ATT PT is id SHAWL SCHOOLS + TO HAVE FAIR AT Tr ALEXANDRA PARK (Continuéd from Page 3) son Robert Moon; S. Simcoe, Zen- ovi Salmers; ~Cedardale, Hubert Boorman ! nm, 25 yds.--Peanut Race -- Girls - under 1025 cts., 15 cts., 10cts-- | 'N.- Simcoe, Margaret Race; Mary, Jupe Luke; King, Ina Brooks; geutre, "Helen Carroll; Albert, Edi Barnes; Ritson, Norma Buss; 8. Simcoe, Dorothy Lang; Lorna Delley, Pie Bating Marathon--Boys un- der 10--25 cts., 15 cts., 10 cts.-- |G, N. Simcoe, Ray Baldwin; Mary, Howard Fraser; King, Ross Ed- . wins; Centre, James Taylor: Al-| pd. ondeo bert, Steve Rupik; Ritson, Morris Markowsky; S. Simcoe, Henry Reed; Cedardale, Jack Shaw, ~ "B0"yds. Girls 8 and 9--25 cts, 15 'cts, 10 cts--N. Simcoe, Hilda Hawkshaw; Mary, Reta Allan; King, Peggy Henry; Centre, Lily Dumingan; Albert, Margaret Brown; Ritson, Anne Wilson; S. Simeoe, Marion Paul; Cedardale, Isabel Mallett. 50 yds.--Boys 8 and 9--25 cts, 15 ets., 10 cts.--N. Simcoe, Doug- las Hall; Mary, Stanley Hobbs; King, Fred Preston; Centre, Gor- don Perkins; Albert, Steve Ruplk: Ritson, Harold Ramshaw: 8. Sim- coe, Ambrose. Shéstowski; Cedar- dale, Jack Shaw. Balloon Blowing Marathon-- Girls open--25 cts., 15 cts., 10 cts. --N, Simcoe, Ida Dyment; Mary, Jean Hobbs; King, Marguerite White: Centre, Doris McInally; Al- bert, Dorothy Vamplew; Ritson, Nellie Mydam; S. Simcoe, Emily Matthews; Cedardale, Phyllis Langford. ; | Wand Race--50 yds., boys open ~--25 cts., 15 cts., 10 cts.--N, Sim- coe, Monty Cranfield, Robt. Dun- ford; Mary, Floyd Bradd, Reggie Burr; King, Harry Medland, George Backageorsge; Centre, Sanford Brown, Reggie Skelton: Albert, James Sutton, George Wilson; Rit- gon; Clifford Kelley, Wm. Mitchel; 8. Simcoe, Jeroslaw Salmers, Ar- thur Sargent; Cedardale, Marshal Gillard, Lorne Curry. 60 yds.--Girls, 10, 11, 12-- 25 cts, 15 cts., 10 cts.--N. Simcoe, Ruby Adams; Mary, Oressa Monti- gomery; King, Alma Merrick; Centre, Lorrain Watson; Albert, Alta Sproule; Ritson, Milly Brown; 8. Simcoe, Amy Parker; dale, Ruby Smith. 60 yds--~Boys 10, 11, 12, 25¢, 15c. 10c--N. Simcoe, Jack Dafoe; Mary, Floyd Bradd; King, Jack Gaynor; Centre, - Abie Collis; Albert, Wm, Wilson ;. Ritson, Everett Harmer; S. Simcoe, Ed. Shemilt; Cedardale, John Spraggs. + Wheel Barrow Rece a Boys under 12--25¢, 15c. 10c--N. Simcoe, James Wright, John A. McDonald; Mary, Cedar-- Arthur Cory, Jick Hobbs; King; Bob Haines, HE 3 Centre, Bill Frome, ph" © : George Lemere, Bert oe pole Gallas, ohn. Goodes, | Si "Anthony; Rit- Garfield Mc- : Donald Laur-} Three s Legged ' Race,--~Girls open, 25¢,,15¢c. 10c--N. Simcoe, Mabel Cain, Doreen Hurst; Mary, Jean n, Eva Crawford; King, Annee McDon- ald, Stella Brooks; Centre, Flora Mcintyre, Betty. Chalmers; Albert, Lois Wilson, Evelyn Chatham; Rit- son, Annie Chaszwski, Violet Thomp- son; S, Simcoe, Margaret Wilkins, Vioila Keeler; Cedardale, - Ruby Smith, Ruth McDonald. : Relay Race 2 Skin-the-Snake Relay, Boys--20c each to winner, 10c each to 2nd. Sil Gurney, Jack McGibbon, Robt. Matheson, Ed: Holly, Albert Bralt, Ken Whitting- ton, Tom 'Wright, Bert Spilstead, George Herd, Ormal Cole, Bob Da- vies, Alfr land. Mary--Willie McClelland, Gerald n, Glen Lauder, John An- drews, Harry Bickle, Ken nn, Regie Burr, Irvine McCullough, Winston Phair, . Raymond Oliff, Donald Cameron, Allan Cameron: King--Alwyn Hayton, Billie Ma- son, George Bakogeorge, Elsworth Leggott, John Mathews, Gordon Johnston, ~ Lloyd Mclnally, Billy Marlowe, Billy Cox, Rod Connolly, Billy Pipher, Keith Goodman. Centre--Albert Barnes, Clifford Hall, Harold Thompson, Belfry De- Guerre, Glen Salter, Jim Grant, Bob Skelton, Wilfred Murray, Cliff John- ston, Vic. Simmons, Armond Brunz- low, Russ. Falukner, » Albert--Mike Bezenar, Aylmer Ward, James Sutton, Sydney Dunn- ence, Ji George Holt, Wm. Wilson, Robt Mc- Hugh, Steve Lezen, Stanley Me- Hugh, Peter Muzik. Ritson -- Wm. Mitchel, Walter Harmer, Herbert Ovenden, Casimer Lesnick, Alfred Newall, Albert Cockerton, John Chmara, Teddy Friend, Henry Kobernick, Wm. Zaleschook, Gerald Herrington, Mike Anniuck, : S. Simcoe--George Elizuk, Paul Hercia, Peter Kushnir, Carson Keel- er, Fred Coyston, Alfred Adams, Jack Shortt, Tom Palchuk, John McEachren, Albert Porter, James Canning, Dudley Deeley. Cedardale--Fred Kettela, Joe' Dra- pak, Jimmie Gangemi, Fred Mering- er, George Burton, George Frederick, Marshal Gilliard, Lorne Curry, Percy Barriage, Frank Singer, Harry Clem- ens, Stanley Fraser. ° For Older Pupils 100 yards--Girls, over 12, 25 cents, 15 cents, 10 cents--N. Simcoe, Eileen Copeland; Mary, Marion Stainton; King, Jean Miller; Centre, Edith El- liot; Albert, Lois Wilson; Ritson, Violet Thompson; S. Simcoe, Kath- leen = Recalla; Cedaradale, Ruby Smith. 100 yards, Boys, over 12--25 cents, 15 cents, 10 cents--N. Simcoe, Cecil Gurney; Mary, Reggie Burr; King, Jack White, Centre, Fred Murray; Albert, James Sutton; Ritson, Albert Cockerton; S. Simcoe, Nick Lazar; Cedardale, George Burton. DOROTHEA HATS Shops in Toronto, Hamilton; Oshawa, St. Catharines, Galt, North Bay Oshawa 3 King St. E. ing, Norman Rowley, George Wilson, | Wilson; Ritson, S. Si s Tom Lorne Cufrey. ukues; Albert, hae "Parker; Cedardale, ~ Gis 1 » gd y fr Girls' relay, 75 yds, 20 cents to each winner, 10 cents to cach win- ner, 2nd- A o£ " N.. Simecoe--Beatrice Perry, Lor- rainec Loveridge, Amy Harding, Lor- na Clark, Dorothy Dayman, Olive Favelle, Martha Robertson, Jean Nu- gent. Mary--Jean McKay, June Kross- man, Mary Beamish, Edith Thomp- son, Oressa Montgomery, * Lillian Helen Rosser, Marian *~ King--Irma Rutledge, Edith Swith- enbank, Stella Brooks, Mary Mec- Gill, Phyliss Sanford, Mary Schwartz, Hazel Weir, Edith Dalziel, * Centre--Dorothy James, Marjorie Simmons, Doris Mountenay, Thelma Bassett, Edith Elliot, Elsie Collis, Virginia Inksater, Silvia Clark. Dorothy Vamplew, Lois, Wilson, Lorraine Lee, Myrtle Chesc- boro, Evelyn Cheetham, Alta Sproule, Inez Black, Katie Marchuk. Ritson--Doris Ballar, Gladys Feel- ka, Helen Willits, Sophia Steba, 'May Krawchuk, Connie Donabee, Flenda Bowler, Maxine Noble. 8S. Simecoe--Louise Collings, Helen Klems, -May Carlley, Doris Muski- luke,' Queenie Sills, Irene Adams, El- la Slowinski, May Shaw. Cedardale--Katic Sibulak, Floris Clark, Irene Homes, Helen Branton, Olga Marco, Ruth McDonald, Mary Anderson," Ruby Smith. Bicycle Races Slow bicycle--Girls--QOpen 25 cents, 15 cents, 10.cents-- N. Simcoe--Margaret Daniels; Mary, Edith Thompson; King, Phy- llis Sanford; Centre, Mary Lilondc; Albert, Lois Wilson; Ritson, Flinda Bowler; S. Simcoe, Helen Klims; Cedardale, Helen Branton.' Bicycle race--Boys--Open, 25 cents, 15 cents, 10 cents.-- N. Simcoe--Billy Mason; Mary, George Fraser; King, Jack Laurie; Centre, Albert Barnes; Albert, Lyle Wilson; Ritson, Myroslow Sheyan; S. Simcoe, Nick Lazar; Cedardale, George Frederick. Sack Race, 2 boys, open, 25 cents, 13 cents, 10 cents-- N. Simcoe, Frank Young, Melvin Montgomery; Mary, Glen Lander, Kenneth Hann; King, Ellsworth Leg- gott; Centre, Sammy Dime, Fred Manning; Albert, John Simpson, George Holt; Ritson, Harold Harm- er, Robert Gow; 8. Simcoe, Lawrence McConkey, Alex Shestowski; Cedar- dale, Jimmie Gangemi, John Goodes, EXCITEMENT OF DIAMOND RUSH Traveller and Explorer Re- turn from Nanaqua-, land London.--Diana Houghton-Rogers, the traveller and explorer, has just returned from Namaqualand: There she visted: the scene of the sensa- tional 'diamond discoveries which envious diggers arc threatening to rush, writing of her experience. in the Daily Mail she says: "Sin, Sand, and Sorrow," is the hackneyed yet apt phrase which de- scribes so admirably that drear coun- try of Namaqualand and the original German territories. When the Ger- mans in 1908 discovered diamonds there they were much harassed by the little bushmen who stole out of their caves to take away the stones which the white men liked so much. In exasperation German notices ap- peared, staked along the shore, "All ushmen must be shot at sight." But the little men were seldom caught. When the police patrol appeared they hid at the foot of the dunes, and the ever-drifting sand quickly hid them from their enemies. In round, skin-covered huts like currant: buns, built on a framework of whale bones, live large, poverty- stricken families of Boers who sur- prisingly describe themselves as farmers. On those grim tracts of stony, wat- erless, unstocked, uncultivated land a few lean goats roam discontentedly. without water for weeks at a stretch must often have been put to the test on a Namaqualand farm, A secretary bird rising heavily, a thin snake dangling from his beak, a few pintailed grouse, and some apa- thetic little girls in stuffy black sun- bonnets and black frocks who came out from their huts to watch us as we passed were the only other signs of Life in many weary miles of trav~ elling. Just over a pear ago there was the sensational find of diamonds on the farm Kleinzee, and a month'later, the almost equally sensational closing of the mine by order of the government. The small hole in the ground from which these treasures were taken is close to the coast, and a thick and bitterly cold sea fog was rolling in as I stood shivering and watching ex-farmers with sand-inflamed eyes hard at work shovelling the gravel. A few miles inland the temperature was 110 degrees in my tent, but from west of Capetown as far north as { Seuth Angola an icy current from the Pole chills all that coastal strip. In a tiny wooden hut near the dig- gings I saw the Lilliputian safe in which the diamonds found were kept gue forwarded monthly to Kimber- ey. There was no foreshadowing then of the exciting finds of a few days later, which resulted in the discovery of stones to the value of £250,000, all from that one small, bleak pit. The toy safe was taxed beyond its ower of holding so much wealth. iamonds were crammed into a fruit salt bottle, and mining engineers swayed and lurched in decrepit lor- ries through the waves and valleys of sand which lic between Kleinzee and Port Nolloth post office, whence they sent imploring telegrams for adequate safes and police protection. No more output was permitted when the new Diamond Bill was passed. Disappointed miners have fumed and fretted for a year wait- ing to rush again into Aladdin's Cave: And there are already stories \ "Obstacle race, boys, oper, 25 cents, | Toe! 10 cents--N. Simcoe, Perey Albert, | Tre: Mary, George Fraser, King, 'B (og a Russel Fal. THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1929 [GARDEN OF EDENTS : AT JUVENILE AGENCIES CONFERENCE The photographs here show two prominent people at the National Confer. k { ence of Juvenile Agencies now being held at Royal York hotel. LEFT, Dr. Chas. Scott Berry, school of education, University of Michigan, Ann Michigan, bl. inded sey, super and RIGHT, J. A. Tinsley, secretary-treasu tend of stats col y for 4 ¢ Arbor, Ter, obs, New, Jer in plenty of plunder and murder for the sake of the diamonds in that sin- ful, sandy, sorrowful land. If the miners fulfil their threat to rush the diggings, there - will be yet more crimes committed. SIXTEENDIEIN U3. FIRE PANIC (Continoed from Page 1) and a fire escape which hangs use- less, a mockery to those who ven- tured to trust it as an exit, Marty Cohen, proprietor of the club, and Robert Jackson, master of ceremonies, were closeted with police this morning. Cohen at- tributed the fire to rivals in busi- ness. The Study Club had been operating for about a year and had prospered, Situated on Vernor highway, about six blocks from the heart of the city and just off Woodward Ave., the main north and south artery of Detroit, it had acquired a wide reputation. Cohen was not in the place at the time of the fire. Another night club, the Lido, had its opening last night and he had gone to partici- pate, he told police. Windows Boarded Up Firemen who tried to enter the Fuilding through windows, found that the window opening had beer covered on the inside with wall board. All windows in the second floor have thus been closed, they asserted, As firemen and volunteer res- cuers carried out victims, taxicabs. which had been parked in a lot next to the building took them to hospitals. Squads of ambulances arrived soon aftér the fire appara- tus. . At receiving hospital 20 men and 30 women were checked in within an hour after the outbreak of the fire. Other hospitals in the city cared for other injured. Nurses, internes and physicians were sent to receiving hospital to ald in treating the injured. Many with slighth urns and superficial injuries were given first aid and sent home, Identification Difficult Some. of the victims were dead on arrival at the hospitals, most of the fatalities, physicians said. re- sulted from suffocation. Identifica- tion was difficult because of the badly burned clothing and the dis- figurement which follows suffoca- tion. - State and city fire commission- ers investigating the blaze with the police declared this. morning that they could find no evidence that the fire was of incendiary origin. Draperies and light flimsey decor- ations, they said, accounted for the rapid spread of flames. Ventilat- ing fans and the architecture of the building sped the flames on their mission of death and devastation. The bodies of 5 women lie in the county morgue unidentified. Two others have been identified. Their clothing was burned off and the charred and burned condition of their bodies will make identifica- tion difficult. Of the nine men who wer killed, eight have been identified. Some of the patrons of the es- tablishment found their way to the roof of the rear section of the building and were: carried down by firemen, or, becoming panicky, jumped to the ground, many suffer- ed broken limbs. : The building {is three storeys high in the front and a two-storey rear. The main dining room occu- pied most of the second floor. The kitchen was on the first floor. The fire came at the peak of the night's business. Patrons who had dropped in for a luncheon after the theatre had just settled themselves to the eniovment of the entertain- ment which . wes offered bv the club when the dread cry of "fire" came. : Montreal Victim Detroit, Mich, Sent. 20--A hushand and wife visiting Pere from Mon- treal, Oue., were the principals in one of the numerous tragedies which resulted from the fire "which swept the Study Club early today, taking a of 16 lives, 1 ig Alfred Snyder of Montreal and his wife Helen, were seated in the Old Time ROUND and SQUARE DANCE in Gene's Hall. COURTICE. Saturday . Evening. Good Music: W. H. DOUBT A Merchant Tailor moved trom 73 Simcoe St. N. 11 Bond St, East Eup 2 Rg ak cl has clubs when the flames quickly flared up and engulfed them. Snyder, taken to- receiving hospi- tal with serious burns, asked' police to attempt to locate his wife, from whom he had bécome separated dur- ing the panic which followed the first red glare of the fire. She could be identified, he said, by a wrist watch bearing the initials "H. S." Police, going through the morguc soon found Mrs. Snyder's body. Graphic Story Louis Kanta, 19 year old Sand- wich boy, from his bed in receiving hospital, gave a clear "account of what occurred as the panic broke. "I was just getting ready to close up," he said. "I was reaching up on the ice box for my keys when a por- ter ran yelling through the room back of the dining room where 1 was working. I looked into the dining room. Flames were shooting from the private rooms at the front. They spread rapidly and swept toward the kitchen. Everyone was cut off from escape. The only place left to run for was the dressing room. "Every one went wild. Women were screaming and men yelling. Everyone was tearing around the room knocking over chair and any- thing that got in their way. I ran toward the dressing room with a lot of others. We were packed in so tightly we could hardly move. We shut the door ahd could hear the flames outside. .."I lay down on the floor but peo- ple began trampling me and I stood up. The smoke choked me and I lay down again. There was a woman lying next to me, T heard her call- ing 'Rose! Rosie, we'll die together. I think she did die. There was an- other woman lving on the other side of me. [I think she was dead." Ancient Custom Is Still Kept Up, But Is Not Effective Sheffield, Eng... Sept. 20.--Every vear on August Bank Holiday (the first Monday in August) the secre- tary of the Ancient Cutlers' Com- pany in Hallamshire keeps a lone- Jy vigil at Cutlers' Hall, where he arranges a meeting for members of the Company who he knows will never come and mever have come on this particular date. And old Act of Parliament passed as part of a charter of the Cutlers' Com- pany, says that a meeting of the Company shall be held on first Monday in August every: year, be- tween the hour of 1 pm. and 3 p.m, to elect 24 assistants to the Company. In these days no meet- ing is held but to comply with the satutory requirements provision has to be made for a gathering at Cutlers' Hall. The presence of at least 40 members would be neces- sary if a meeting took place, for this number is needed to form a quorum, If the Act of Parliament were to be altered to avoid the necessity of the secretary attending it would cost about $4,000 in legal fees and other charges, and so from one o'clock to three o'clock the secretary sits and waits the errant members who are probably enjoying their holidays. Other Editor's | Comments | NEW RADIO PLAN (Hamilton Spectator) The recommendation of the Federal Radio Commission that government ownership of broadcasting facilities in. Canada be effected is what the public has asked for. Members of the commission made' a. cost-to-coast tour of the Dominion last year, hold- ing open meetings' in the more im- portant cities and inviting the. testi- mony and suggestions of receiving- set owners. The preponderance of opinion was 'that the existing broad- casting arrangement left much to be a and that government control was advisable. Whether or not the commission's : suggested 'method of achieving the "ideal" will generally be endorsed remains to be seen. It is to the credit of the commission that it has advanced a clear-cut plan and quite evidently is prepared to stand or fall with it. A FINE ACT (St. Catharines Standard) Premier Ferguson is admired by his friends and criticized by his. oppon- ents for being an astute politician. If ..depends upon astuteness, probal ly the remier has all rr + of rac-Nery wily.' poli- he does things. which ration." His work for wayword boys at Bowmanville de- serves "thé highest 'commendation. Now it is announced from Sault Ste. Marie that the Premier has under- taken to give a crippled child treat- ment at the Sick Children's Hospital, Toronto, for one year, at his own expense. That little act in itself should cover a multitude of sins, and only the rank partisan will accuse the Premier of having made the offer on conithand' the eve of a Provincial election: A NOW UNDER WATER British Naval Officer Claims Location in Persian Gulf The decision of some Anglican theologians that many of the Old Testament stories are merely le- gends gives interest to the claim of .Commander C, E. V. Crawford, a British naval officer, that he has found the Garden of Eden-- beneath the water of the Persian Gulf, Writing in the Daily Mail he states his case thus: ,.. ". Where 1s-the Garden of Eden? Biblical information is very pre- cise: "And a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it was parted, and became into four heads . . . And the four- the river is Euphrates." - Nothing incomprehensible there 80° let us start to examine the Eu- phrates. Along its present course the Eu- phrates shows no evidence of either a past or present junction of four great rivers, In past ages can the Euphrates have extended farther along 1s course? The answer is yes, and that is the key to the problem. The Persian Gulf is a basin val ley which has been inundated at some past period; and according to geological estimate that inunda- tion has been very recent. In the Persian Gulf, from Yao, its western extremity, to Ormuz of the east, there is no ocean depth, no soundings showing ocean trend. Directly, we pass from the Persian Gulf through the Straits of Ormuz and into the Gulf of Ormuz we meet true ocean depths. Undoubtedly the Persian Gulf west of Ormuz was once a basin valley through which the Eu- phrates flowed on past Fao, on- ward bordering the Koweit and Hasa territories, on past the north- ern coasts of Muscat territories, and so outward to its ocean outlet of Ormuz, which was then the northwestern limit of the Indian Ocean. River Oasis oa Before the Flood the valley held a Garden of Pleasantness a river oasis bordered to northward by the Hiddekel and to southward by the Euphrates, Tts eastern extremity was the junction of four rivers, to grounds wi . St., then round track to gate just north of grand- stahd, then south to old club, house 4 ait srapciBy Order of <2 x: suas site, shasaeh loa "ow ane noni on ne E Basia Yi 4 > 5 2 dd P NOX GRIMES VAL three of which are supposed to have been lost, all of which have now been found. The Euphrates flowed onward, eastward past Fao (its present tep- mination), to its river junction, and as it flowed onward from inere its name changed. From the Eden junction onward to Ormuz this riv- er wag called the Gihon, "the same is it that compasséth the' while land of Ethiopia." The Gihon compassed or encir-: cled the whole land' of" Ethiopia, the land of the black Arabs. Do not confuse this Biblical Ethiopia with the more modern' Ethiopid which we now call Abyssinia, An- cient Ethiopia is now called the Hasa and the Muscat Teyriforjeg, Now we have the approximafe latitude of the Garden of Eden. If you wish for more precise in- formation you must patrol the pearl banks of Bahrein, situated in those localities. 'Where the pearls are best, where their lights are most exquisite--there you are near to the Garden of Eden. The natives will assure that fresh: wat- er from the ocean bed gives these pearls their exquisite hues and ren- der them the most valuable jewels of the world's pearl harvest. They are watered by seepage from 'the lost river Gihon. When the Ocean Flood, of earth- quake and tidal wave origin, inun- (dated. the Basin, Valley . it swept from the Indian Ocean westward, drowning the whole of the Adam- ite world with the. exception of Noah, Shem. Ham, Japhet," and . their wives and families. " Thé Flood retreated' gradually and left the Pison as a subterran- én river, whose course is still clear- I¥ 'indicated by the" Wad DédWwasir, swhich compasseth -the whole land- of Havilah, "where there is gold . . there is-bdelliam and the onyx stone." The geological location isa very exact one, These three.-subsiances -are in three. distinct geological strata. 1 hdve seen the. gold' of 'Havilah, in the next strata I have.been: shown the "bdellium," a curious lime marble so 'beautiful in; proloring that it is a semi-precious stone. In the last of the'three strata is the onyx stone, both the genuine onyx of modern classification and the biblical onyx or agate. GENERAL MOTORS BUYS NORTHEAST ELECTRIC Rochester, Sept. 19,--Sale of the Northeast Electric company' of this city to General Motors corporation for approximately $13,000,000 was authorized at a meeting of stock- holders of the local' concern to- day. See Them Today Chevrolet Cabriolet 1927 Chevrolet Cab- riolet, price, $450 PontiacCoach 1928 Pontiac Coach, price, . Chevrolet Touring 1929 Chevrolet Tour- ing, price, $575 By any standard you like to use---performance, appear- ance, sheer dollar for dollar value--these O.K. used cars are in a class by themselves. ..they lock like new cars........and they ride comfortably. Yet, the pricés are away down to rock- bottom. We have nut back whatever small amount of mileage previous owners have taken out of these cars, yet they have paid the cost of depreciation. on the most favorable terms possible. ing for a genuine motor car bargain, come in today. clockwork... SPECIAL VALUES '1927 Pontiac Landau......$575 1927 Oakland Coach.... $525 1928 Chevrolet Coach ....$525 1928 Chevrolet Sedan ....$550 1927 Ford Roadster .....$175 ~ 1925 Chevrolet Coach'..$285 1927 Chevrolet Sedan ....$450 1927 Chevrolet Coach ....$400 1928 Essex Coach ..........$595 | 1928 Chevrolet Truck ....$550 1925 Overland Sedan ....$2%5 1928 Chev. Cabriolet ....$550 Ontario Motor Sales, L 99 Simcoe St. South, Oshawa Their motors run like You buy If you are look- Phone 900