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Oshawa Daily Times, 20 Jul 1928, p. 5

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LAY ASIDE PRAYER ISSUE AT BANQUET OF LORD MAYOR Bishops Forgot Problem in Hand During Dinner at Mansion House (By Canadian Press) : London, July 20.--Bishobs for- got, for a while at least, their per plexities over the Prayer Book when they dined with the Lord Mayor at the Mansion House the other night. For many years it has been the custom of the Lord Mayor of London once a year to entertain the Episcopal Bench, Laughter played around the fea- tures of the Reverend fathers, more especially when His Grace of Canterbury delivered a very happy and witty speech. Even the musie served with the meats was of a light and happy character. There were Gilbert and Sullivan ex- cerpts--and even selections from old-time musie hall songs. Some- body suggested that the musie ought to have been Gregorian. The Archbishop of York said the first letter he had opened that morning contained thls very searching question: "Are you and your brother Davidson servants of the Devil?" The writer, added the Archbishop, left no sort of doubt as.to his own opinion. "One of the great difficulties of bishops of today," said the Arch- bishop of Canterbury, "is the ceaseless demand for utterances of some kind absolutely unlike what our predecessors in office were ac- customed to when three or four times a year a dignified utterance was put forward in solemn tones and was duly reported in a quite respectable way. "IT sometimes wonder whether the modern form of the newspaper sheet is accountable for it. Nowa- days the greater part of our news- papers, s full of stirring pictures, brilliant motor cars, wonderful dresses fronr Paris, illustrating to the full all the furs and furbelows of the day---and sometimes even more intimate details than that. between the interstices of those pictures the reporter has to find room gomehow to put in what this man or that has said, No wonder that we are made on occasion to say things which in print we fail to recognize as our own," Continuing, the Archbishop sald a man of his age received much advice of a contradictory nature. Some would have a man retire at 70 or hefore. Others would have him carry on until he had to be wheeled in a bath-chair along the Brighton front, to be pointed out by triumphant nurses as an old man in full possession of all his faculties. NEW CURE FOR "VARICOSE VEINS Paris Doctor Has Had 10, 000 Successes in Eng. land A new specific for the treatment of varicose veins, discovered by M. Genevier, of Paris, is now being adopted by doctors in this country. About 10,000 sufferers have re- cently been cured in England alone. The new treatment does away with the necessity of surgical op- erations. It consists of injections of quinine salts within the affect- ed veins, This results in a clet being formed and shunting the blood from the diseased areas to the inside muscles. There no swelling can take place. This curative drug, which 18 simply four grammes of quinine hydro-chloride combined with 2 grammes of Urethane (an ano- dyne), costs only 6d. per dose, FRENCH STEAMER DASHED T0 PIECES Number of Lives Lost -- Disaster Occurs in Indo-China Henoi, French Indo China, July 19.--A number of lives are feared to have been lost when the French steamer Cap Lay was dashed against a rock at the entrance to the Haiphong river in a typhoon. Most of the 250 passengers es- caped but several at least were drowned when they swept into the sea while they were trying to scramble up the face of the rock, One of the ship's hoilers hurst and she sank almost immediately. The ship's doetor is among those missing, Twenty Annamite natives were drowned when a small sailing ves- sel sunk in the Haiphong river. Dozens of junks and sampans were sunk at Henoi and Haiphong. The typhoon uprooted hundreds of trees, unroofed houses and de- stroyed many roads, slush splash shine! Beautify your car at our expense, Send us this coupon (with 10 cents to partially cover cost of mailing) 20d we'll send you the following: z sample can of No. 7 + Duco Polish, o} Spe can, can of No. y : & sample can * No. 7 *~ Auto Top Finish, No. 7 Duco Polish Removes mud stains, grease and oil! film from the body of the car. Shines and preserves the finish, Toronto 9, Ontario: to help pay mailing cost. AT odds if it does rain-- what matter if the mud and . NUMBER SEVEN GROUP will make the car like new in no time. And if it rains again tomorrow the mud won't stick half so tight. Buy the whole kit--three handy aids to car pride--one for the body, one for the top, one to make the bright parts brilliant. You'll be surprised how easy it is to keep that showroom Send for this Sample Beauty Kit No. 7 Nickel Polish Banishes rain spots and tarnish. Willnot scratch or harm the finish, and in the house it's ideal , for anything made of nickel or brass. Made by the Makers of DUCO eS hr a rr wr i -- FLINT PAINT AND VARNISH LIMITED, Send me your sample Beauty Kit for my auto. I am enclosing 10 cents NAME 0 sussinspnrrnssnpss arpa rsas over the body--the te No. 7 Auto Top Finish Gives a lasting, brilliant finish that waterproofs all kinds of auto tops. RTT ERT .4 THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 20, 1928 T "Stands Scotland Where It Did?" Aye, Laddie! (102). Scorrised YF Canaoian Rockies "Stand. in the Canadian Rockles. Scottish Music Festival, with Springs Hotel, headquarters at the (cotland where it did?" Yes, except during the period from August 31 to September 3, when fit will seem to have been transplanted overnight to a new Highland haunt The oc- caslon is the Highland Gathering and to take place a second time at Banff, Alberta, Banff Songs that the Scot Yas sung for seven centuries, and martial bagpipes he has played even longer, will again resound in the Canadian Rockies, making Banff re- semble its namesake in Auld Scotia. | Initiated last year under the pat- vonage of the Prince of Wales, this festival has quickly established itself 8s a Canadian institution, with regi- mental piping contests, athletic mes, foll and Highl d --all as old as Scotland herself. Nota- ble among the musical features ar- ranged by Harold Eustace Key, mus- ical director of the Canadian Pacific Railway, 1s the special performance of "The Jolly Beggars," a cantata with text by Burns and music by Sir Henry Bishop. At the daily concerts in the hotel ballroom notable Canadian art- ists will sing the folksongs of Scot- land, and Scottish Canadian lassies will join their laddies in the High- land fling, the sword dance, the sall- or's hornpipe, the Scotch reel and the = graceful seann triubhas. The programs of Scottish music are drawn up in historical sequence, be- ginning with the old ballads of the 13th, 14th and 15th centuries, follow- ed by groups from the period of Mary Queen of Scots, the Stuarts and the Jacobites, selections from the songs of Burng, Sir Walter Scott, Lady Niarne and Christopher North, as well as the Iiebridean music recently made popular by Margaret Kennedy Fraser, PiPING FOR FIRST PRIZE, BANFR At the same time the Alberta Ama- teur Championship meet will crown the victors in the flat and hurdle races, welght-throwing, tugs-of-war, high and broad jumping, tossing the caber, shot putting and discus and javelin throwing. The regimental pipers from all over the Dominion will compete for the prizes offered by E. W. Beatty, AVIATORS SAFE IN NORTHERN QUEBEC Two N.Y, Brokers' Plane Forced Down by En. gine Trouble Grand' Mert, Que., Both James Goodwin Enes Curtin, young Wall Street brokers and aviators, are safe in Northern Quebec, according to in formation reaching here Tuesday. Hall is at Lane David, 20 miles north of Chicoutimi, down with engine trouble. , He has plenty of provisions and has a canoe, Yester- day .a Fairchild seaplane, piloted by J. F. Saunders, left here, to go to the young man's assistance Capt. Saunders will endeavour 'o repair Hall's Stearman biplane. 1f that is found to he impracticable, he will bring the New Yorker back hcre, July 19 Hall and Curtin js at Oskelaneo, from where he sent a request to the Fairchild company to go to Hall's relief, The latter left Cur- tin at Oskelaneo while he went alone into the north, Following Curtin's appeal, Capt, left here to locate the missing man and found him on Lake David, but owing to weather conditions could not alight on the lake. The two pilots left New York July 7 for an inspection trip to claims in Quebec. Considerable anxiety had been experienced as no word had been received from them for several days, WILL SEEK RAREST BIRD IN AFRICA Party Leaves N.Y. -- Only One Specimen Known to Science Grandmanan, N.B., July 20.-- The quest of Jason and his Argo- nauts for the golden fleece seems a summer day's ramble compared with the quest of Allan L, Moses, of Grand Manap, who in company with J. 8. Rockefeller and C. B. G. Murphy, 1928 graduates of Yale University, who sailed recently from New York to Africa. They will travel 10,000 miles by lana and sea, seeking not diamonds, ivory, precious gold--but six birds, gpecimens of the psendocaly-pto- mera Graneri, of which only one specimen is said to be known to science. That specimen fis in the British Museunr. They * expect to be away about five weeks in travelling from Lon- don through the Mediterranean, Suez Canal, Red Sea, Gulf of Eden and into the Indian Ocean to Af- rica. They will strike across country to the western border of Lake Tan- ganyike, where at the very peak of Kandashomiva, thousands of feet above the sea level, in a range of hills they will search in the bamboos--the spot where the one sknown specimen of this bird was caught--{for the rarest bird in Af- rica, Cr Ne Que,, Saunders There is nothing in the world that promises so much in satisfac- tion and yields so little as the spirit of revenge.--Kitchener Rec- ord, A St. Thomas his way to work miles an hour, of these plain of ment, businessman on drove his car 62 He is probably one businessmen who com- the lack of law enforces --Chatham News. Er ------ Apex Electrophonic honograph igle 25 whohogany Walnut or Ook 1 he Greatest Ad- vance Ever Made In 1 he Science of Musical Repro- duction An achievement that has brought music lovers face to face with perfected creation of tone--the soul of music--The =~ Apex Electrophonic. Prices range from $1135 to $385 'Wilson & Lee 71 Simcoe St. North The Compo Company, Ltd. Lachine, P, Q. Ontario Distributors: The Sum Record Company, Toronto, Ont, Complete Stock of Apex Electronhopic Records Al- Harris Music Shop rm ONTARIO MUSEUM GETS PRICELESS CHINESE IMAGE Director of Archaeology Secures Gem Direct From Imperial Palace at Pekin Toronto, July 20.--This city has just acquired what is probably the most interesting and priceless museum piece among the collec tions of the world for the supreme god of China has just completed its second long journey in 3,000 years from the .Imperial palace at Pekin to the Royal Ontario mu- seum here. The article, a circular piece of jade about a mot in diameter with a hole in the centre, has been kept by rulers of China through- out history as the supreme God of the heavens. C. T. Currelly, director of archaeology, does not doubt its authenticity, for he has its absolute history in an un~ broken line going back to the first millenium, B.C. The circle represented to the Chinese symmetry, perfection and endlessness and so their supreme diety was abstractly conceived as a circle within a circle. For the central imperial inrage of the great god only the most valuable material could be used, with the result that jade which is more precious than gold and harder than steel was chosen. The jade came from the Kara Kash river, far away to the north of Tibet where men dived into the icy turbulent waters and groped with their hands for the feeling of jade. Perhaps with good for- tune a diver would find one piece at the end of two years. The piece used for the imperial irsage of the ultimate god must have been too heavy and clumsy for anyone but an exceptional swimmer to handle in the rush of water. Wrought entirely by polishing with emery powder the symbol has a smoothness and translucence which must have facilitated the long Chinese belief in such a strange god. Its removal to Toronto will only be a passing phase in the life of this age old celestial divinity who has spent over three thousands vears 'advising the rulers of China in the sezsred eity. TWO INJURED AS RADIAL HITS AUTO July 19Two elderly wo- men, Mrs. Thomas Norris of 23 Gor- don street, Hamilton, and her sister, Mrs. Radcliffe of Princeton, were painfully injured tonight when a Hamilton, Grimsby & Beamsville car crashed into their auto as it was backing from the driveway of Mrs. Lews's home on Highway No. 8, near Grimsby. Mrs. Norris's som, who was driving, escaped unhurt, The injured women were given first aid by Dr. Steele of Winona. They were suffering severely from shock, cut and bruises, with possible internal injuries. Grimsby, The difference between liberty and license is that when a man he gets a license. --Bran- rries f don Sum, a PRA PAGE FIVE "Pass on the Good The 99c Sale Finishes on Saturday Whirlwind Selling It's a long time since we staged a sale of like character that met with such an enthusiastic reception. With From the minute the doors opened on Thursday morning the store has been as busy as a beehive, and customers have not hesitated to tell us how pleased they have been with the bargains they secured. Come Here to This Store Tomorrow and See The Prizes We Have Reserved for Sat- urday's Selling!! SLAYER TAKES No Change of Expression When Told Sentence Commuted Saint John, N. B., July 19.-- When Sheriff Frank Bishop car- ried the news to Arthur Deme.- chant in his cell at the Andover, N.B., jail that his death sentence had been' commuted to life im- prisonment the prisoner received it without even a change of ex- pression. '"'Aren't you pleased?" the sheriff asked in surprise. The prisoner then nodded his head and admitted that he was, Ever since his committal to jail, Demerchant had heen behaving very well until the last few days when, with the time set for his exefution drawing near he hecame morose. At times, however, fhe would hecome violent, it was said, buntinz his head against the bars. CORN NEWS CALMLY sfreforfedforiond oolesfeefesde EE 2, "' oodootedes] Josfordesd Ca foster fosionioniosde teadost: + Loses. oedeodort 20st Corn Flakes % really help you to keep cool and 5it:{ They are so deliciously crisp--so easy to digest.} Which i is just another reason why m more than 11,000,060 people' demand' them' daily! lorries Let This Drug Store Be Your Drug Store We can supply Funnels Glass graduates. ,, Hot water bottles _.. Nursing bottles ,, Rubber nipples, Absorbent cotton, ,, Bottle hrushes., Gauze Rubber sheeting Safety pins...,., Bahy S08P8.... ss st12+ Baby talcum po-:ders. Therran-- baie Boric acid tubber syr'nges...... sponges This is EERE) testers, EEE EERE SOIULIONS: seers everything the baby needs for filling nursing hottles .for measuring milk + ++.for stomach pains for baby's food .for nursing bottles .for plugging nursing bottles .for cleanin: nursing bottles . for cleaning baby's face .to prevent baby wetting bed .for fastening baby's clothes for baby's bath .for baby's delicate skin .for taking baby's temperature .for baby's eyes ++. for ear or rectum . 'for hahy's bath vee 3 2 the store that gives "SERVICE THAT SERVES" Karn's Next P, O, Kellogg's FLYA'K E 8 Drug Store Phone 378 * Ne other corn flakes equal Kellogg's for flavor and erisp- ness. Kelloge's are never tough-thick. Never heavy. Always extra light and crisp! Serve for lusch, dinner or break- fast. Delicions, with milk or creain

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