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Oshawa Daily Times, 26 Jul 1929, p. 10

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NE OSHAWA DALY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1929 (Continued From Page 3) "inating device is one of the many © 4 3 | "displacement. fut and wider chassis frame. anding mechanical improv hing this new car.' Whee} ternal-expansion Servo. b springs and d rs are addi ether wit a ing non-glare windshield, re-de- ving nongre and clutch, larger ber motor mountings and a stur- The top road speed on all models obtained at slower sugine speeds an were possible ard piston models, due to the ee piston Fuel economy en retained due toa better AR. between the engine power and car car embodies § 'the new McLaughlin-Buick 'weight, phos Jmproved carburetion. The a system in the new two major improve- ments--the gasoline pump has been re-designed and improved, and the ow speed carburetor adjustment has 'been eliminated. Thanks to the thermostatically ontrolled radiator shutters the per- ufficiently warm. Semi-Elliptic Springs One of the outstanding features on is the semi- -elliptic spring suspension with § idouble- -acting hydraulic shock absorb- aoNTIETEN A 'ers. The shock absorbers are a new 'development, and check car on both 'bound and rebound. Their action is 'controlled by metering valves which {insure uniformity of action under all {road conditions; however the torque- 'tube drive and 'sealed chassis con- 'struction have. been retained, The 1930 McLaughlin-Buicks has adopted the mechanically operated icontrolled-Servo internal brakes, \ iprotected against adverse road and 3 (weather conditions. On. the "40" 'series the brakes are 14 inches in "diameter; on the "50" and "60" ser- | isteering wheel is lies. the diameter "is 15 inches. A 'separate hand emergency or parking brake completes the system. Ease of Steering Remarkable ease of steering has been obtained by the use of an ac- curately made and fully adjustable 'worm and roller type of steering igear. 'All road shocks through the reduced to the 'minimum by the special road shock liminator placed at the front end of Brame on the steering gear side. This i device allows for a slight movement 'and in this way road shocks are ab- i sorbed in the shock eliminator with- out being transferred to the steering 'wheel. i The chassis on all models are en- CATARRH Here As Usual if you veh Catarrh, | iE Hay Fo Fever. 50 cents from W. H. Karn, Your. Nose Needs "Nostroline" by i Continted Fos from page 1) every constituency on the rig province during tae next month. ~ Should not Canadians have an equal opportunity for self expres- puble. sion as people of other countries of the world, Mr. Bennett questioned. Was it right that the people in the republic south of the 45th paral- lel should dump their surplus fruits and vegetables into Canada and 'destroy the markets of our own growers. Yet this had been permitted by the present administration since 1925, he said. The Liberal govern: ment had rescinded the dumping clause at the behest of a Liberal meniber from Saskatchewan be cause power was more Amportant | ou than our fruit and vegetable grow- ers. The industry was suffering serious consequences. , "I ask the government if they are sincere in some of their state- ments," said Mr. Bennett. "Why they do mot pass an order-in-coun- cil putting this clause into effect. They do not have to wait until pur- liament meets." Premier King had taken the at- titdue in Parliament that Canada must not provoke the United States i nthe matter of tariff." "Are they proud of this?" Mr. Bennett went on. "Don't provoke them. That is the statement of your prime min- ister. Imagine what they must think in Washington of a counery, fifty thousand of whose soldiers lie dead in the fields of France and Flanders when the head of the government of this country takes a stand like that. "It was the duty of Canada to look after the interests of Cana- dians," Mr. Bennett declared and legislate for the interests of their own people. We are told that a really hap- py man is one who feels as impor- tant at home as he does at a lodge meeting in full uniform.--Galt Re- porter. Golfing bookkeeper out our way says the hardest fault he had to overcome was the habit of carry- ing his putter behind his ear.--Ar- kansas Gazette. rm ---------------------- That's a cheerful bit of news from Kansas City. In a fight be- tween gangsters who were shot dead but no innocent bystander was hit.--Boston Transcript. The time will come when a U.S. flier will cross the Atlantic and 1~+4 on an inside page. --Brandon Sun, $1 amon tirely new. The frames are tapered and are extra wide at the rear mak- ing a much better support for the bodies. x Fos Trot Vocal ictor Records Honey Rudy Vallée and His Connecticut Yankees Mildred Hunt 21869 22024 Pagan Love Song Waltz Rudy Vallée Vocal To Be 21931 21992 The Troubadours Franklyn Baur In Love (Especially With You) Pox Trot Waring's Pennsylvanians ' Yocal Jack Smith 22023 21987 Jack Smite Louise from the motion picture * Innocents of Paris" Vocal Fox Trot Piano Solo Ben Pollack and His Park Orchestra 21918 21941 216544 Maurice Chevalier Central Harry Thomas Fox Movietone Follies Breakaway That's You, Baby Fox Trots by George Olsen and HisfMusic on Victor Records 21927 and 2191 Big City Blues Walking With Susie Victor Talking ~ Machine Co. All the latest Red Seal records by famous Victor artists PARTY DROWNED] i (Continued fron from page-1) 'night and, owing to the rough con- tae | dition of the roads and the remote- ness of the spot at which the drownings occurred the Coroner, with Mr, Hisgrove, Jr. who had motored to Buckinghati from Ot- 'tawa with Fred Taeger, brother of one of the victims, did not reach Houder's Lake until about three o 'clock this mornng. « At the camp they found Mr, His- grove, 8r., in a serious condition '| and' in neeed of medical attention as a result of shock. News of the targedy received here last night by the families of Miss Lamont and Mss Taegerw as the first word they heard of the young women since they left for the camp last Wednesday. The two were close friends and were employed in the millinery department ef a local Seperrmeria: afore. " Miss Liimont 'was bn fa Mont- real. She was 27 years of age. Miss Taeger had lived in Hull 'most of her life. Her age was giv- en as 37. i Mrs. Hsgrove was the wife of a well-known photographer. The search for the body of Miss Lamont is being continued today. NO CHANGE IN BRITISH POLICY (Continued from page 1) story 'of Egypt since the termination of the Turkish suzeramty in 1914. In 1922 the declaration recognizing Egypt as an independent sovereign state in internal affairs had four re- servations, Security of British com- munication ; defence against foreign aggression: protection of minorities: and the Sudan. The abortive Anglo-Egyptian trea- ty of 1927 would, if ratified, have su- perseded the 1922 declaration. In reply to questions by Mr, Bald- win, the foreign secretary said therc had been no charge in policy. He had seen the Egpytian premier and discussed the situation. Proposals submitted by the Egyptian premier had been referred to a sub-committee of the. cabinet, which held its first meeting only last Monday. ¥ "Whatever our policy is, it will not be put 'into operation until it has been submitted for the approval of the Egyptian people and to this House for ratification," he said, add- ing no steps were being taken with- out full consultation withthe Dom- inions, The foreign secretary told of the telegram sent to Lord Lloyd and the high commissioner's visit to the Bri- tish foreign office, where he submit- ted his resignation tothe foreign sec- retary. He parted from Mr. Hen- derson on the best of terms. "All went well until he had an interview with the former chancellor of the exchequer (Rt. Hon. Winston Chur- chill," Mr, Henderson went on. This brought a storm of cheers and laughter from the Labor benches. "I suppose," Mr. Henderson contin- ued, "it was because of that conver- sation that I was asked in a not very friendly way if it had extorted the resignation." Mr. Churchill protested that his 'l question was based on Mr. Hender- son's own description of the telegram to Lord Lloyd. "I don't think that lays me open to the charge of being an extortion- er, 'Mr. Henderson heatedly retort- ed. With the House in uproar, Mr. Churchill shouted * you are not going to incriminate 'me," He charged Lord Lloyd had not received proper cour- tesy; he had only done his duty in expressing his views. "Does the governiment want pupepts as its rep- resentatives ?" he asked. He assert- ed there had been prejudice against Lord Lloyd in the foreign office and in view of what had happened Btitish representatives abroad would hesitate to freely express their views to the government, asthey should do. NO HARVEST HELP NEEDED FROM EAST Winnipeg, July 26.--No labor will be required from eastern Can- ada to harvest this year's crop in the west, in view of the short | crop, the heavy immigration move- ment this year, and the use of com- bined harvester-threshers, it was decided at a meeting held here to- day by the Canadian Passenger as- sociation, attended by immigra- tion, labor, provincial government and railway representatives, The following statement was handed to the press by J. B. Par- ker, secretary: "In view of the short crop, heavy immigration movement this year, combined harvester and thresher available, and on account of the labor available by reason of the general industrial and mining development in the west, it was decided that no labor would be re- quired from eastern Canada this year. The whole situation of the harvest will be taken care of by labor available in western Can- ada." RUNS IN FRONT OF CAR Toronto, July 26.--Running out from behind a parked car on St. Clair avenue near Runnymede, last night, Jean Nichols, 8, of 3 Blake ly street, was knocked down by an automobile driven by W. J. Rob- ertson, 2656 Yonge street. Robertson was traveling east on St. Clair at the time of the acei- dent. A number of children were playing on the street and Jean left them to run across the street, di- rectly into the path of the oncom- ing car. She was taken to the Hospital for Sick Children where it was found her injuries were ot a minor nature. ORIENT JS GIVEN AT CHAUTAUQUA (Continued From Page 3) pregnant' Sentences, gave a word pic- ture of the might force: of the awakening East, with its 4,700, years of history, ° 400 thou: s lof square miles' of territory and its 400 millions of people, For nearly five thousand years, China has retained its integrity, be- cause it holds so fast to the doc- ttine of honor to parents and be- cause it knows so well how to play a poor hand well. "There is not, in the length: and bread of China, one national asy- lum for the insane. And that is not because we have no insane or feeble- minded people, but because they are taken care of in the families." "But, here in this land, you can- not understand what we lack in China. There is one doctor there to every 418,000 people; one apothecary to every thirty-two millions and there are more nurses in Ontario than in the whole of China, Japan and Korea combined. We have only one teacher to every 108,000 children, If some of your lawyers, who are so plentiful here, would go to China and help the widows there as well as they do here, they wouldn't have to marry them, as is often the case in your country, A widow in China has the advantage of your women. When her husband dies intestate, she has the power to take everything that he has left." "China," declared the speaker, "will never become militarized nor Bol- shevized, because she wants to be- come Christianized. Seven of her present Cabinet Ministers are Chris- tians, and one of them is the sixty- seventh descendant of Confucius himself. My own mother was a Buddhist, my father was a follower of Confucius, 1 have five Presby- terian sisters, and four Baptist bro- thers, and I am a Methodist!" Then he went into some amazing statistics that caused his hearers to sit up and listen keenly to this Oriental who had come to point out to them the greatness of their own land and its wonderful potentialities. "Canada is the amphitheatre of the world and you hold the balance of power because you are the pivot be- tween the East and the West, Thank God that in the hands of Canada lies the peace of the future civilizations of the world." During the Company's last fiscal year, ending April 30th last, the Central Manitoba Mines operating in Eastern Manitoba, produced gold tu the amount of $521,000. The mill is handling 160 tons of ore daily. The ore runs about $10 per ton and costs about $5.50 exclusive of devel- opment. Well it is easier to wash a pair of legs than to wash a pair of stockings.--Toledo Blade. -[VEILTOBELIFTED ON RESIGNATION Henderson Promises Full Statement on Trouble Af- fairs in Egypt London, July: 26~Today Rt. Hon. Arthur Henderson, foreign secretary lifts the veil from the troubled af- fairs of Egypt. On a motion to ad- journ, he will make a full statement in the House of Commons on the re- signation of Baron Lloyd, high com- missioner of During yesterday's debate in the House of Lords, Lord Parmoor, lor president of the council, was pressed | a repeatedly for the text of Mr. Hend- erson's telegram of July 3 to Lord Lloyd which "most people would have accepted as an invitation to termins ate his position," but in view of Mr. Henderson's coming statement, the lord president declined to go far- ther. Lord parmoor intimated, however, that as stated in 1924, the Labor gov- ernment's policy was, with certain re- servations, 'to make Egypt an inde- pendent sovereign cotintry as, regards her internal affairs. Replying to the Earl of Reading, former viceroy of India, Lord Par- moor said there had been a "change in procedure, perhaps," regarding Eg- ypt's internal affairs, and added the change "might be all important." The MacDonald government hoped to bring about with Egypt the mea- sure of self-government which suc- cessive governments had repeatedly stated to be their aim, said Lord Passfield, secretary for the dominions, who added the dominions had been fully taken into the government's con- fidence with regard to negotiations in progress. Asked with whom the negotiations had been carried on, Lord Passfield said "With the government of Egypt. They are not yet complete." His questionér was Lord Brentford, who as Sir William Joynson-Hicks, was home secretary in the Baldwin gov- ernment. Lord Brentford said Lord Lloyd enjoyed the late government's confidence, Birkenhead is Bitter The debate closed with a bitter at- tack by the Earl of Birkenhead, for- mer secretary for India, who said the government's attitude had been scan- dalous, indecorous and unprecedented. He particularly criticized the fact that Mr, Henderson's telegram , to Lord Lloyd had not been obtained from the foreign office, and it was, he said, a scandal and an insult that information should be refused. Intervening, Lord Passfield said certain matters could not be produced in the public interest, whereupon the Earl of Birkenhead retorted that this telegram was the pivot of Lord Lloyd's resignation. Surely, he sa:d, it was the duty of parliament to in- vestigate the circumstances. The Earl of Birkenhead said he had reasons for saying that negotia- tions of a formal nature had taken Tolace between fhe Macdonald' ov- ernment and h Say 04 1 ypt without Lord igh porscnancs in infor- med, and said he hi the rumor that a document had been actually signed wis untrue, onstrous Usurpation If it was the purpose of a Minority ernment in absence of at to make bold and novel experi- ments in the fabric of the empirej|| the Earl of Birkenhead said he would |} use whatever influence he had to put} the government out of power. Such a thing would be "a monstrous Hisurp. | ation of the rights and privileges of parliament," he said. © Rumor is busy as parliament a- waits Mr, Henderson's statement. For ts that big are com- ing in Egypt are made by comment- ators, Two reports going the rounds ath That the vacant high commis- d sionership will not be filled and that minigtef will be sent to Egypt in- stead That the 080s in Egypt will be reduced, and will be in the na- ture of civil police. ress Comment "It is clear," pov Times says edi- torially, "that his (Lord Lloyd's) re- lations with the foréign office were strained long before Sir Austen Chamberlain left it, and that Mr. Henderson -has done little more than take up his predecessor's legacy. It should have been possible to arrange matters by a transfer to a post where he would be better placed than at Cairo, not by a quarrel. The method adopted is good neither for Egypt nor reat Britain." The Conservative Morning Post strongly upholds Lord Lloyd. "Clear- ly Lloyd in effect was dismissed," it says, "The immediate cause of this disgraceful treatment of a great pub- lic servant lies in the enmity and intrigues of extremists in Egypt, working with the left-wing Laborites in_Great Britain," TWO BURNED IN LAUNCH BLAST Leakage of Gasoline Causes Explosion at Hastings Rock Peterboro, July 26--Two men were painfully burned by an explosion cof gasoline fumes on the cabin cruiser "Mistral" as it was about to enter the Trent river lock at Hastings Wednesday night, They were rush- ed to St. Joseph's hospital and in spite of an inexplicable ban against press inquiries, it was learned that one of the men is seriously burned about the head, arms and breast, and the other is suffering with burns on the arms and face. It was reported that their names are Kellogg and Putman of Buffalo, and that Putman is the more serious- ly burned, although his condition is not considered dangerous, It was stated by an eye-witness that éne of the men was blown out '| water by Claude Hoard, Women Are Picking Up § Cool Summer Dresses Here for Actually Less Than Makers Cost One rack of Pretty Trimmed Prints. Priced at Another Rack of Woven Voiles, Craysheens & Foulards at .. Organdie $1.00 ~$1.95 Double Fugi Dresses at $3.95 Washable Silks at Crepes and Printed $6.65 serene. If we can suit you. We can surely save you money. TL EO of the launch by the force of t' explosion, He was dragged out of the the lock- master. His upper clothing had been burned off, most of his hair and he was in great pain. It was learned that the "Mistral" had approached the lock and signaled for the opening of the highway bridge, but engine trouble developed and the owner of the boat called out that he would have to tie up for 20 minutes. One of the employes on the government dredge which is operat- ing along the retaining wall of the river below the lock, looked into the cruiser and noticed a leakage of || gasoline. He decided it. was healthier to get out. It is understood that the leak was from a glass tube by which | the gasoline was pum up into t engine. A drain pipe was opened te | carry off the flooding gasoline and as the two men on the boat were engaged about the engine the ex- plosion of fumes flamed suddenly a. | round them. i Both men jumped immediately from | the blazing interior. f 54 Church St, Flour, Grain, POULTRY SUPPLIES BRANTFORD BINDER TWINE HOGG & LYTLE. Ltd. Feed Phone 203 ACRES - 38,500 Harmony. Six room frame eel ee, Te 1 | ter on -- Ideal place for Motorists' est y gion ory By For terms ™}. H. R. LUKE 52 King St, E. Phoues 871 or 687W LUMBER - F.L. BEECROFT Whitby Lumber and Wood Yard. Phone Oshawa 324 Whitby 13 HARDWOOD FLOORS LAID BY EXPERT MBOHANICS Old floors finished like new. Storm windows, doors. General tractors. B. W. HAYNES Su W. Phone 0, 161 King COAL COAL , Phone 198 Ww. J.SARGANT ard--89 Bloor Street E. Ocders Pn Prom ?Oshaw270nt. V. A. Henry INSURANCE 3% Simcoe St. 8. Phones 1198W---Office 1858J Residence STORE FOR RENT At 9 Prince St. Apply ROSS, AMES & GARTSHORE CO. 185 King Street West, Oshawa. Phone 1100 Machinery Repairing NOTHING TOO LARGE NOTHING TOO SMALL Adanac Machine Sho 161 King St. W. Phone 1 For Your Drug Needs THOMPSON'S Ng 10 Simone ty: 8---We Deliver li For Better Values tn DIAMONDS Corner King and Prince Cash or Terms List Your Firm in the "Times" Business Directory! INSULATING BUILDING BOARD WARM IN WINTER - COOL IN SUMMER DISTRIBUTED BY OSHAWA LUMBER COMPANY LIMITED OSHAWA, ONT, LUMBER J Building Materials Prompt Delivery Right Prices Waterous Meek a pa High Class Interior Trim Rough and Dressed ; Lumber W. J. TRICK COMPANY LIMITED 25 Albert Street Phones 230 & 157. Real Estate Insurance CUTLER & PRESTON 64 KING ST. W. Telephone 572-228 Night Calls 510-1560 AT THIS TIME Xou should buy one of our 8 roomed garage homes on Gibbons St. Heights. .Elec- 'tric lights. Good water. $875 with $50 cash, balance as rent. DISNEY Opposite Post Office. Phone 1550 W. A. HARE 23%; Simcoe St. North Hundreds of people wear almost with comfort Hare's Faultless Lenses

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