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Oshawa Daily Times, 26 Sep 1929, p. 11

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a FIND THREE MILES OF BAS RELIEF ON Interesting Discovery by Dr. John Hill of Cali- i fornia ~ Los Angeles, Sept. 26--Dr. John . C, Hill, director of the Department © of Religion, Archaeology and Anth- 7 ropology.at the University of South- "ern California, upon his return here i from a summer's study in the South i: Seas announced he had discovered on the island of Bali, near Java, the temple of Boro Boedoer on which J there is three miles of life-sized bas Uf relief as interesting as any book ever 4, written." : : 4 e temple, Dr. Hill said, was buried 1,200 years ago. It covers ! nine acres of ground, has five levels, or stoseys, so far uncovered, and was the seat of an ancient native religion. "The Bas relief on the lowest 5 level" said Dr. Hill, "depicts the size I of the world and the temptations of man. Those above show methods of overcoming evil through the trials of spiritual reincarnation until the Prince and finally the God is created in man." : % Dr. Hill described the island as #4 100. miles long and having a popur lation of about 1,000,000, He said the island was a virtual Utopia where the natives lived with little of effort 4 a life free from worry and care. The + natives verged on physical perfection, and lived highly moral lives, he de- § clared. Mohammedans, said Dr. Hill, ? ago and forced their religion upon © SOUTH SEAISLAND| which had created the temple. Dr. said he would return to the i for_six months of research, DESERTER FOUND BY DETECTIVES Toronto, 26.--The life of a soldier has its good points and the life of the unemployed has not, 19- year-old Stanley Smith confided to detectives as he surrendered him- self as an army deserter last night. Smith, who came to Canada about & year ago from Wales through the assisted passage scheme, told Detectives Fred Storm and Moiser of West Dundas division that about 11 months ago he joined a battery of the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery at Kingston and served for six months. Early in May, he said, he deserted the unit shortly before it was to entrain for summer training at Camp Petawa- wa. . For five months he wandered around Ontario cities, but failed to stick at any one job, §mith told police. He began to appreciate warm blankets and regular mess hours which he had known at King- ston, His conscience began to prick him, too, he said. So he de- cided yesterday to surrender. will be taken back to Kingston for court-martial today. MOTORCYCLIST INJURED Toronto, Sept, 26--Thrown off the rear of a motorcycle when the driver crashed into a parked car after en- deavoring to avoid hitting a boy on a bicycle, George Beach, aged 14, of 193 Royce Avenue, sustained a. severe flesh wound on the left leg on Perth Avenue last night. The motorcycle was in charge of James Plummer, aged 16, of 14 Boustead avenue and was proceeding south on Perth, north of Wallace. . s A boy on a bicycle appeared in front of Plummer and to avoid hit- ting him, the latter turned his ma- He |0 THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES; THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 19% PAGE ELEVEN chine towards the curb, In doing so he lost control and crashed into the rear of a parked car. The impact knocked Beach off the back scat. He was rushed to St. Joseph's hospital in 4 police ambulance, Spain proeuced more than 7,- 000,000 tons of coal in the last 12 months, The live stock of the farms of On- tario is valued at more than $280,000,- ER, A Mrs. W, G. Lacey, an English farm woman of Rorketon, has the distinc- tion of having the highest per cent- age of hens to qualify for certificates under the Dominion Live Stock rules for record of performance in the 1927-28 tests. She also has the honor of having two 300-egg hens qualify. Mrs, Lacey came from England four years ago and went on a pioneer farm with her husband in the - Rorketon district east of Lake Dauphin, Mani- toba. She took up poultry raising as a hobby and has made a great com- mercial success of "it, and in 'a short time has taken a proniinent place among the leading poultry raisers cf the province, SAYS STEEL CARS AVERTED DISASTER Toronto, Sept, 26--There would have heen a shambles as well as a half-mile of wreckage strewn along the tracks of the two C.N.R. ; fliers which crashed near Kings- ton early yesterday morning had not been composed of all-steel coaches, or if the derailed east- bound train had not been almost emptied of its passengers before it was sideswiped by the racing westbound express, Such was the opinfon given by C. Howard Smith of Montreal, president of the Howard Smith Paper Mills, Ltd., who was a passenger on the westbound train, The crash was caused primarily by the derailment, of the east- bound train when it struck a split rail. Efforts to halt. the west- bound were frustrated by fog and the train sideswiped the derailed coaches, Four passengers on the eastbound were injured. "I have heen in train wrecks before," Mr. Smith remarked, /'and I've always said each one was the last. It seemed as if this one came pretty close to being the last, too." "I'll tell you what a train wreck feels like," his narrative was sup- plemented by Harold Crabtree, vice-president of Mr, Smith's com- pany. "It feels as if you were standing on the edge of a preci- pice and someone hit you a crack on the jaw and knocked you over. The next thing you know is the bump when you hit the bottom," Asléep in Both Mr. Smith and Mr. Crab- tree were asleep in their compart- ment when their train plowed into the derailed coaches which over- lapped the westbound track. Mr, Smith had 'the luck of the party, however, for he had the berth nearer the engine and was shot neatly out onto the floor, while the vice-president had nothing but an unyielding steel partition wall to bump against. But both were agreed that it was a most unpleas- ant wreck if not a disastrous one. "It was jar, 'bump, bump, bang," Mr, Crabtree related from the comfortable depths of an arm- chair in the National club. "And the eplinters looked like the real- lest wreck you ever saw. We must have plowed more than a thousand feet through that train, and If it hadn't been steeel there Co-operating with the manufac- turers the Oshawa. Wholesale are assisting their dealers to promote the sale of Alymer Soup, a brand of soup well known In Oshawa homes, This is sold by many mer- chants and if your particular gro- Oshawa Wholesale Ask For Comments on Soup cor does not happen to have it in stock phone 2184, The Oshawa Wholesale, and you will be advis- ed as to the store stocking it. The Oshawa wholesale will be glad to hear your comments on this Cana- wouldn't have been anything left but kindling wood. "Our engine just of the eastbound train and left most of it matchwood. Someone bet me that was a carload of mix- ed fruit and I didn't take him up. But the fruit car was only a mild jar for us, We got our bumps when we hit the steel coaches, We didn't cut through them, .but all the same it was as well they were empty. And if our cars had been wooden, - there would have been simply nothing left of us." As it was, Mr. Smith said, all that the impact did to the steel cars on the moving train was loos- en the steps and the gear under- neath, while the main structure was undamaged and even the elec- tric lights remained 1it, He ex- pressed admiration for the way in which the. crews of both trains behaved and averted any chance of panic. "But there was one man on our train who objected very much," he recollected, "He was pretty drunk, and when we were all picking our- selves off the floor he yelled out to the porter, 'Hey, George, what the--'s going to happen?' '" "They ain't nothin" goin' to happen, boss--it's done happened,' was what the porter told him." 2 ARTHUR HUARDS EET IN GRASH Autoists Find Néimes Iden. tical When Questioned by Officer North Bay, Sept. 26.--Provincial trafic officer Berard arrived here on Tuesday from Rutherglen with dian product.--Adv, the story of two unrelated motor- through the fruit ear at the front. ra " With all the bran of the whole wheat no work or worry--a delicious lunch--a eat it with milk and berries or sliced home for bananas. ists whose names are the same and who were introduced to each other through the medium of an automo- bile collision. The accident occurred at a point between Rutherglen and Eau Claire. © When the officer arrived, he found the two angrily endeavor- ing to fix the responsibility for the crash and estimating the damage, "Names, please," requested the officer. "Arthur Huard, of Cobalt," was the response from one of the men. "Arthur what?" broke in the other man, "You heard me," said the first with some "asperity. "Arthur Hu- ard, of Cobalt." The other party sat down on the running board. "Are you trying to kid me?" he asked. "My name is Arthur Huard, too. Huard of Mattawa." Explanations followed and al- heard of o r seen the other, they readily proved that they were en- titled to th to the officer, e names that they gave Although botH ma- chines were badly damaged, they agreed that Arthur Huard was re- sponsible for the accident and sub- sequent damages and parted good friends, proving that after all there is something in a name. A motoris make of aut world, but i t is a man 'who thinks his omobile is the best in the s saving fip his nioney to buy another kind next ycar.--Seuth- ern Lumber man, Ee = FIS! Liv H AND CHIPS esay & Crowe]! Opposite Bus Stand though the two men had never P hone 1795W had invaded the island many years the natives, killing the native faith Many Oshawa Stores Feature Aylmer Soups Ask These Stores to Supply You With Aylmer Products W. Greenly Soanes Bros. 86 Alice Street Phone 191 J. Sammut 264 King Street, East Phone 136 O0.A.Gerrow 432 Simcoe St. South " Phone 117w W.H.Scilley 458 Simcoe St. South Phone 1036 A. Haverson 10 Drew Street Rs 3 htm le BE 124 Brock St. East 64 Ritson Rd. South Phone 787 3 G. Andrews Phone 145 Phone 1611 J. Russell .Rosland Road Phone 3201 : YOUR own sense of taste quickly tells you that " AYLMER Soups do excel in Flavor. to the finer natural flavor of Canadian-grown Vege "tables. § AYLMER Soups are. healthful, % This is due convenient, inexpensive." A Canadian production from the field to the can, AYLMER Soups bring you finer flavor at less cost.' 5 Phone 104 R. Heaslip Phone 238W R. R. No. T Oshawa G. Clark 138 Mill Street Phone 2454 S$. Andrews 226 Gibbon Street Phone 3141W. T.W.Brooks 64 Celina Street Hoehn's 275 Albert St. FOOD SHOP Phone 273 : hi Te BEE C.AGlssco 174 Ritson Road South Phone 3238,

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