THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 1929' Fin artes" nw 7 SOO THERE. mL, WE'LL BROOT DOWN INTO now! LJ DODGAST YOUR Hie! | ELL BIT YE Tis TIME § We HAVE TO SHase ~~ 1 BOW FEGGED) b) MN DOM YT MAKE Arey DIFFERENER 4 4 FW $0 aLuAR TO TW TOR YOU WW, wm' @uwe wApeAN LA THASE YE DOW TW OTE SHIM, AND TIGHT SLAP WTO JA) oromenss pape % ---- wr -- go Ll Mo MATTER I Yn MET HOR TH MOTH POLE, we'll ov ve!) ' < | LVL eive we To- ba A wa UMMIN SC 0) ALL HOW POR erASSVALE | | WOMDETL WHAT'S 60in' OM IW TW OLD BURE, PINK CHINESE I5 | HARD-LUCK KING Whites and | Reds Hold Horse Shoes and Four- Leaf Clovers Harbin, Oct, 11.=The Pink Russian of North Manchuria ranks as one of the principal "hard luck" individuals in the world today, Mere whites and Reds hold horseshoes and four-leal clovers compared 10 their ex-compats riots, the Pinks, The Pink Russian may be officially defined as the man who has white S¥ibuthies but a red passport, He is therefore half white and hall red, resulting in a pallid pink, After: the Russian revolution, a bout 250,000 white Russians fled into North Manchuria, Most of them were penniless, and those with money ra- pdly spent it, being unable to get work, The chief source of employment in North Manchuria is the Chinese Eastern Railway, Educated Russians, especially, have been useful in oper ating this line, But white Russians are people without country, and the Chinese-Eastern agreement specifies that employees must be citizens eis ther of Soviet Russia or of Ching, In other words, they must have So» viet or Chinese passports, This ruling put thousands of white Russians in a quandary, Jota on the railway were dangled he ore them if they had a passport, but there was no country to issue these necessary papers, They had the choice of bes coming subjects of Soviet Russia cr of China, Some took out Chinese passports, but others decided upon the Soviet, Reds At Heart The Pinks arg the butt of every faction in North Manchuria, Whites, Reds and Chinese. The Soviet offi cials know they are not Reds at heart, whatever their passports may say, and treat them badly, The Whi tes are resentful because the Pinks have deigned to recognize the Sov- jets in any way, The Chinese, in some cases, take advantage of the necessity under which the Pinks labor, : The recent Sino-Russian contro versy added to the misery under which the Pinks have lived for at least four years, The Pinks had bes come Soviet citizens solely to get a job on the railway, Naturally, they werk not disposed to resign their to please the Soviets, But the real Reds did everything possible vo make them quit, and have threatens ed to ruin them when the Soviets in get control of the railway. hose who have remained have al so been taunted by the consistent Whites who say: "Why don't you stick up now for your a pred coun. of the Chinese officials, in- fluenced by the nationalistic tide Sweeping over the country, have de. od all sorts of humiliating ser vices from the Pinks, Mussolinl was educated for the profession of teaching, CROWDS GREET ATHLETICS ON THEIR RETURN Philadelphia, Oct vosened ity paured forth upo hig great team of young b all tha noise enthusiasm can be stored up for a champion, Into a city that throl undercurrent of joy tempered on the surface with ealin satisfaction, thie ancient MeGillieuddy led hig huskies this afternoon, They came fresh from the World Series battlefield in Chicago, full of pepper, dash and optimism, eager to trounce the Cubs as soundly here thoy did in the first two games the Midwest A happy, boisterous crowd mobbed the station as the special train clang ed into the yards, Ihey cheered "Jimmy" Foxx, young first baseman who has clouted two home runs and a flock of lesser base hits so far; Al Simmons, the socking left fielder "Mickey" Cochrane, "Mule" Haas Max Bishop, "Lefty" Grove, shaw and all the Then they caught 10 vocal chords p ( Philadelphi way a Muck Wl player onni and waiting 15 year bed with an and excitement as in rest sight of the Earn | Ld s ) hb p 7) - . " 9 fe y - Brgy To WHEN YOON TO STAY » THAT DRAGE\N BUSINESS, MN Qar ? \ ' -- Pow, HICAGO FANS 0 ~ STILLLOYALTO | wi WOARTHY'S TEAM Large Trainload of Them | Accompanies Cubs to Philadelphia Philadelphia, et, 11=A hody of strong, silent men completed a some what painful journey from the West here yesterday afternoon, They 'had come from Chicago, and they had made the trip though it in silence, ing a lot of hard thinking, for they were the Chicago Cubs, who had just had the stuffing kicked out of them in the first games of the 1929 World Series right in their own back vards, and when this happens to a ball t 1 there is little that can, or | I. be sale [ say the other | Il one could not exactly depressed nor, on the hand there any efforts at jo ularity attempts to laugh it off For in their own fashion ball play fs are a singularly philosophical foll I'he element of chance runs high in their game, and for the part they are gamesters at heart, To them "breaks" are everythin or nearly so, They rarely concede the preatness of another, and, heyond its were most | CANADA'S EXPANSION { hospitality intrinsic value, give little thought to thelr own, It's the "breaks" that de [ tros in the Maritimes, « cide "We just didn't get the 'breaks', was quite patent that they were do-'says Manager Joe McCarthy, "but Commerce party, during Septem- ber we'll get thet They 't have been whole visit has been an piration and will be an Imper memory," Mr, Luke sald, kindness with which I have unbounded extended to me, will long In my memory, Can- nda ls 0 great country; I hope to do omething to awaken the English | people to a proper appreciation of ite possibilities hari ---------- taft of oction, | On the s day recently Gerald, England | voungest son of Princess Mary of to Can-| England, celebrated his sixth birth ada expressed himself as amazed | day and his grandfather, the Ear! at the "wonderful development of | of Harewood, who has since died, the Dominion," Mr, Luke had vis fourth, fted al the most important cen ntral Can ada and the in addition to || touring the River « with the Canadian Chamber for us," sa lornst "I I'he ur turn can't be far a | a ay, This fight | In Ishable "The hoon received, and the linger AMAZES MEMBER (By Canadian Press Loased Wire) Montreal, Que, Oct, 1 W. Luke, of the executive tha London Time I'rade who recently led for nfter a four months visit He his eighty M. Chiappe, Paris prefect of Pe has declined to be Corsican ublican in the natorial elections wont, en Peace yuntry Dn candidate coming ol | American Labor Federation Delegates Visit Niagara blonde head of lanky Howard Ehmke | Connie's surprise package of the ries, The roar rattled the ear drums of a couple of hundred fans, jammed in the cov ered pass that led into that station In all the excitement every one looked for Connie Mack, the tall, lean greye-haired leader, He was not with the players nor wus he in any of the cars directly ahead of the Athletics Carriages, It seemed as though the team Con nie spent 18 years to build inte ehams plonship calibre was coming home without the 67-year-old veteran shay ing in the triumph, For a few min utes it seemed a most definite ro buke to the fickleness of baseballs fandom, Connie watched the boisterous re ception for the youthful team that in one year has stirred up more en thusiasm in the Quaker City than the old champions ereated in their entire careers, Then he tried to sneak une noted from the front of the tram, He was half away before the crowd spotted him, He smiled at them, rai soll his hat and hurried away. The Cubs, without a word to say, slipped into town with scarcely 200 fans forming a reception committe Silently they went to their hotel to rest Although all registered se seats in Shibe Park, with a capacity of 38. | O00, have been sold for all three ga- | mes scheduled here, a line began to form at midnight last night at the bleacher ticket office where 1,20 dols lar seats will go on sale at 9 am, morrow, Through the might 30 fans huddled in overcoats, played cards, hung over small wood fires or openly amused themselves "shooting craps," Hundreds were in line tonight, But on every side is the conviction that the excitement won't last==not beyond the fourth game Saturday anyway, The general opinion is that by that time the extra "X" Jimmy Foxx carries on the ¢énd of his name will merely mark the spot where the body of the Cubs may be found, that gretted Howard Los! Qj Dologates of the American Feds eration of Labor in convention in Toronto the past week, and their wives and families, took a pleas ure trip across Lake Ontario on Wednesday to visit Niagara Falls, The photographs here show: (1) CONVENERS AND WOMEN The cameraman finds Jimmy Simpson, vicospresident' of Cana dian Trades wd Labor Oo \ in a smiling humor, (2) rank Morrison, secretary of American Federation of Labor, with two very attractive Scotch twines- FOLK MAKE SIGHTSEEING TOUR OF GREAT FALLS Assoe,, Washington, D.C, (8) 8 CO Sumner ("Ungle Rtove'), Sisyoars. old, (8) Mrs, Dell of Seattle, (7) J.T. Browalee, British Fraternal delegate, and (8) James Bell, fraternal delogate from: British Trade Union Congress, Lillag and Ellen Baivd of Kenosha, Wisconsin, members of the Hos fery Workers' Union, now on strike, (8) Santiago Iglosias, wees retary of PansAmerioan Federas tion of Labor, (4) MH, W, Strick. land, secretary of Rallway Mall FIRST TRANS-ATLANTIC SUBMARINE CABLE TO BE LAID IN 1831 ? ---- ork, New York-~The probable date for laying the first trans-Atlantic submarine talking enable Ig announced as the summer of 1931 by the Long Lines depart. ment of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, Disclosed also for the first time are details of some obstacles now overcome, which for half a century blocked linking the old and new worlds by copper talking wire, The oable will extend 1,800 miles from Newfoundland to Ireland, Carrying spoken words on a wire beneath the North Atlantic Is par allel sclentifically, except for speed to the feat of throwing a stone the pize of a house into the water we Newfoundland and recognizing its ripples when they wash the Irish coast, The cable will deliver to Ireland volce sound waves in the form of electrical fmpulses that are reduc od to the Incomprehenatbly small figure of one millionth of a billion» th part of the power with which they leave Newfoundland, And that starting power is an amplification not many times greater than the natural volee, Strangely enough, the big ob- stacles to talking has not been the minuteness of power reaching the opposite shore, The trouble lay in another resemblance of electrical impulses to water waves, This was the tendency of the impulses to flatten out, lose their shapes and run together in a blur after travel ling great distances, If then am- plified they would produce only a humming sound, New Civil War Thought Certain In Central China (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Nanking, China, Oot, 13, War between the Nationalist Government and the powerful forces of Marshal Feng Yu- Malang, war lord of Central China, who Is a powerful leader, though an uncertain factor In far eastern politics, is belleved here to be inevit. able, Little has been heard of Feng lately, but his forces were today reported already moving asainst the Nationals fats with' Hankow as their ob Jootlve, New Y The White Horse Taxi Co, twice refused permission by Commissioner Whalen to place a fleet of their cabs in New York, lost mandamus pro- ceedings in Supreme Court, when Justice McCook denied an. anplicas tion to compel the police to license its cabs, The New York Times running elec tric news ribbon around its building on Times. Square, is called "The Scotch Newspaper" BIG GANE HUNTERS SHOOT AT CATTLE Cows, Pigs, Sheep 4nd Chickens Killed by American Tourists Windsor, Oct, 11.--Bold ' American big game hunters passed through Es. sex county on Tuesday afterfioon, playing havoe with the cattle in the fields and barnyards as they blazed away with rifles, They did most of their damage in the South Woedsiee area, it seemed, The hunters, three men and 8 wo- man, who occupied a big green ear, peppered away whenever they saw cattle in farm yards along the Weod- slee road, Arthur Vetor lost one sheep, tly wunctured thro, ¢h the head,. Victor rown and A, Wright reported the loss of several chickens, 8 Were the targets on the Ward farm near the village of Woodslee, but. the shooting was poor and the ped bo- vines kept on chewing as the bullets flew around them, A Belgian comt.uined that while he was working in a sugar beet feld on the sixth concession of Rochester township, he was shot at by the occu ants of the green-colored car. Joe Pe antes of the same neighborhood complained that a pig had been shot and killed near his home, WHEAT POOL HEAD: RESENTS ADVICE: Alberta Official Asks Out. siders to Withhold N | Comment Calgary, Oct, 12~Commenta and advice offered publicly to the wheat pool by persons not connected with the co-operative organization are sented by the Alberta. wheat po Over the radio here yesterd ! Nesbitt, publicity secretary of the pool stated that such comments "ful. 1 no useful purpose," Referring to those who offer ums solicited advice, he said: "The best interests of Canada would be by their maintaining a condi of silence regarding the operations of an organization with which they have no conection," In spite of criticism by inl ts overseas and in Canada, he said, the pool is maintaining its position that Canadian farmers cannot 'a to lower prices for their wheat, Flight Ended Chicago, == The "Chicago--We Will" landed at Sky Harbor Alpe port a tew minutes before 7 o'dlock this morning just after it had pase od its 2th hour in the alr, ond of the flight was forced by inabile ity to refuel the plane because of dense fog.