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Oshawa Daily Times, 14 Apr 1930, p. 6

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a ee Antitaudind ama PAGE SIX AINTING OF EDEN AROUSES ACTIVE TALK IN CHICAGO 'Women 'Not Just Sure Whether to Banish Work She Was Unable to Get a Night's Rest Relbef Came After Talking D odd's Kidney Pills "1 had a pain in my; back and was not able to get a good night's vont," writes Mrs, W, EB, 'Blagrave, who resides at Rawdon, "J ot fous boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills and after I had finished taking them 1 was quite well again, That was a year ago and 1 have not {ele any sore back since, 1 am feel. Ing fine now," Vor over three generations Dodd's Kidney Pills have been the standard remedy for Backache, Rheumatism and All- ments arising from Faulty Kidneys, They strike at the seat of the trouble, the Kidneys, They are no cure-all, Just the finest Kidney €d if they should be called singly or on blo, "Um in teaver of the blapkeir ing, smiled Hon, kroest Lapointe, Minister of Justice, and uneom- promising enemy of divoves court legislation, smid lsughter, It was agreed to pass them en bloe, When My, Speaker asked the formal question us to when 'they | should be read the second time U, G, Coote (Progressive, Macleod) Lncetiously shoute , "Bix months hence," The bills then carried, No sign of the blockade talked of at the beginning of the session DODDS Cod A From Club Chicago; ~ A painting of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden and nothing else except a hair ribbon has created guite an argument ot the Minois Women's Athletic Club, The rinting is dv Miss Vilenting el of Bt, Louis and hangs in a You! exhibit, The title is Mapres' fel someone said means "after," Tha purely technical eritielsm of vs, Minna Schmidt concerned the | fr ribbon rtep Yve's h.ad, Mrs, Behimdt expressed serious doubt that there were hair ribbons in those days, : "The pleture shows the first man and the first woman in ved sithon- eile against a green sky, Eve Is _ fadin~ the camera: Adam js peering 'toward the Horizon, : It is 'the idea of Mrs, Charles Pe terson, chairman of the club's art salon, that the pieture represents the awakening of womenhood, or something of the sort, Ii is the ops inion of Mrs, Bessie Bragg Pierce, president, that a hair ribbon is in pdequate attire, She feels that as fong as Eve was buying ribbon she might as well have bought some more, The deep shade of red in whieh the silhouettes are painted alse caused comment, It could hardly have been intended for sunburn, the ladies agreed, Mrs, Emily Lund- green thought the artist's intent was that the pair were "blushing all over, "The club has been unable to deelde whether fo banish the work from the al n, mueh as Adam and Eve were anished from the Garden. In the meantime, the artist, Miss Vogel, who is 24 years old, says that if her pigture is. ruled out, then half the fctures in the art institute ought to e ruled out too, 33 DIVORCE BILLS IN 2 MINUTES FT FIRST READING Read En Bloc With No Sign of Opposition in House Ottawa, April 12,--~In less than two minutes, the House of Com- mons yesterday gave first reading to 63 divorce bile, the first meas» fires of their kind to reach the tower chamber this session, Laughter spread through the House as Mr, Speaker called the . Wotlon for first reading of thess Initial vesitlts of the past few weeks' activity of the Henate di» » Yoree committee, Mr, Speaker ask» A VENOS COUGH SYRUP ~~] tam aa Rl RR Pa Propose Radio Beacons on Was apparent but if divores eourt supporters plan to hold up theses bills, there will be plenty of op- portunity on second and third reading, T_T. C0-ORDINATE AIDS T0 AIR NAVIGATION ery Routes Between Canada and U.S.A, (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) New York, April 18,~~Heeem= mendations that existing radio aids to sir navigation in Canada and the United Htates he co-ordinated on routes which cross the horder will be handed to the Governments of hoth countries hy the heads of delegations which have heen meets ng here in a Lwo-4.y conference which eame to en end yesterday, No specific announcement was made vespecitng the points at which these services will be linked up, but it is understood they will be only those points where regular air mall and passenger lines cross the international roundary, It fs thought lkely that it the recommendations of the delega- tions meet with the approval of both Governments, radio beacons will eventually be installed to cover lines running from Montreal to Albany, Toronto te Buffalo, and later Winnipeg to Minneapolis, ROME TO CANONIZE CANADIAN MARTYRS AT END OF JUNE Confer Honor of 'Sainthood on Missionaries Slain Near Midland (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Montreal, April 18 == Official word from Rome has heen receiv. ed at Jesuit headquarters here that in all probability, the eanonisation of the Canadian Jesuit Martyrs, whieh has been eagerly antioipat- ed by Cathelies in all parts of Can ada, will take place at the end of June-~a great deal earlier than ex» pected, The canonization doubtless will arouse widespread interest throughout the Dominion as the Jesuit martyrs will be the first Cane adians to be granted the honors of sainthood, These are the mission arigg==John de HBrehoeuf, Gabriel Lalement, Isaac Jogues, Charles Garnier, Anthony Daniel, Noel Chabanel, Rene Goupil and John de a Lande---who were barbously slain by the Iroquois around the yeag 1648 near Midland, Ont, to whom the large shrine at Fort Hte, Marie, Ont, is dedicated, Thelr canonigation ceremonies at Rome will he attended, in all probability by pilgrims from all parts of the world, The story of their heroism is written in letters of bloed in the early history of Canada and al ready they have heen immortalised by historians--Protestant as well as Catholie==so that all Canadians will rejoice in the honors granted to these ploneers of Christianity and civilisation, LONE WORSHIPPER IN MEETING HOUSE A QUARTER CENTURY (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Bloomsburg, Pa, ~~ Miss Mary Emma Walter, ninety-one, who for the ay twenty-five years worshipped alone in the Friends' Meeting House in Catawissa, is --) : L The photographs here show Queen Mary of England and thves of her sons, chief figures in a bios | blographer, graphy of the Queen written hy | Mrs, Cavendish, and just publishe | decided views on marviage, so the dead, Misk Walter was the last member of the congregation ut the Friends' Meeting House, In 1000 all the other members had died or had moved from the district, Mach Wednesday and each Hunduy sh went to the little log building and gat for half an hour in silence, ni cording to the ritual of her faith She lived alone in a small hon The church was erected in 1776 and is 8 histories) landmark, Mis Walter, the daughter of a well to-do land owner, came to Cataw! oa in 1801, and vastored the build ing, which had not been vised some years and wus falling into decay, Three years ago the Cata- | wissa Borough Council took ove maintenance of the meeting hous The original furniture remain TEN THOUSAND SHOPKEEPERS RUINED IN YEAR Cheap Transportation Lures Customers Into Large Cities London, Eng, Ten thousand shopkeepers mainly trading In the villages and small towns of Hritain have gone bankrupt during the past yoar, Thousands more ave facing vuln, and the reason for their failure is mainly due to the inerease in trans port facilities from remote hamlets to the large towns and oltle Rapid and comfortable motor-om nibuses, offering cheap return fares have stopped in the village streets | and whirled away to the lure of the Jarge stores, where a greater val foty of goods ave offered at lower prices, The carrier's cart which used to make an eventful journey week from the village to the towns | Ras been replaced by a regular sel vice of fast vehicles, The village stoves are rarely patronized even | for small purchases beonose many village housewives are now able to | oatoh an early omnibus, shop in the | town, and return in time to cook | the midday meal, | Bankrupeles Up "Rankrupteles among small | shopkeepers have Inereased 6 per | cont, ginee the war," sald the man | ager of the Agenoy, "Pwo hundred shopkeepers have | gone bankrupt every week for the pant year, "One of the main causes of the | fallure of traders in small towns ix undoubtedly the increase in the | number of motor-omnibus services from villages to town "The small shopkeepers who have suffered most are the grocers, provision merchants, drapers, and | outfitters, | Some idea of the prevalllng din tress of village shopkeepers may he gathared from a letter published ¥ & Lincolnshive's trader, "Times are had for everyone," ha writes, "but I de not think people realise what an uphill people are having, Not A Fair Deal "I do not think we get a fair deal 'roteetion Trade task we | 1 od marvied state, money our tention nl | Are lin anee a | Io from the moneyed people who live in and around our village, Ans a neral rule they wend up to Lon don for thelr goods, and instead of spending their money in the village and doing the village people a hit of good, they spend it wheve there in already plenty of money, 4 "I sometimes think that people spend thelr money in the towns merely because they do not realise what the eirenlation of money in a village means to the shopkeeper, It In certainly not because they ave judiced against shopping in the 0cal stores, "F know that the upper classes say that ft In of no use trying to shop in the village because we do not keep the class of goods they res quire, J " we do not, hut we oan 'get anything they requive if they 1 would only give us the ohanee, "If we get a fair deal we ean give 0) (1) Prince of Wales, whose une wecording to sho his mother, Queen Mary, feels keenly, The Queen haw mor rem can certainly give our personal ats und we customers SHANGHAI HOLDS MORE SCANDAL SHEETS | THAN ANY OTHER CITY | Bhanghal ~The Chinese husiness professional man who strays from the straight and narrow path usunlly veads all nhout his sins in the papers A survey tary made recently by mill suthoritios indicates that there more seandul sheets in Bhang- had thin any other elty in the east. arn hemisphere and probably the world, One hundred and ten yels low tri-weekly newspapers are pub Huhed In the Asiatie metropolis and are nll devoted to printing news not fit to print To lieep these papers supplied with fnformation concerning the do- ings of Chinese who are in the potlight, a large army of Chinese andal mongers ls constantly kept an the Joh, They appear at the most amaging times at the most In. convenient places, SUTPOITS NINE CHILDREN BY PANNING GOLD Knoxville, Tenn.~Aunt €Clindy Kelly, 76, who lives on Coker ereek the mountains, supports nine arandelifidren by panning gold, he finn kept the location of her find a moore! he ralsed five ehildren hy panning gold after her hushand, i miner injured and unable (Oo continue at work TOWNSHIP WITHOUT 4.0 ONE RENTED FARM (By Consdian Press Leased Wire) Farpu Nichol Township may justly hold a record in the Provines, At a meeting af Niehol Counell in Fergus recently, the members stat. od (hut go far as they knew there not a person ving on a rented farm in the township, Perhaps this ueenunts for the wonderful of Alex Molr, tax collector, who has for seven years had the reputation for eollecting every cent of taxes, Thix year the voll shows od FHA NAG. 78 taxes all of whieh he oolleoted except $4.04, which he. longs to an estate on lot 18 whieh has not yet heen straightened up. ven this may have heen went to the enllector this week an it was promised, If ao, no munioipality oan equal Niohol Township's repus tation of paying every cent of taxes for some Years haok, GRASS UNDER SNOW ALLOWS CATTLE TO GRAZE IN WINTER (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) foattle = Mxperts from the UnitedeBtates Department of Agris oulture predict that the strange winter blue grass discovered on an Oregon farm and bellaved by them to be "lost grass' of Kurs ope may revolutionize farming and datrying industrien, The story of the grass in a farm romance, Similar to grass which disappeared in Europe a century or more ago, it dies down in summer, when other grass is green, but thrives In winter, when food for livestock ia low, It forms a perfect turf, even under snow, Hecaune the experts found ft Will grow under most adverse oon- dittons, without enltivation, and will thyive in Tein regions, they view it an a solution of the pro. blem of utilising logged-off lands of the Pacifie northwest, Heads for use in the Paelfie northwest will be sold exolusively In Beattle by the Children's Orthos pedie ho@al, The agency was a mitt of Mes, EB, 0, Hanley, on whose farm (he seed was found, and will be a source of Jermauont income for the hospital Times change, 1n 1800 Bandwieh pasied un by-law forbidding houses holders to wrap thelr. gabage in fanen At a recent meeting this y=law was brought uw to date, and it now provides that houses holders must ee to it that their Ano Bl0es chronicler sintes, particularly unmarvied state of threo of her sons, (4) Vortealt of Queen Mary of England, taken Prince Henry, Dulko of Gloucester, a8 good, if not better value for {Harbuie In wrupped in paper, the in 1088, (i) | BAD TEMPERED OWLS NIP HANDS OF PLANE PILOT Birds From Cuba Display | Uncomfortable Liking For Human Flesh (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Now York, It's owl in the way ve look at it, as Mister Dooley might have sald, Out at Roosevelt Field they called 'em "manseating' owls, Just because they displayed an uncomfortable tendency to take a nip out of any available human flesh But Dr, WW, Reid Blair, director of the Bronx Zoo, said they were merely a pair of bad tempered owls, carnivorous. as all owls are, but much preferring lve mice and moles or posibly smalled birds to a human filet, The two terrifying owls arrived at Noosevelt Meld after u de luxe plane trip north from Miami, They were caught in Cuba, somewhere south of Havana, where owls, too, have thelr good times after dark, Mrs, Hrrison Williams of New York and Long Island a guest on the estate of Charles A, Munn at Palm Beach, sent them as a gift to the New York Zoologleal Park. Mrs, Willams and several others started on the plane trip, but left to take a traln te Jacksonville when bad weather intervened, The owls continued the trip as the only passengers ($60 passeng- ers at that), huddled in thelr orange orate, bitterly resenting the world, the spirit of aviation and everything that was happen ing to them Immediate objects of tlils resentment were Ray Bar bin, pilot of the Roosevelt Field plane, and Harry Goldberge, anslists ant operations oMeer at Roosevelt Field and co-pilot on the Alght of the owls, The two pilots fed the owls raw meat once a day and stowed them In a warm place at night and see retly resolved that if worst eams to worst those darned owls would not rate a parachute, On their arrival at Roosevelt Field, after stopping over night at Hadley Meld, New Hrunswlek, because of thiok weather, the grim pair was | greeted by George Willlamson of the Zoo staff who didn't seem to mind a litle matter of concentrat- ed grumpiness a 'bit, He handled them knowingly, submitted ami ably to a little clawing of his coat collar and bustled the newcomers | off to the Nronx, | The viel of mystery that sure rounded the owls ever aince they started north last Saturday was dissipated by Dr] Dlair when he termed them aslmply barn owls, They are also oalled, he sald, monkey-faced owls, The Bimian resemblance ia marked, what with the white rim around the eyes, the ruffed pompadour of feathers on the read and the heak is long and hooked, looking pretty menacing, They have big hrown eyes, whose stare in baleful and eanloulating, They are about eighteen inches igh, Fen owls sald, Dr, Blaly, are found in Cuba Central America and the southern United States, Rimllar specimens have visited the Bronx Zoo hefore though there are none thare now, They do not live very long in oeaptivity, (A couple of aviajora murmured that they well understant that!) They are striotly nocturnal and do not pee very well by day, (Two cam- eramen mumbled that they could nee well enough to grab a fellow's finger), And they are not mums eating, (No, sald some one, Just tasting), Ofoers Tuesaday continued thelr search for 10 prisoners who enonps od from the seventh floor of the county Jail at Houston, Texas, Monday, Two others who eswnped were captured, The 12 men sawed through steel bara after trussing night watchman W, A, MeGlinton, They slid 75 feet to the earth, down a fire hose lashed to the cell window, | | | | who was grapher as an admirable governors gonoral for the Dominion and (4) Canadian suggested by the hie Princo George, younges, son of Quoen Mary, ELECTRONS DANCE AND MUSIC TURNS CORNERS IN TUBE Neon Tube Illustrates Queer Action of Electricity, Musical Notes York April==(By The Press) == Music. was made to turn corners, execute corkscrew gyrations and otherwise perform in an extraordinary man ner by Dr, A, N, Goldsmith, vice president and general engineer of "a Radio Corporation of America, during an address on "The Iudus- trial March of the Electron", give en before the members of the Eleo- Now Tonle in the werld, At All Deal Mail from The DOC Dold emer tid Pons ioom Toe trical Association of New York, The musle vibrations, trans. formed into electrical vibrations, then into light by means, of a neon tube, were made to leap though space on the beam of light, flow through a glass tube and glongs off mirrors and other ob- jects bytore falling on a photoslec- tric cell und again being converted into electrical energy, amplified and reproduced as muse, Dr, Goldsmith struck a match before the sensitive photoelectric cell and the sputter of the oxidiz ing phosphorus sounded ike u miniature machine gun, A Fourth of July sparkler caused similar but sustained crackling sounds, such us are heard when the radio sot is operated during wovere static storms, Dr, Goldsmith said electronicg being the study of the electron and proton, the elementary nega- tive and positive charges and the smallest things in the universe =~=Wa# the newest avenue or path- way in The fairyland of sclence, Heo predicted that radio musica) instruments, such as the instru ment which iw played hy waving the hands before it, will bring into being In the future tone eoror never before heard by man, through the evolution of a whole new family of musical instruments made possible by applications of the electron tube, Any pitch, vol ume, tone or type of control be comes & possibility with the vacy um tube, he sald, SOLDIER WANDERED 18 YEARS TO COME HOME FROM PRISON Trento, Italy.=TFrom the little village of Camp! near here, August Lorens!, 88, departed, 106 yoars ago a8 An Austrian soldier to fight the Russians, He hag just now return- od after years of hardships to find himself an Italian eltizen, hecause his village, hy the fortunes of war, became Itallan, Lorenzi was cap- tured by the Russians in 1014, He was sent to Semipalatinsk, then to Tomsk, Samarra, Tamboy and Gor. ad. He was made to cut down troes until the work broke his health, Ea ly Then he farmed out to a | with whom he was working he time of the revolution In 1917, The Bolshaviks wacked the town and burned the mill, Lorenzi fled nt night, He passed sovernl years of Intense misery until in 1021 he became a farm hand, It was no! until the following yeur he was able to wend n letter to his rele tives In Cempl He aid not then know that the war was over, The next year, de palring of ever [being able to Tenve Iussia, he wat | ried the daughter of a farmer, In [1026 the authoritios here, through [the IHallan ambassador ut Moscow, | hogan to exert Influence to allow [him to return, Dut the Hoviet government, hecause he had mar | ried n Russian, withheld his pase {port for four yours, At lust they {let him go with only sight dellars and a few articles of clothing, NNEEDING WINTER CATTLE Falrbaghks, Alanke, =-Yaks and | Galloway cattle are helng crossed | at the Fairbanks government ex | perimental station in an effort to {bulld a hreed of cattle which ean withstand the ¢ winters of Alaska, The yaks were hrought here from Canada and first experiments were sufficlantly promising to continue the avoral yen Yor plan for HE FOUND THE SNAKE Sydney, Australin, «= Detective Delaney was working on the strange | conse of the disnppenranes of pennies from publie telephones On the street he encountered # man whose pockets jingled and wers evidently bulging with small change, "Where did you get those poeunies?'" De laney asked, 'I am a snake charms or and I've Just heen giving a pore formance," the other replied, De- Inney laughed, He had heard such stories before, Ho he summoned n polieeman, then plunged his hand into the man's pocket, His laugh turned into a how! of rage, He bad found the snake Speaking of colors, it In suid that orange makes men nervous, To way nothing of what it makes Irish men, Guelph Mercury, -- of year. The H: a load; Pneumatic capacity Horse drawn vehicles one ton shall be limited to 250 Speed limits all the year round are: 15 milea an hour for solid tired vehicles and 20 miles an hour for pneumatic tired vehicles of more than 8 tons gross, Loads Must Be Reduced During March and April Government Warning to Owners and Drivers of Trucks The Ontario Highway Traffic Act provides for the roeds, paved and unpaved, during early spring months, Because moisture lurks in the foundations of the roads, the surfaces are readily damaged by excessive weights and speeds at this time What the Law Says way Traffic Act declares that during March and April, on roads outside cities and towns: Solid tired trucks and trailers shall be limited to half tired trucks and trailers, with a carrying exceeding three tons, shall be limited to half a load; 15% pe och 1h WHdUh of tre with a Penalties are Provided ection of The penalty for overloadihg during March and April ia a fine, imprisonment or both, Licenses also may be suspended, Highway traffic officers have been directed to be especially vigilant in apprehending all who disobey. The Department of High desires to impress upon truck and team owners and drivers the provisions of the law, It seeks their co-operation in seeing that the law is obeyed in all cir- cumstances, Ontario's investment in good roads, now amounts ing to many millions of dollars, must be protected, Ontario Department of Highways : The HON. GEORGE 8. HENRY, Minister 4

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