THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1930 * SROUGHAN SCHODL ARY REPORT '4 Brougham, Feb. 15.--There was | Holtby, Holen Farley. excellent attendance at Sunday hool on Sunday last. Mrs, F. C Brown addressed the school, us- mg the lesson period for a Tem- ee talk. Mr. Ed. Wilson of eenriver Temperance Superin- dent for the township, was a i visitor and gave a few thoughts along Temperance lines. Brougham School report ~ January: : _ Sr. 1V.--Annie Bayles, Virginia hite, Lorne Holtby and Mary hillips, equal. Sr. llL--Walter Knox, Merle Hopkins, Jean Phillips. Jr. 11I.--Reata Shea, White, Harold Cassie. "Hl.--Norma Harnden, for Donald Merle i Harry Jermyn, teacher. Mrs. John Patterson of the Tth Concession celebrated her S0tn birthday this week. Our dramatic company are busy . practising a play to be presented : in the near future. E Thursday A. M. Mr. Bert Harvey spent last week in Toronto returning home on Saturday last, "WwW. J. Brown and family of To- ronto were with T. C. and Mrs Brown on Sunday. . Miss Flora Patterson of Toronte spent the week-end ' With her ople. Pe The many friends of Mrs. Kate . Bennet are very sorry to hear that she is not improving as fast as hoped for. She is still in the Gen- eral Hospital, Toronto. T. C. Brown has quite recovered from the shaking up he received in an auto accident, "AERIAL. ENGINFER" IS CANADA'S 1 ATEST Map from Aerial Photo- graphs Is Followed by New Method (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Ottawa, Ont, Feb. 17.--Aerial sur- i veying has been developed in Can- ada to where this country hold the position world leadership, - but Narraway, Chief Aerial Survyes Engineer of the De- ot ing the relief of the country prom inently and truthfplly, Mr. Narra- way stated. The engineer is thus able to see the hills and valleys, the flats and gentle slopes, the trees, riy: ers, and other roparhical features of interest and is enabled to draw form lines on the photographs Which can later be transferred to a plan. With the aid of some field measure- ments the form lines may be con- verted into true contours, Mr. Narraway called upon all en- gineers to become air-minded and promised that the new scicnce would assist them in solving some of then most serious engineering problems, Although only in its infancy, the re- sults were already remarkable. One case cited was of a large water pow- Fer investigation where there were at least five possible schemes, any one of which might have been adopted. The stereoscopic study of the photo- graphs enabled all but one to be dis- carded without field work and with a saving in field expenditure which could readily be appreciated. The old days of running random or trial lines through the woods in search of rail- way location, it appears, are over. Formerly the location engincer spent all summer and often winter months in the field. Now a preliminray re- connaissance and the taking of pho- tographs of the most practicable route is the best method of finding a location. Aerial photographs for hte location oi transmission lines and perhaps in no other field have aerial methods met with greater suc- cess, stated Mr. Narraway. The first and only field survey necessary is when the locating engineers are handed photographs with the route marked out. "The full value of aenal engineer- ing is perhaps best indicated in Mr. Narraway's description of what can be accomplished in connection with hydro-electric projects. Ile stated that in this field very marked success had been attained on preliminary re- i and investigation, in preparation of final plans oi storage reservoirs and pondages, in PHO NF 22 For Your Drug Needs THOMPSON'S 10 Simcoe St. -- We Deliver : TIME TABLES a &- PE a C. PR TIME TABLE Eficctive Seot. 29, 1929, (Standard Time) sing' West . Day (Except Sunday). Daily . Dany (Except Suno.y) . Daily. S. Naoto have | been used on more than one occasion | lection 'and 'detailed study: of © dam] ; ; § sites and in daughting the general ONLY | TER OF layout of construction. Once photo-14 . Engineers' Convention Told. 73 Percent of Dominion's Area is Known Only In Outline (By Canadian Press Lecsed Wire) Ottawa, Ont., Feb. 17.~"The map- f continent is a graphs are "available 'alang a tiver, they are used for the inspection' of a project until its final completion, their usefulness including the finding of timber for construction and exten sive gravel deposits, if any, also the location in the best position of con- struction roads or railroads. -------------------- Almost two: million dollars was turned over to the province of Man- itoba as profits of the governinent liquor control commission for the fis- cal year ending April 30, 1929. "I just heard an awful your husband." "Tell me; I need a new dress." ---Daily Oklahoman. story . ping of half a mendous undertaking, requiring the utilization of all the resources of the science of surveying and mapping," F. H. Peters, Surveyor General, De- partment of the Interior, Ottawa, told the Enginee convention on ol ped in" anything like an . scale. that particularly in a great rich in so many work of engineers and continued Mr. Peters. Mr. phic map as a philosopher's tre- 1 with which resources ing of" our country. {ig Institute of Canada ursday 'id an address "The Engineers work wn Survey- ang and Mapping" He declared that 14 per cent of Canada was map- accurate Today we live in a world built upon engineering work and it woul® scem and young country such as our own -- undeveloped re- solirces -- our future growth and ex- pansion must firstly depend upon the surveyors, Peters characterized the accurate topogra- stone hitherto un- known and ¢ven unsuspected can be made to contribute their quota to- ward the development and well be. "When Jacques Cartier discovered Canada in 1534, he saw perhaps a few hundred square miles of it and no doubt in sqme rough way mapped as ouch. At that time that was all there was of Can- ada," he remarked, In looking at the best map avail- able today of Canada, stated the Surveyor General, there were vast blank spaces, some of them the size of the province of New Brunswick, in which the future possibilitics can hardly be contemplated. "Camada is far from being sufficiently mapped," he said, "Eyen today you can, for instance, step into an acrorlane at the city of Ottawa and fly for a pe- riod of perhaps an hour and a haly and reach a territory of which no reasonably accurate map is available and consequently of which practical- ly nothing definite is knewn regard- ing what exists here, wo realize that Canads is still a: provinces that had been mapped young country, one has only to read [In the entire third the reports written from 1840 (o 1860 | largest country in the world with an which through lack of knowledge |arca about the size that is susceptible of being properly | about 525,000 square mi recorded only in accurate maps, de- | Cont ot the area is mapped in scribed "what are now the great | thing like an a Ee. sense, A wheat growing lands of the West as| showing econside detail but an arid or a semi-arid waste and |?2ccurately cover another 13 per cent; stated that 'there was no practicable | While for 73 per cent of the arca route from east to west through Bri | only the most nicagre outlines of the tish territory." Surveys made espe- | coast-line and the main inland wat- cially for the production of maps, | Tw? stated Mr. Peters, are npw generally | srr carried on by the departments of the Federal Government and dlso by some of the provincial departments. | All lengths measured by Canadian | surveyors and engineers are based | on the legal standards of the Domin- | ion for the yard and the metre, kept | in the custody of the Department of Trade and Commerce. Figure quoted giving the areas in the Dominion, the ase presented, thousands Yow Eat A Deli atful Breakfast Foed ELLA CINDERS--The Romantic Cad By Bill Conselman ond Charlie Plumb I AI 80 garg COCO CRBOCOOCOO000ODOOCOOOH 0 £00 CC C00 CO C0COOCOO0 I'D ScoONER. SEE THIS SHIP TO A BLACK-HEARTED MuTINEER 717 w mm | SANES ME THE i TROUBLE OF SAMS the *| TELLING TOMMY H AYE-AYE BELONGS TO THE LEMUR FAMILY. ERTL er dl V THE MARMOSETS ARE THE SMALLEST OF THE MON- A 8 KEYS, TOMMY, AND AM § MARMOSE [JARMOSET 15 THE FAMILY NAME OF THE SMALLEST OF THE MONKEYS, YiHICH ARE t= _\ JHE AYE-AYE 15 FOUND I MADAGAS CAR. IT GETS TS MAME FROM THE fm | WELL, WHAT WERE YOU AND DADDY TALKING bE ABOUT THIS TIME, TOMMY © OM, JUST SOME MONKEY BUSINESS! ABOUT THE SIZE OF A SQUIRREL OR A HALF- g Paily (iacept Sunday). ng East a.m Daily : 10. 2.04 p.m. Daily (Except Sunday). 8.43 pn: Daily (Excent Sunday). 11,10 p.m. Daly (Excent Saturday). 12.05 a.m. Daily Sn" (RY OF SURPRISE THE HATIVES GIVE a HEN THEY SEE THE AMIMAL. THE AYE = AE ISABOUT THE SIZE OF A RABBIT. a 8 a Laské& partment of the Interior, described to the convention of the Engineer- ing Institute of Canada a later de- velopment which he termed "aerial i and which is accom- GROWH KITTEN, THEY LIVE IH SOUTH AMERICA, THEIR COAT 15 LONG, SOFT FUR, AND BEAUTI- FULLY COLORED. THEY ALL HAVE 10M6 TAILS, v engigeering" / . - + phishing wonders in the planning of large projects such as hydro-electric undertakings, railway building and location of tramsmission lines. The new instrument of the engin- eer is the "aerial sterescope." It is designed for viewing pairs of aerial photographs stereoscopically reveal- Machinery Repairing NOTHING TOO LARGE NOTHING TOO SMALL Adanac Machine Shop '161 King St. W. Phone 1214 Diamonds ! Bassett's On Oshawa's Mam Corner "COAL COAL 'hone 103 W. J. SARGANT ¥Y ard---&y Bloor "treet EK. Or ders 'romptly Deliyercd Sale:--In North end of City, close rate School, lovely 6-room brick DISNEY REALTY EXCHANGE c Phone 1450 : AIRING OUR SPECIALTY it your watch is not giving satisfaction we can 'repair "and make it tell the correct time : D. J. BROWN THE JEWELER Official Watch Inspector for Canadian National and Osh. be Bg 'Railronds' k King St W. 180 elt Bros. The Leading Jeweler Esta lished (8X6 CANADIAN NATICNAL RAILWAYS Cflective Sept. 2¢, 1903 Time) a.m. Daily, excert Sunday, £3 any. Sunday only. 300 a.m, Daily, ¥ 7 vm Daily excert Sunday, poi, Daily, except Sundav, 47 pan. Daily exceut Sunday, 2.42 pr Daily 11.99 pan Daily. except Saturday, 12.07 gm. Daily, 4 12.25" v.m. Dusty, Westbound ily, except Sunday, 20 atu, Daily, aan. Daiiy, 02 pan. Daily, .37 p.m. Daily, 19 pu, Sunday only. pan. Daily, except pul Ddily, except Whitby, Oshawa. Bowmanville BUS LINE 3 WEEK DAY SCHEDULE (Effective on and after Sept. 29, 1920) Gong W: est Arrive od 3 Sundav, Sunday. excent excent Sunday, Sunday, eA aly i Pgs), 12.45 p.m 45 pan 645 pm POEMS Wh] BASeBHENNaER BIGEZEES wmom Sepwndaan mv =5 Las ~~ OENmA~O 11.00 a.m, 1.00 p.m, s 4.35 p.m, 6.50 pan. ERuSLREES SSemawawnd BARA858R8a sppoopP? =» 33385588 ae 11.00 p.m, ' . ousses Whitby Hospital : SUNDAY AMD HOLIDAY SCHEDULE salEnncesied aman > = . 3 JURY & LOVELL'S OPTICAL PARLORS { AH-THERE'S ONE OF THE GENTLEMEN THAT LIVES IN THIS NE\GHBORMHOOD - IL GET ACQUAINTED - Se [GOOD MORNING - | a] DOLLY DIMPLES AND BOBBY BOUNCE KNOW: THAT'S WHY WERE MOVING! Dolly, Boesy AND C WALKING IN THE WOODS ~ AND THEY HEARD A QUEER NOISE - OMEY WERE y { o . A Vi oi ie Tf ey Wr AND THERE WAS A Lovely WHITE THERE, NOW DONT CRY: GOOoSIE DEAR ; pr %f Av WILL TAKE YOU HOME" SAID ¥ DoLLY- BOBBY AND COMFY = "AND a GOOSE CAUGHT IN SOME BRAMBLES AND COMEORTED (T-- Dolly RESCUED THE POOR GOOSE= SHE SMOOTHED ITS FEATHERS =A You CAN LIVE WITH OUR GANDER IN THE LITTLE HOUSE WE MADE 24) ) TILLIE THE TOILER--Losing No Time . TASTER a i mie FOR HM" By Russ Westove: S0 I'VE DE Sy 5 FERENCE LISTEN, MR. \UHIFPLE - WE' : : - RE PARTNERS IN NAME ONLY - You WON'T TAKE aur AN 0 YES, THIS 1S Miss SONES, OF JONES, WHIPPLE AND CO. You SAY You WANT TO SEE ME ON IMPORTANT BUSINESS] ALL RAGHTIE .VYou CAN COME RIG OVER , MR. ny BENNETT | WHEN | 'PHONED TONES You, MiSs I HAD NO IDEA "THAT SUCH A CHARMING YOUNG LADY AS SOURSELF WAS =n) (HE HEAD OF ig I ) PROSPEROUS FiRM. al IN THE FIRST PLACE , MRS JONES, \ CAN APPRECIATE THAT "YOU CONSIDER. THAT TIME IS MONEY, AND TIME LOST IN YOUR BUSINESS 18 MONEY LOST. AT = fh re ne! Down? OH, THANK WON'T You You SIT