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Oshawa Daily Times, 15 Mar 1929, p. 7

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0 Mrs. 8 boys L to a was of- e's de- easily ner or , fruit- hipped 1libub, 8, just vberry, a plece range- stiffly 8 been confec- avorite on BG BATTIES BELIEVED NEAR IN MEXICAN REVOLT (Continued from page 1) chains to the steel rails pulled them s to the steel rails pi from the twisting and b g them a aa use. Five Executed Despatches from Vera Cruz said that ranking officers of the army of General Jesus Maria Aguirre 'were executed last Tuesday at the same Siffie 4s Gederal Simon Aguirre was a firing squad. The By were General Jose Trini- dar Rjoas; General Francisco Acosta -who was chief of the Ya Ui forces; and Colonels Jorge Crail, Francisco Vailes Mancilla, and Ignacio Acosta. ghty four others were taken pri- soners and at present are being held at Vera Cruz for military trial, These are eleven chiefs anl 73 officers, Waiting for Battle Naco, Sonoro, Mex, March 15-- Newspaper correspondents today were still awaiting the expected battle of Naco. To all appearances an encounter between General Aug- ustino Olachea's 1,200 Indian federals fortified here, and General Fausto Topete, reported to be adancing upon the town from Nogales wit 1, rebels, was imminent, but they have learned that "manana" (tomor- row) is a slogan of Mexican military as well as civil life, Mexico City, Mar, 15--Fearing that The federal forces, notified bels t evacuate torreon the re migh! oon general, in t Por- tes Gil of his move. "I fear, how- ever, that the disloyal may take to flight toward the north," he said, ich I am trying to avoid by all means. Juarez, Chihuahua, Mex, March 15--Rebel forces led by their com- mander-in-chief, General Jose: Gon- Zalo Escobar, today were reported on the march south from Torreon to meet the federal army advancing on the city. Definite Mavements of the revolu- tionists could not learned but it was reported that General Escobar planned to place his troops in strate- gic places in an attempt to stop the government forces before they reach- ed Torreon. STRUCK BY TRUCK Toronto, Mar. 15.--Mfss Mar- garet King, aged about 50 years, of 693 Euclid Avenue, was serious- ly injured yesterday afternoon when she was run down by a motor truck on Adelaide street, west of Simcoe street. The driver of the vehicle, Andrew Grady of R.R, No. 5, Bolton, Ont., told the police that the woman stepped from the north curb in front of the machine. She was taken in the car of W. A. Miller, 1288 Weston Road, to the General Hospital ,where she is in a semi-conscious condition with a possible fracture of the skull. Miss King lived with her sister, and has a brother also in the city. em -- Miss E. F. Barron, corsetiere Nemo Flex Corsets DEMONSTRATION Pod 0) | Ed Monday and Tuesday March 18th and 19th Corset Company, will be in attendance at our Corset Department on the above days, when she will be pleased to demonstrate to the ladies of Oshawa the advantages and new styles of these famous Corsets. of the famous NEMO FLEX The Arc ade, Ltd. AM Kc Improvement LWAYS natural mineral salts. With just enough bran to keep you well and fit, Try these better bran flakes. ; | | | A Prd 7, Zl tid oe "IMPORTANT -- A ALL-BRAN --gnother \- seed to Bran Flakes 's Pep Bran Flekes are mildly 100% 9 laxative. bran end gueren- constipation. BETTER BRAN FLAKES | About A Young Girl Who i i i Hi i : . | 4 gs H | A impossible. | Bolfry!® i th | uy i i it pid! vii Hi mil i HR 1 : 5 5 Challoner and his young fdeally happy in the old Challoner home. Hugh decides to try for the Hy himself, does mot realise that her husband has a tinge of jealousy toward his own sen, Chapter II. But she was herself again, smil- ing. "Bee," he said, 'it seems to me that you are the most wonderful woman in fhe world." "Perhaps I am the happiest," she answered soberly. "Yes," Hugh nodded, "it's partly that, I know you're happy. And it's partly that you--that you are playing a part, like a little girl playing house." "Oh, Houston Challoner, how {nsulting! How belittling to the lady who fillg the proud position of your wife!" "The time may come when the tittle girl will find out it isn't all a game, and what then?" he asked. "But it is, and the nicest game I've ever played!" Beatrice per- sisted drowsily and affectionately, with her red head butting gently against his cheek. "If having a husband, and wanting a baby," she went on, in a singsong voice, "and running a house and calling on your mother-in-law and going on boards of directtors for one sister-in-law and engaging nurses for the other, seems like a game, why, what is there to find out-what's 'pretend' about that?" she demanded. And immediately hearing a nolse in the hallway outside the door, she straightened up and called peremptorily, "Bert!" The door had been left a crack ajar; now Bert put his handsome fair head into the room and said reprovingly, 'For heaven's sake, are you people going to sit up all night?" "Bert, did you close the fce box? [* Helen spoke to me about it," Bea- trice sald, "1 did, I smashed my finger to hell, and that's how I know." "Mashed it! Ought it to be ban- dazed?" "Oh, no; it only hurt for a min- ute. I raked out some pie and some cold kidney stew-----"' "Loathsome!'" Beatrice shu'der- ed, "Delicious. And T found some Jammy stuff: sort of like pickled pineapple~---" Hugh had left her side and was at the mantel, smiling at her. Bert smiled at her too; her radiant "10k went from one to the other of her two men; warm and beautiful and young and fragrant, she stretched her slender young body sleepily among her cushions and pointed a finger at the clock that was strik- ing midnight, "Want me to carry you to bed?" Bert asked, yawning undisguised- y. "Oh, no, no--Hugh'll fix me beautifully!" Beatrice answered. Her ste, con bent down, kissed the ruffled red top of her head, and Central Political Council of the Na- in tionalist Government yesterday de- Nothing to find out, nothing to }eigeq to dismiss the Lit wo com- 3nd out, ' Hugh said, in wid soul. b ander of Hankow City and two "e had long forgotten thelr In-f,ipor generals belonging to the Wo- terrupted conversation and her last §y 0 phonon of the. Council 1 question: jie kde She would not i 'understand. After she was sound- [4 ly, sweetly asleep, with her dishev- So Ding Speking Pill) eled, fragrant young head resting | Kairong and Talyush, which have against his arm, the phrase went |peey hitherto f on and on in his mind: "Nothing to | oovernments. went on his way. find out, little girl playing lady. No- thing to find out!" "Did the cat walk in here?" Bez- | SONG WRITER ENACTS trice asked, at Bert's door, "Come fn, come in!" the tall boy invited her cordially. "0h, a million, million pardons! {ard Stevens, who wrote the song "I ** sald Beatrice | Faw Down and Go Boom," did. You're dress: "I'm dressed, Except this--damn e--collar----" Bert gritted, at his Jrecovering from scalp wounds and mirror, "You've seen me in less § bruises after his motor car was hit by another, the song-writer "faw- "Your swimming suit, certainly,' ling" down on the pavement and the sedately. "Every Jautomobile going *'boom." than this," he reminded her. Beatrice conceded time he dresses your father does sidewise to study his handiwork / critically. *"Saxophones-dast-noise- Houston trays being rushed about every- where----and twenty square feet for one hundred couples to dance inl" protested, a little nettled in spite of himself, "how do you get that way? I'm four years olderthan you are, Married Her Employer. "Say, lissen-say, lissen--" Bert you know, and I'm crazy about the "Well, that has nothing t with it," Beatrice pion Dag nim sepetiels, 'Bert was stunning In his even dress, she reflected --idly. CH deep ripple in his chestnut hair-- hair so bright in color as to be al- most - yellow--and the clean-cut hard line of his freshly shaven cheeks, and the firm jaw--no won der the girls liked Bert, and tele- Juoned shamelessly to him all day "I could take you to th - Iry, my dear young lady," Se po now, with a negligent side glance, as he carefully placed a mono- grammed handkerchief in his breast Docket, faud Jou ignt decide that 8 a ba © { 5 You dance, don't Sout Batis 4) ot course I dance!" "Then that's all I need to know," Bert remarked briefly, You might take me some night when you haven't anything o'se to do, Beatrice suggested after a pause, "But, I warn you in ad- vane, 1 vom like it!" o! I won't take you, madam," Bert told her, He snapped open a cigareids case--a heavy, beautiful affair of enamel and gold, inspected its contents, slipped {it into a pocket. Why not?" Beatrice asked, genuinely curious, "Isn't that enough reason, that you warn me in advance that you'd not enjoy it?" he asked in reply, "Well--but I might after all," she confessed, with her artless smile, "Then that would be worse!" Bert sald, in that authoritative bus. Inesslike male manner that {im- pressed her in spite of herself Her color came up; she appreciated suddenly that he was right. It would not do to form a hanit of going to places like the Belfry with one's stepson, "Bert, have you a girl!" "Here, in North Underhill, d'you mean?" "Well ** she laughed Ingen uously, "Here, or anywhere," she sald, And a nod of her red head in. dicated a photogranh on his dress. er, "Is that your girl?" "In a way--yes," he sald 'ndiff. erently, "That's an English gir! who was studying in Paris" "Studying----architecture?" "No, musie, She had a delight. ful personality and a fine figure and no volce--poor kid! She ves al. ways getting herself nhot graphed as Carmen, runhidle, ¢ s ae. body, apd telling us how 'e could sing it " "Did she like you, Bert?" Bea. trice, with a faint accent on the pronouncs, asked a little shyly, at he fe'l gllent in mid-sentence "Oh, kinda, She really liked & man who died, a dirty lousy Pole who wrote musie " "Bert, what horrible words!" "I assure you he was all of that, and then some," Bert crossed the room, and took an oblong, loose-leaved black book from his desk, and put it Into her hands. "That's Alekowsk!," he said, "The woolly-looking one? And what a fascinating place!" (To Be Continued) THREE GENERALS IN CHINA DISMISSED Nanking, China, Mar, 15.--The The council also adopted a reso- virtually 1egional WORDS OF OWN PIECE Lon Angeles, March 15--Leon- He was in a hospital yesterday that," she commented, seated mow on the edge of his desk and watch- ing him thoughtfully. "I wonder why men have gone on S50 many years wearing such uncomfortable things!" Bert tore off a collar and>drop- ped its remains into his wastebas- et. r "Hugh does that too, every time we dine anywhere," Beatrice obser- THE Carew Lumber Co. Phones 121112 ved, unimpressed, "Which means that he's done it twice since last August," Bert said disagreeably. Her innocent eyes were fixed wonderingly on bis face, through his morror. "We hate dinner parties." she admitted. "We don't make any bones about that." "He does," Bert muttered. hav- ing better success with a second ilar. "And T hate them worse than he does," Beatrice added, puzzled. "Well, because they're all given by old fogles like Aunt Min and Granny and their kind!" he said scornfully, "And I suppose we would have a better time at the Belfry," Beatrice suggested amusedly. "Ever been to the Belfry?" Bert asked, finishing his tie. "No, but I've been to places like it," Beatrice said, tipping hér head This Winter Keep Strong and Vital-- Take SCOTT'S EMULSION Rich In All Vitamins Scott & Bowne, Toronto, Ont. ». THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1929 LUMBER INDUSTRY |35raf cite bed ac Bi fy raritini sd wi WAS SUBJECT OF of Virginia by the early English | try, said Mr. Gilbert. 'ne great. settlers, and since that time the | est hope for conservation, he said, lumber industry had provided one | lay not in reforestation schemes tied up (Continued From Page 3) Mr. Gilbert, insol 4 were both _insolubly said Mr. Gilbert, who went on to | they would be manufactured to pillars which were a feature of | wood in transportation systems. some types of architecture were conceived as a copy of the huge trees of the forest. commerce in the early ages had | conceptions of the men engaged | smallest minimum, so as to con- | close. been dependent on wood for the |in lumbering, and eulogized the | serve to the greatést possible ex- first ships to sail the ucean were | lumber-jacks as hard-working fel- | tent the timber still available in| "Father of the Kinsmen's Club," wooden vessels. 2 Growth of Industry "We would not be here if it were not for wood," tied up with the lumber industry. Forest Conservation The start of the overseas trade The conservation of Canada's across the Atlantic was a cargo of | forest resources was one of the cedar logs shipped from the coast | greatest problems before the coun- of the epic romances of the growth | fo rplanting new trees, but rather of the country. Lumber, too, | in the economical utilization of went hand in hand with traffic, | Canada's forest resources so that with forestry. use made of | the best advantage, ana with as lit tle waste and destruction as pos- Not Hard Drinkers sible and 1aid great stress on the Mr, Gilbert also took the oppor- | importance of reducing this wast- The great | explain the large Trade and | tunity to dispel some popular mis- [ age and destruction to the very J. C. Young, introduced as the lows who were gentlemen in the | this country. spoke briefly at the meeting and best sense of the word. The lum- Mr, Gilbert's address was listen- | recalled some of the rrr berjacks, he said, were not hard | ©@ to with marked attention, and | the organization period and early remarked the! drinkers, as was generally suppos | he was haartily applauded at its | days of the club. Im L | Jl Annual Spring and Summer What You Have Been Waiting For! | Printed in Tabloid Form! SPRING brings new cooking problems, for the season demands different foods than Winter, Such problems will be delight- fully solved for housewives who obtain The Detroit Times Annual Spring and Summer Cook Book. Tempting ways to cook meat, prepare cakes and cookies, cooling drinks, fish and a host of other good things, are described. Nancy Carey contributes many recipes. Be sure to get this Cook Book FREE With Next Sunday's Baht dN Eel Lk a hE Tarun ag-- po + 0 AES ENTE Wa PT TN NT TS RTO A % bo bom ht di hbing BREA A i WTC

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