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Oshawa Daily Times, 18 Oct 1928, p. 16

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ONTARIO NEWS NEW INFANTRY SCHOOL OPENED IN BROCKVILLE Brockville, Oct. 18.--A provisional 5 of infantry, to cover a period of six weel.s, was opened at the Arm- aries last evening here under the dir- sction of an officer from Militia Headquarters in Kingston. AN AMBASSADOR (TALIAN QUILL VISIT QUEEN'S Kingston, Oct. 18--The Right Hon, Ly James) vor Ce G.C.B, | Gilm 8.C., His Majesty's. Ambassador to the Court of Italy, is to visit Queen's University next month and will de- iver a lecture on November 1st or Ind, it was announced yesterday. FINE APPLE CROP IN EASTERN COUNTIES Cobourg, Oct, 18--The apple crop n Northumberland and Durham Counties is regarded as a fair one his year. Spys are reported to be \ fair crop, Golden Russets and some sther varities an excellent one, while Baldwins and Starks are reported ta se a lighter crop. Prices are stated 0 be from 50 cents to $1 a barrell rvigher than last year, KINGSTON OVERSUBSCRIBES PORTION OF FOUNDATION Kingston, Oct. 18--Kingston has wersubscribed its portion of the 3200,000 foundation for which the Na- MALLETT'S COAL Ph SERVICE tional Council of Women of Canada is conducting an appeal throughout the pion, Captains of the teams aged in the local effort report tion 100.60. Kingston's quota was $3, CASE DISMISSED THR! LACK OF EVI CE Belleville, Oct, 18.--Justice Raney, after all the evidence had been sub- mitted in the case against Donald our, charged with a very seris ous offense, discharged the jury, stating there was no evidence. Gil- mour and Harold Barnum, who plead- ed guilty at the opening of the As- sizes to a serious charge involving a 12-year-old girl, will be sentenced to- day when the Assizes resume. BADMINTON C! FOR BELLEVILLE GA _At the annual meeting of the Belle- ville Garrison Badminton Club offi cers for the year were elected as fol- lows: Honorary Presidents, Col. R, Vanderwater, D.S.0.; Col. R. J], E, Graham, Col, E. O. Keller, DS.O.; President, Capt. H. M. Jones; Vice- President, Capt. A. H. Ketcheson; Club Captain, C, A, Cameron; Trea- surer, Capt. Walter E, Scott; Secres tary, T. M, Webster, COBOURG REGT. ALLIED WITH BRITISH FORCES Cobourg, Oct, 18.--Approvals ans nounced at the department of nations al defence of the alliance of the Northumberland Regiment of the non-permanent active militia of Can- ada, to the Northumberland Fusiliers #]of the British army, The Northum- berland Regiment was organized in 1866, The headquarters of this unit is located at Cobourg, Ont, and is under command of Lieut.-Colonel J, F, Wolfraim, PETERBORO MAN SENTENCED ON PERJURY CHARGE Cobourg, Oct. 18.--James Akey, of Peterboro, was given a sentence of two months imprisonment in County Court at Cobourg yesterday merning REPAIRING ovR If your Wateh 1s not giving make it tell the correct time WATCHES D. J. BROWN Official Watch inspector for awa Raliroads, 10 King St, W, Let Us Serve You We offer for your comsideration-- A complete line of nationally ad- vertised building products -- a close knowledge modern builder -- a delivery service that puts our entire commedity line within an hour of any building site-- and finally every possible co-operation, Oshawa Lumber Co., Limited 25 Ritson Road North Phone 2821 JEWELER Canadian Naticeal and Osh. Phone 189 of the problems of the the basic desire to give LUB ORGANIZED | RRISON THE 1 two months at hard labour in the Counties' Yai while Barnard was given suspended sentence, BELLEVILLE PLANE WAS FORCED DOWN Lansdowne, Oct, 18--Early Mon- day morning there ment here, when a pa: ae! ne Waa naticed la be in the es ~ ever the pilot succeeded in lardi safely on the farm of Mr, M. Mc- Donald when it was learned that it was owned by Leavens Bros. Air Ser- vice of Belleville, and operated by Mr, J. Leavens, who was en route from Prescott to Belleville, when a broken cylinder forced him down. He left at once for Kingston, and secured a new cylinder, and was able to leave for home Tuesday morning, THREE INJURED IN PETERBORO ACCIDENT Peterboro, Oct, 18--In an effort to throw his two children clear, Ward Rosebush, of 60 Victoria avenue, re- ceived injuries to his hip and side when he was struck by an automo- bile driven by Jack Phelan, at the Bethune and MeDonnell streets in- tersection, Tuesday night at eleven o'clock, The children, Daisy and Billy, were injured about the legs and arms and today all three are con- fined to their home, The group was returning home from the Made-in-Canada Fair when the accident occurred. Dr. Loudon was summoned and in the meantime a member of the fire department who happened to be near the scene, ren- dered first aid, HIT AND RUN MOTORIST APPPEARS BEFORE COURT Peterboro, Oct, 18--George Ward, of Millbrook, alleged to be the hit- and-run motorist who struck down Mrs. Ewart W, Davies and her daughter Inez at the intersection of Rubidge and Park streets on Satur- day night, October 6, appeared in Police rt yesterday morning be- fore Magistrate O. A, Langley. A plea of not guilty was entered to the charge of failing to return to the scene of the accident and render as- sistance, The case was laid over for two weeks as the injured persons are not able to attend court. Alex El- liott is defending the accused. BISHOP OF TORONTO TO VISIT PETERBORO Peterboro, Oct. 18--The Right Rev, J. F| Sweeney, D.D., Bishop of To- ronto, will arrive in the city at noon when he begins an extensive visita- tion to the parishes and missions north of Peterboro, ; He will be accompanied by A. H. Cuttle, Finance Commissioner, "His Lordship. will visit the Anglican church at Apsley, when he will hold a Confirmation service on Thursday evening and on Friday evening will hold a Confirmation service in the Anglican church at Wilberforce. On Sunday he will conduct services In St. George's church, Haliburton; St, Peter's church, Maple Lake, and in St, Paul's church, Minden. On Mon- day his Lordship will visit St, John's church, Havelock, where he will in- duct the new rector, the Rey. P. C Howard, formerly assistant curate at Millbrook. On Tuesday he will pro- ceed to ooler for confirmation sere vice there and will return to Peter- boro that same evening. On Wed- nesday the Laymen's Association of Peterboro will tender a banquet to his Lordship at the Empress SAY US, 50-GENTS NOT LEGAL TENDER Unusual Claim Entered in Appesl in Counterfeit- ing Case Montreal, Oct. 18.-- Submission that United States 50-cent pleces did not come within the terms of the Currency Act of Canada, made by J. P. Charbonneau to the Court of Appeal, criminal side, Tuesday morning, »was countered by the Crown, through Auguste Angers, K, C., by the declaration that ac- cording to the Criminal Code, leg- al tender in Canada consisted of the King's money, that of any for- eign prince or state or other money made legal by proclamation. This discussion developed during the appeal of W. H. Brunet against sentence of two years hard labor, Sale On Tomorrow 74 Simcoe St. N. p d on him by Judge Marin, on conviction of haying made and cir- culated counterfeit coims, purport- ing to be United States 50 cent sil- yer pieces, sometime about Decem- ber 27, 1927, Attacks Indictment, Mr, Charbonneau opened bis ar- to the text of the judgment. He then developed the argument on the lines of the Currency Act, men had told the truth frankly arrested, that it had been was much excite | : OSHAWA DAILY. TIMES, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1926 vg ---- y Good Car 1 Price Ford Touring, 1923 MBE]. sin vs Ford Coupe, 1922 Overland Touring, 1922 model ..... ... $60 Baby Grand Touring, 192] model Ford 1-2 ton Truck, 1926 model ...... $200 Chevrolet Touring, 1925 model $225 Olds Sport Touring, 1924 model $250 Chevrolet Touring, 1927 model Chevrolet Coach, 1925 model Chevrolet Sedan, 1927 model Essex Coupe, 1927 $695 Pontiac Cab,, 1927 Terms to Suit, Ontario Motor Sales Limited 99 Simcoe St. 5, During the course of the argu- ment, Mr. Justice Hall suggested that it would be strange if the courts of Canada allowed the coun- terfeiting of United States coins; while Messrs Justices Cannon and Bernier inquired in some detail in- to the clauses of the Currency Act Judgment was reserved, The hench, of five judges, con- sisting of Messrs. Justices Dorion, Bernier, Hall, Cannon and Cousin- eau, Elie Beauregard, K, C., acted as counsel to the Crown, SEVENTY DROWNED Shanghal, China, Oct, 18, -- Seventy persons were drowned, ae- cording to reports from Tienstin, when two steamers of the China Merchant Steam Navigation Com- pany collided near Taku, The Yung Ging was sunk and 60 of the 300 passengers she carried with ten membersof the crew were missing. EATS MINCE PIE AND SLEEPS FINE--NO GAS "I eat anything I want now--in- cluding mince pie. Thanks to Ad- lerika, stomach gas is gone and I sleep fine."--Charles Carter, Just ONE spoonful Adlerika re- lieves gas and that bloated feeling 80 that you can eat and sleep well Acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes old waste mat- ter you pever thought was there, No matter what you have tried for your stomach and bowels, Adler- ika will surprise you. Jury and Lovell, Druggists. = \EQUFHENT "m V7 Z£3 44 - CR WITH AUSTRALIA QUITE PROBABLE Hon, Robb Willing to Give 'Preference to British Posessic BN Ottawa, Oct. 18.--Hon. James A. Robb, Minister of Finance told a delegation of British Columbia lumbermen this afternoon that he is prepared to greatly extend trade with Australia, "As far as Canada is concerned," said Mr. Robb, "we are prepared to give them our full British preference. If Australia is prepared to let our fruit in free during the season when thay are not producing I would not be afraid wr. "We will let Australian fruit in free during the season when w. are not producing." "I am satisfied that if we all work together we can enlarge the scope of the Canadian-Australian treaty. I believe we can get the full British preference from them, but we will never get it by lam- basting them, and keeping their products out, They are no dif- ferent from what we are. We hear the argument every day that we should pay the United States with our goods. I am not only prepar- ed to sell to Australia but I am also prepared to buy from them. As T said, T am ready to give them the whole British preference. We want to do business in a big way and they cannot open it out tno wide for us. We don't want to sit around the corner and trade jack- knives." Mr. Robb told the lumberman that the Canadian government was very anxious to extend trade all ov- er the world, but particularly within the British Empire, He denied that the lumber industry had heen neglected in the negoti- ation of the treaty with Austral- ia. Canada had practically cap- tured the newsprint husiness in Australia, he said, "You net only want to get more trade," said Mr. Robh to the lumbermen, "but you want us also to make. the tariff for other countries. 'That is not an easy matter as you can imag- ine, and especially n Australia, for even if they are Britishers they do not admit that other Britishers should be allowed to make their tariff." Mr. Robb said the Autsralians had a decided feeling that Canada had got the better of the trade agreement with them, and he point- ed out that last year Canada hought only $5,801,000 of goods from Australia and sold over $14,- 000,000 worth of goods to them, He said Australia put that up against Canada every time Cana- da went to trade with them, All Governments had had that troub- le. When Canada negotiated the Australian agreement she tried to get them to accept the full Bri» tish preference and, in return, ask- ed them to give Canada the full British preference. There was a decided attitude in favor of wider Empire trade in after-dinner speeches, but when they got down® to brass tacks it was another mat- WINES USURPING PLACE OF CIDER ---- Dandelions, Elderber ries » 'Currants and Grapes More Plentiful Than Apples Toronte, Ont, Oct. 18.-- Wine has replaced cider in many country homes, and the cider mills that used to dot the landscape have dis- appeared. Wine is now made from dandelion flowers, elderberries, cherries, currants, grapes, ginger, parsnips and other fruits and vege- tables, but cider can be made only from apples. According to the statement of cider makers in Toronto to-day, the good old drink that most farm boys used to delight to "to sneak down cellar and gulp down" is going in- to the discard es a beverage. The whole output of cider in Toronto is pot to exceed 10,000 gallons and this is made only in the fall when apples, are most plentiful. Apples that then cannot be sold or used for any other purpose sre generally used for cider. Theres is a small quantity of the cider made by the vinegar makers kept for the making of cider vinegsr, but even cider vinegar is gradually being dis- placed by the "white wine," made from alcohol and the "mait" vine- gar. i WOMEN'S INFLUENCE | Montreal, Que., Oct. 18--Wheth- address at the inaugural meet- of the Wilfred Laurier Club at of peace; fit can only come about through of women," to stand up in Parliament and say: TRADE EXTENSION [SAYS HOOVER = FAVORS THE S. LANRENCE ROUTE Kellogg Declares at St. Paul That Coolidge Government Prefers It St, Paul, Minn, Oct. 18--If con- nection between the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean by the St. Law- rence River does not materialize af- ter negotiations with the Canadian Government, the United States Gov- ernment will construct an all-Ameri- can route through the State of New York, declared Hon. Frank B. Kel- logg, Secretary of State, in address. ing a luncheon meeting of the Ram- i County Women's Republican ul The Coolidge administration favor- ed the project and Herbert Hoover, the Republican nresidential candidate to succeed President Ccolidge is in favor of the St. Lawrence, the Sec- retary said. He said the United Sta- tes was doing everything it could, "but no canal can be built on the in- ternational section without the co. operation of both governments." i Setting Attention In view of the magnitude of the project, Mr. Kellogg said he believed the Canadian Government was giving to the project all the attention which the United States could reasonably ask. He said he had no doubt the construction of the St. Lawrence canal and the power connection therewith would be as valuable to Canada as to the United States, "I will not undertake to go into the details of negotiations with Can- ada which are still pending," Mr, Kellogg said, "Canada has problems connected with this improvement which undoubtedly require the most careful consideration," Mr, Kellogg said Canada had in the Northwest a rich agricultural empire, timber and mineral wealth yet un- developed, and he believed the Cana- dian Government would work out the problem in the interest «f its people, No Place For Dictation "It is not for the United States to dictate or to advise Canada in this regard 'but to be ready to co-operate with her at an early date and on a generous basis for the development of one of the great waterways of the world," he said. "The people of the West, and I think of the whole coun- try, are earnestly desirous of con- structing a canal to connect with the ocean. If it cannot be done by the St. Lawrence route, it will be done by an all-American route through the State of New York." COURT CHANGES ITS ATTITUDE ON COMMUTERS' CAE Detroit Judge Cancels Own Injunction Permitting Aliens to Enter U, S. Windsor, Oct, 18. --Some 125 alien residents of the border dls- trict, ho obtained Injunctions against the United States immigra- tion authorities which would allow them to commute and hold jobs in Detroit, were out of luck Wednes- day afternoon, when Judge Charles 8. Simons, of the United States from the yu Gen 2 Buy your Coal D Dixon Coal Co. All Coal thoroughly screened and loaded on vehicles for delivery with electric automatic loaders to aveid "Solvay Coke" Forked to Insure Cleanliness . Motors Wood Bone Dry--Speaks for Itself Jeddo Coal The Best the Mines Produce ---- , Phone 262 4 CT LINES TO CENTRAL ~ QUALITY AND SERVICE ASSURED DIXON COAL CO. 1 BIG FEATURES, 5. The HARDEST Waxt 1 Slit oy 3 T to ! 4. GOES FARTHEST Drying! | dm--------_ Lp F-N 0 SB FLOOR WAX FOR FLOORS "LINOLEUM - FURNITURE Federal Court, in Detroit, sudden~ ly vacated his restraining order, Judge Simons' action was made on his own initiative, and was taken, as he explained, to prevent further large groups of aliens on this side of the river fromr secur- ing injunctions which would en- able them to enter the Republie, until the order he signed has been fought out in his court on Monday next hetween counsel for the al- fens and lawyers representing the United States Immigration Depart- ment, Naturalized Canadians and na- tives of the British Isles have claimed preference under the Jay Treaty of 1794, which gave unre- stricted border-crossing privileges to all British subjects. Their con- tention was upheld in the United States Supreme Court last week and Order 86 will be repealed in- gofar as it concerns them, accord- ing to unofficial word from Wash- ington, Although not British subjects, the 125 subjects of European countries who secured the Injune- tion order on Monday claim that as residents beneath the British flag they are entitled to consideras tion under the Jay Treaty, 4 T0 SAY IF POOLS" LIABLE FOR TAXES Ottawa, Oct. 18,*-- Whether the wheat pools of the West are liable to income taxation will be the subject of a case in the Exchequer Court here this fall, The matter has long been in dispute, and while the taxes have been paid, it is un- der protest, The Saskatchewan Co-operative Company's case is to be made a test the decision in which will apply to the other pools, A deduction in all to three cents a bushel is made by the pools, one cent for commercial and two cents for elevator purposes. The pools claim that the elevators built from this money are not theirs, but that they belong to the farmers, propor tional to their participation, Limited New Afternoon Dresses Styled and Sized for Misses, Women and Larger Women 1 0° In selecting for this sale we \ ere insistent on every new Mid-season attention has been Style. Special aid to slenderizing dresses for larg- er women, New browns, black, wood shades, blues and greens, Materials of heavy crepe. On Sale Tomorrow See Our Windows The ARCADE Limited

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