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Oshawa Daily Times, 29 Jul 1929, p. 9

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GUEST DEFEATS J " THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1929 Re E WRIGHT me - SENIOR BALL TEAM SWAMP 13t01 Oshawa's C.0.B.L. Senior's Swamped by Belleville In Hard-Hitting Game Two Home Runs by Weir of | 'Belleville, Are Big Factor in 13 to 1 Defeat Sustain- ed by General Motors ; Baseball Team on Satur- ~ day Afternoon -- Visitors ' Had Eighteen Hits at Ex- ; pense of Two Local Pitchers General. Motors entry into the C.O.B.L, Senior series suffered their worst defeat of the season when they lost to Belleville Nationals en Sat- urday in a one-sided affair at Alex- andra Park. After the fracas was pronounced over due to rain at the end of the eighth the Nationals were so far ahead the locals could hardly see them. The score at the end of the eighth was 13 to 1. Goodness knows what it would have been if the game had gone into the ninth innings as the Belleville boys were banging the old pill around for fair during 'the last few innings. It is hard to say whose fault it was un- less it was the bats the Belleville gang used, as Oshawa had only one error chalked against them and both pitchers used pitched steady ball Alex Weir and the rest of his banged out 18 hits as against 7 by the local kids. Kids they are com- pared with the Belleville brigade of veterans. Alex Weir hit two circuit clouts and both times several of the acks were occupied. Theodore El- iott, the local catcher, tried to show the boys the way to hit when he banged out a homer, but unfortunate- ly the bases were empty. Mathews followed him with a fweibagper but there was no other results, The rest of the Oshawa boys couldn't seem to catch the 'lea and follow. Several times Lo. Shea who |... .cd for the Nationals was in a hole but each time he pulled out all right. Dutch Os- borne started on the mound for the General Motors and pitched great ball for. the 'first six innings. In the seventh the Belleville boys seemed to have gotten his Fange when the banged out six hits for six runs off him before he was relieved by Math ws. Mathews was touched for three its and one run before the side was retired. Belleville started out by ycoring two runs on the first. Peny paved the way for this with an er- ror. It was hard to call it an error at that, Oshawa got their one and only in the second frame. It was for- tunate that they got one as it saved them from a bad white-wash, Belle- ville got two more runs in the fifth, seven in the seventh and two more in the eighth. It was sure a lucky seventh for the Belleville boys. It would be hard to analyse Osh- awa's defeat. Belleville are all vet- erans at the game and knew too much for the locals. Both the pitchers, Osborne and Mathews, delivered good stuff but when Belleville hit the ball it was always a hit. Neither of the itchers are at fault. Then the locals fad only one error and that only re- sulted in one run really. 'If the lo- cals had half the experience that Peeney Mills and his brother, Alex Mills and his brother and a few more of the Belleville boys had they sure would be able to trounce any team in the league. These = Belleville boys / have been playing Senior ball since the time 75 per cent of the local play- ers were in public school. Oshawa should be proud that they have such a group of the younger generation that can go out and provide opposi- tion to these men. The Game First Inning Belleville--Scott flied out to Math- ews. V. Weir reached 1st on Penu's error. Stole second. H. Mills thrown out at first. V. Weir scored on W. Mills' hit. W. Mills scored on Blake- Is consumed by, the new uxaoc This means a saving of 5Xin Battery ! kee Iy's three! . A. Weir struck out. 2 run hits, 1 error, po flied Hed vt Weir Yen: utton out to V. Weir. u fouled out to M. Green. No runs, no hits, no errors. Second linning Belleville--M. Green thrown out at first; E. Green fouled out to Row- den. J. Shea went to first when hit by pitcher. Scott thrown out at first, o runs, no hits, no errors. Oshawa--Elliott 'knocked a homer. Mathews doubled. Young struck out. Rowden struck out. Mathews thrown out stealing third. 1 run, 2 hits, no errors, Third Inning Belleville--V. Weir thrown out at first; H. Mills thrown out at first. W. Mills flied out to Rowden. No runs, no hits, no errors, Oshawa--Little flied out to Scott. Osborne flied out to V, Weir. Gray beat out a hit. Sutton fouled out to W. Mills. No runs, 1 hit, no errors. Fourth Inning Belleville--Blakely fouled out to Sutton. A, Weir struck out. M Green thrown out at first. No runs, no hits, no "errors. Oshawa--Penu fouled out to M. Green, Elliott fouled out to W. Mills, Mathews walked. Mathews - caught out at first. No runs, no hits, no er- rors. Fifth Innin, Belleville--E. Green hit safe. Green scored on J. Shea's homer. Scott flied out to Gray. V. Weir struck out. H, Mills hit safe. Weir to sec- ond on W. Mills' safety. Blakely flied out to Rowden. 2 runs, 4 hits, no. errors. Oshawa--Young flied out to Blake- ly. Rowden hit safe, Weir to third on Little's hit. Little stole second. Osborne struck out. Gray thrown out at first. No runs, 2 hits, no errors, Sixth Inning Belleville--A. Weir struck out. M. Green hit safe. E. Green hit into a double. M. Green thrown out at second, himself on first. Little to Penu to Sutton, No runs, 1 hit, no errors. Oshawa--Sutton fouled out to W. Mills. Penn thrown out at first. El- liott flied out to A. Weir. No hits, no runs, no errors. Seventh Innin Belleville--Shea hit safe. Shea out at second when Scott hit into a field- er's choice." Scott went to third when V. Weir hit safe. Scott scored. V. Weir went to third when H. Mills hit safe. V. Weir scored, H. Mills went to second when W. Mills hit safe. H. Mills scored. W. Mills went to third when Blakely doubled. Mills and Blakely scored when Weir hit a homer. (Mathews re- lieved Osborne. Feur went to centre field and Gray to right). M. Green hit safe. M. Green went to second when E. Green hit safe. Shea struck out. M. Green scored, E. Green went to third when Scott hit safe. Scott stole second. V. Weir struck out. runs, 9 hits, no errors, Oshawa--Mathews . singled. Math- ews went to second when Young sin- gled. . Mathews was thrown out at third and Rowden at first when Row- den hit into double play Scott to H. Mills, Little flied out to M. Green, 2 hits, no errors, ing Belleville--H. Mills led. 'W. Mills fouled out to Elliott. H. Mills thrown out at second when Blakely hit into fielder's choice. Blakely scored on Alex Weir's homer. M. Green flied out to Rowden. 2 runs, 2 hits, no errors. Oshawa--Fair flied out to A, Weir, Gray reached first on Scott's error. Sutton hit into a double play. Gray at second himself, at first V, Weir to H. Mills, No runs, no hits, 1 error. Official Box Score Belleville ABR HP Scott, 3b ...e000v0en V. Weir, 2b «seeesee § H. Mills, 1b ........ 5 W. Mills;,C sevens 5 Blakely, 88. ..e0s esses 3 A. Weir, sensene 3 M. Green, 1f..co0uus 5 E. Green, rf. ..... J. Shea, Pi covssepe 4 o » pt ft DD DD IN) 4 ND bt DRO BD IND BD G3 G0 4st me COCLUN=O OL CoooonNON=D> SCoocococco=d > 8 oa PR > wn Oshawa Gray, cf, rf ..ci000 4 Sutton, ib Penu, 2b . Elliott, ¢ .... Mathews, rf, p . Young, 3b Rowden, If Little, ss +... Osborne, p Fair, ereavessnsey 1 Dew ~|l cococcomcos ul commmnmoo=l 5 21 COO AO™NLWOO- Sl cooonvoonce =| ccocococomcot Summary--Home runs, A, Weir 2, Shea 1, Elliott 1; three base hits, Blakely. Two base hits, Blakely, Mathews; struck out, by Osborne 5; by Mathews 1; by Shea 4; bases on balls, off Shea 1. Hit by pitcher, by Osborne 1, Shea. Runs off Shea, 1 in 8 innings; off Osborne 10 in 7 1-3 innings; off Mathews, 3 in 1 1-3 inn- ings. Left on bases, Belleville 6, Oshawa 5. Double plays, Oshawa 1, Little to- Penu to Sutton; Belle- ville 2, Scott to H. Mills, V, Weir to H. Mills. Umpires, Ed Lebarr and McKay, of Peterboro, THE TRUTH N (Philadelphia Bulletin) Wifey: "Dear, please do take off that shabby suit. You don't know who may call." Hubby: "Who's likely to call this morning, anyway » . Wifey: "Well--er--the truth is, there's a man calling who offered me $3 for it." LARK AND THAT'S THAT "We bought a loud speaker to our older children at home." "Was the idea successful?" "No, they stay in and listen but as soon as the one is over they go out."--Der Wahre Jakob, Berlin. ; |a Catholic or a Protestant, a CAPTAIN DANCEY GAVE LECTURE ON CANADIANIZATION (Continued from Page 3) lars therein with mental implements wherewith to engage in the battle of e. "There are three types of boy in the schoolroom; the one whose mind controls his body, the one whose body controls his mind, and the third whose stomach controls both. But the children should be taught about their own land; its history and tra- dition and the lives of its great statesmen. In the schools the boys and girls learn the meaning of Cana- dian citizenship, and throughout the breadth and length of Canada, there is not a spark of Canadianization taught in the schools. "We are told that we have no right to call oursclves Canadians, but the census taker who tells us that is just a man without senses. Every time I think of Canada, I think of Heinz' A. | pickles and their fifty-seven varie- ties. It is a curious thing that in Canada to-day there are just fifty- seven varieties of nationalities and each one of those wants Canada to be according to his national pattern. Over-Organized "We are over-organized along 7 | many lines and we have plenty of or- anizations of many types, but in 'anada to-day we are not organized at all, We are running around with- out a head or tail or anything to give us a pride in oursclves. "There are times when I feel dis- gusted with the self-centred, greedy adults of our country, If the boys and girls are to have a proper cn- thusiasm. for their land, the adults must direct their minds into the right channels, but there is an ab- solute lack of interest in these youths who are the cornerstone of our land. The only return for the sacrifice of our youth that was made in the Great War is to build up a true pat- riotism in Canada. "We are living in an age of in- tensive materialism. We are reaching out for material benefits and sacri- ficing the spiritual and artistic values of lite. Citizenship means something more than dollars and cents and mere selfish gain, There are among us too many smug and self-satisfied people who are content to sit back and refuse to be bothered with patri- otic considerations and service to God, the community and the nation.' gious Differences Captain Dancey, alluding to a lit- tle town of his acquaintance where Protestants and Catholics refused to fraternize with each other and made a dividing 'railway line the symbol of their separation from each other's interests, spoke of the necessity of getting rid in Canada of the sectional and factional fences that prevent real, active citizenship. He referred to his experience while visiting Stockton, in California, and meeting the head of the Masonic Order there who was just about to give a Jewish rabbi his cheque for one hundred dol- lars towards the building of a new Catholic church in whose erection the Hebrew was actively interested, "In the trenches of France and Flanders, the boys would not think of asking their comrades: 'Are you Are you a Liberal or Conservative?' Thank God, we had something * bigger to think about them. ? The War Breeder "And the class of person who will inevitably breed war in any country is the man or woman who goes about talking of his neighbors and hating everyone and everything in his heart. If those who engage so constantly in the great indoor sport of picking out the mote in their brothers' eyes {would use all that energy in discov- ering their own shortcomings, what a wonderful land we would have. The spirit of tolerance, between man and man, community and com- munity, nation and nation, was re- commended by the speaker, who spoke of the manner in which On- tario constantly wars with Quebec, and the difficulties which arise be- tween the East and the West. "In Detroit recently fourteen prizes. resented in the schools were won oreign-born children and thirteen of them went to children of Hebrew parentage. In Vancouver, nearly every year, a little Japanese girl car- ries off the awards in school, but public opinion orevents the publica- ST. CATHARINES CREW St. Catharines' powerful eight- oared crew furnished a big sur- prise at the Canadian Henley on Friday when they won the junior eight final from Detroit and Wyan- dottes. The Garden City entry took the decision by three-quarters of length in a great driving finish, while Detroit swept in ahead of Wyandottes by two lengths, The time of six minutes and 40 seconds bettered that made by Detroit in the 150-pound senior eight heat, and St, Kitts people think the crew SURPRISE IN JUNIOR EIGHTS will win the Hanlan Memorial Cap today. No. 1, from left to right, the St. Catharines crew; F, Court ney, B. Copren, .C. Warren, .G. Robinson, R. Welch, .A. Vander- brugge, D. Robinson, T. Bramah, D. Thom, (Cox.) No. 8 shows Gib- son Shaw of the Argonaut Rowing Club, Toronto, and The Daily Star staff who won the junior singles. No. 2, Elwood Bole, Winnipeg Rowing Club single sculler, who won the Assocation singles from M. Brett of St, Catharines, tion of her name in the press. p Boisterous Minority "We have here in Canada a boister- ous minority that bitterly and con- sistently opposes every honest effort that is made to build up the nation. They block these efforts in the schools, in our organizations and .in our parliaments. Liberals and Con- servatives are alike in this regard. There is no difference between them. And their excuse for doing so is that these efforts will disrupt the Empire. There is nothing farther from the truth and their interference furthers that inferiority complex which is the Canadian curse to-day. We do not believe in ourselves and our boys and girls have no way of being schooled in the precepts of citizenship and in the belief in their own land that is necessary 'to their adherence to it, and. steadfast belief in its possibili- ties, in later life. I will take a Ger- man family and put them down in the United States for ten years, then bring them to Canada and leave them here for forty years. Ask them at the end of that time what nation- ality they possess and they will tell you they are Americans. We should try to plant in the minds of our boys and girls in the schools the same be- lief in Canada's future and greatness and make them proud of their Cana- dian parentage, We are breeding nei- ther Canadians nor Britishers in the Canada of today. "God forbid that we should become so marrow that we believe that all the good is bound up in our own land and all the bad in others, It was a marvellous experience to me to go down to Alabama and speak at a 'Ro- tary meeting there, where the or- chestra struck up "O Canada" and the members sang it a hundred times bet- ter than any gathering of the kind could sing it here." "There are twelve millions of Can- adians living in the United States and we send there seventy per -cent of the graduates of our universities. We are giving them the best of our brains and we are getting nothing in return. . "I would like to see this immigra- tion movement taken out of the hands of the transportation compa- nies and placed in charge of a non- partisan committee, I would like to see our own Canadian boys and girls given the same opportunities and privileges that are lavished on for- eign-born peoples coming to our land and I would like to see brought into, Canada only those who can assimilate by |and prove that they can be good citizens. We have here a marvellously rich heritage and I do not think we should pay people to come here who may have been failures in their own countries and certainly will not be anvthine more in ada," HAMILTON WOMAN STRICKEN IN JAIL Hamilton, July 29"--Taken ill while serving a jail term on a I..C.A. con- viction, Mary Penn of 209 Pearl street north, died in the General Hospital yesterday. Heart failure, from which she suffered for many years, was the cause of death. An inquest will be held. On July 17 Mrs. Penn was sen- tenced to two months. She was ill and had to be assisted to the witness box. She complained of heart trou- ble and when officials learned that she could not pay the fine, 'they or- dered that she be examined at the General hospital before being remov- ed to the cells. This was done and the report was to the effect that her condition was not serious enough to preven her from being taken to the jail, Jail authorities saw no change in her condition of late. The fatal seiz- ure was a sudden one and immed- iately her illness was made known Governor Lalonde summoned Dr. L. A, Richmond, acting jail physician, who arranged for her immediate re- moval to the hospital. JEAN LUSSIER Daredevil stunt man from Spring- field, Mass., who went over Niagara Falls in a rubber ball last July 4, and plans to repeat the performance .this year and as well pass through the whirl. pool. He plans {0 make the try on September 2. Lh WELLAND CANAL OPENS NEW ERA Toronto Quietly Preparing for Coming of Big Freighters Toronto, July 29.--The opening of the new Welland canal in Au- gust, 1930, will mean iron works and a coking plant for Toronto, It will mean, according to disclos- ures made here to-day, the found- ing of a milling industry in Toronto that may soon challenge that of Buffalo, It will mean, in the opin- fon of Gen. Geo Langton, manag- er of the Toronto Harbor Com- mission, and prominent business executives of Toronto, a new era for Toronto and Lake Ontario ports of increased shipping and harbor prosperity and growth, Transpor- tation charges on coal alone will be 90 cents a ton cheaper, It is the new 1,000 acre eastern industrial area of Toronto harbor that iron works and coking plant are to be located. Beyond the gen- eral information of what may be expected, General Langton and wheat men would not go. On the question of a steel plant and a coking plant for Toronto, which was last prominently before the public in July and August, 1927, when a report was made for the city of Toronto by Messrs D. H. and George D. MacDougall, Gen. Langton weighed his words and sald: "I expect to see blast furn- aces and coking plants in opera- tion in this new eastern harbor terminals section at the foot of Cherry St. following the opening of the new Welland canal, Two significant facts about Tor- onto harbor are conclusive evidence of how the city is quietly prepar- ing for the coming of the big up- per lake freighters. after hte new canal is opened. In the first place the western entrance to Toronto harbor js be- ing dredged to 22 feet in depth. In the second place, the Toronto Harbor Cmmission is completing the 120 foot span bridge across the eastern ship channel to the new 1,000 acres of the eastern indus- trial area of reclaimed land in Ashbridge's bay. The completion of both of these projects is to be coterminous with the opening of the rew Welland canal, "The completion of this bridge in time for the opening of naviga- tion next year," Gen. Langton ex- plained, "will immediately throw 200 acres south of the ship canal on the market. The new bridge has a 120 feet span with two 140 feet approaches on either side." "With the opening of navigation next year, also, the federal govern- ment will have completed its dredg- ing contract for deepening the western channel to rermit any boat coming from the head of the lakes and loaded to the 20 feet of upper lake draught to enter the harbor." "Have negotiations for blast fur naces and a coking plant been completed?" General Langton was asked. "We never dislose our nego- tiations." he replied. 'To do so would give competitors an unfair advantage." Some of the by-products of the founding of a coking industry in Toronto suggested by the manager of the harbor board would be ad- ditional industries dependent upon such a plant, such as tar products, sulphate of amonia and possibly the recovery of benzol, "A 'coking plant here," explain- ed Gen. Langton, "would ensure a supply of e for the citizens of Toronto at uniform prices and free- dom from price variations and fuel shortages during a coal strike." "It wouldn't be at all far-fetch- ed to imagine a milling plant in Toronto harbor," acknowledged G. F. Briggs of Toronto Elevators Ltd., the new 2,000,000 bushel ele- vator established here last year. "The opening of the new Welland canal was what we had in mind when we built the elevator," he said. Mr. Briggs estimated that the saving in the transportation of grain alone on account of the lar- 'ger loads that could be carried and the passing of the necessity to tran- ship into the smaller canal boats, as at the present time, at Port Col- borne, would amount to three. quarters of a cent a bushel, ap- proximately $100,000 for this ele- vator alone in a year, and a host i St. Catharines, July 29.--Bend- ing to the oars with machine-like precision on the roughest water that has ever "tagged" the Cana- dian Henley course, Jack Guest Saturday afternoon sculled his way to victery and fame when he swept 1 in ahead of Joe Wright, Jr., by three full' lengths, and thus won the Dominion senior singles cham- pionship, For one day at least Guest ruled alone. The favoring breeze did not worry him to any extent, he sculled swiftly and true and it was apparent to all before the race had been half run that he would be the victor, As the new titleholder flashed across the finish line in near-rec- ord time, from the crowded stands arose a mighty and thunderous cheer. There were many there who had hoped for such a result; there were few who thought it pos- sible, and there were others, who even' in defeat, are still loyal to the former Diamond Sculls win- ner, But one and all they ac- claimed the 1929 titleholder, the man of determination, who for- got that Wright had beaten him numerous times before, and went out there and sculled like a Han- lan. Guest, sculling brillianty, show- ed that he was a good pace-setter, and Wright despite his gallant efforts, could not cut in much on that mountainous advantage, The new champion, who steered a per- fect course under the conditions, had plenty of reserve strength left and crossed the finish line in the fast time of 7 minutes and 54 2-b seconds, four-fifths of a second slower than the record establishea by Wright when he defeated W. F. G. Gilmore of Philadelphia in the single final two years ago. In defeat Wright was as great as in victory. He was the first to wave congratulations to his club- mate. In a statement after the race he said: "Guest is welcome to the verdict and all the honors that go with it. I did my hest. I have no excuses. I will race against Jack at the United States Nation- al Association Regattta and am also willing to meet him in a spee- fal match event at the Canadian National Exhibition." Congratulations for Guest Joe Wright, Sr., Coach of the of other firms, as a result, would benefit from this transportation saving. Though less certain about the effects of the coming of the larg- er boats to Toronto next year, the coal companies at least have. lo- cated on the waterfront to reap the advantages of the cheaper water transporattion, and have calculat- ed a saving of $1.10 per ton. Confirming these figures, J. Herb. Milnes, of the Milnes Coal Co, Ltd., drew the deduction that all big downtown buildings and manufacturing plants that draw coal from the harbor trucks will especially reap benefit of this saviig in coal trans- portation. SEA DRAMA THRILL GIVEN PASSENGERS Sixty-eight Carried Ashore While Fire Menaces Kawartha Steamer Lindsay, July 29.--Once more a gallant ship's captain has won re- nown in time of stress aboard his craft by "holding her nozzle agin' the bank" until the safety of his pass- engers was assured, Like a drama of the sea was the adventure which befell the sixty- eight aboard the trims little st Jack Guest Wins Sin Sculling Title, Beating - Joe Wright by 3 Lengths Argonauts, was biterly disappoint- .. ed, but he shook Jack Guest by the hand, and like the defeated cham. - + pion, had no alibis. He watched the race from the' 'seawall" and - his roars of encouragement could be heard far across the choppy waters, but he must have xmown ° Hat 30 was beaten long before the - finish, Argonaut Eight Features Argonauts' great eight came through handsomely to take the senior event, the Double Blue win- ning from the sensational St, Cath- erines Rowing Club juniors by two -- lengths and a half. St. Cathar- ines, fighting - rimly, lasted long enough to beat Wyandettes to the -: finish line by balf a length, Mc. Kitts, who sprang one of the big- gest surprises of the regatta when - they won the junior championship, give promise of developing into - strong contenders for semfor hone ors, if Coach Fitzpatrick can keep ~* the crew intact, something which is doubtful. _ Argonauts' victory was, of course, expected, They had too much class for thelr opponents--it ° i doubtful if there is an eight in America that can trance them-- and they are a real credit to Coach Wright who has labored long and earnestly in their behalf. i Argonauts Triumph St, Catharines, July 29, -- Argo- nauts, Toronto, garnered the mast points at the 47th annual Canadi- .an Association of Amateur Oafs- men Regatta, which finished Sat- urday on the Royal Canadian Hen- ley course here. Argos had mark- ed success in the closing events and were represented by a larger num- ber of competitors than any other club. The point standing, exclusive of high school events, follows: 1st 2nd 3rd T't"1 Argonauts, Toronto § 24 Dons, Toronto . .. St. Catharines ... Brockville .. « «. Detroit .. .. « «oe McGill University . Winnipeg .. .. .. Westsides, Buffalo Lachine, Quebec . Penn. B.C., Phila. U. of Toronto . .. Ottawa ... .. ++0 Jubilee B.C. Halif'x Wyandotte, Mich, . CHMHNOMMOO® kW NOCOOHMOHMD HW 5 1 1 0 2 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 NNN A® Regent ine Now Playing The Trial | MARY DUGAN NORMA SHEARER An All Talking Sensation Regular Prices! Lintonia, owned by Captain. Grey of Sturgeon Point, while the craft was making her regular trips from the re- sorts in the lake to Lindsay. Fire Discovered Soon after the steamer left Pleas- ant Point wharf fire was discovered on the deck. There was no panic, but the commander ran his steamer into a resort known as Snug Harbor, where the passengers had to be car- ried a short distance through the wa- ter to the shore. It was also discov- ered that one of the lifeboats. had caught fire and could not be used.. There was considerable excit t but no disorder. Fire was supposed to have been started from a spark from the smokestack. The blaze was extin- guished before it did any great harm. Steamer Strikes Rock; Founders North Bay, July 29.--The steamer Miami Beach, plying between North Bay and the French river, on Friday night foundered in 20 feet of water in the channel near Hayes cottage, French river. The passengers were taken off safely. The boat, which was in charge of Captain Williams, struck a submerged rock, while making its visits to cottages, Captain Clarke, of Sturgeon Falls, has left for the scene of the accident with scows, to try to raise the steamer. A large hole in the stern which was occasioned by the impact probably will be repaired at Sturgeon Falls. Theo Legault, M.P.P., announced yesterday morning that tourists will be transported during the next week to the French river on the steamer Estelle B. ° i ---- fn Si Ola Sol seems to be good at re- fueling these days, too. -- Sault Dally Star. A lot of child welfare work can be done with a switch,--Elizabeth- town (Ky.) News. _ aibanimus | Regent ~ - New Martin} 'Reginala | DENNY 13 His / Lucky - Day " COMEDY. {. Now-Playing

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