1 Fas v Now MONDAY, JUNE 9, 1930 PAGE TWELVE RECEIVED SERIOUS INJURIES Belleville. -- Elgin Jackman, treasurer of: Rawdon township, met with an unfortunate accident while working on the ston crusher; : In an to break a huge boulder with the Sipdse Rim h, the hahdle slipped ou and hy v= ed a blow in the face resulting' in the fracture of his cheek-bone ds well as injuries to his teeth. . GRADUATE'IN NEW YORK In the list of graduates of, the Metropolitan 'Se¢haol 'of Nursing, New 'York, appear the names of three Prince' Edward girls-- Miss Aletha Hunt, of Bloomleld; = Miss Marjorie Hunt, of Wellington; and Miss Mary Davis, of Picton. At the head of this school is the Prin- cipal Mrs. 8. H. Datesman well- known to many in Prince Edward County. Her maiden name was Miss Sabra Hunter. The assistant principal is another Prince Edward girl, Mrs, Beatrice Christie, proéb- ably better remembered as "Bea- tie Dunn," SENTENCED FOR FRAUD Belleville.-- Charged with at. tempting to defraud an insurance company: as a result of .a fire which destroyed the Knight home in Tweed, Thomas Aok and Mrs. Clara Knight were given sentences of 'one year, Gus Knight six montlis and Mrs, Parks, an aged lady, three months. ANNIVERSARY OBSERVED Port Hope.--Inspiring sermons were preached to large congrega- tions at the celebration here of the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Port Hope Baptist Church. Rev. J. H. Sutcliffe, pastor of Murray Street Baptist Clvarch, Peterboro', conducted the services, ADMITS SETTING FIRE Peterboro'.--Charged with un- lawfully setting fire which spread and burned 30 acres of timber land if if Tiki! ; i Callie | Only keep your | skin healthy | -anditwill belovely Elizabeth Arden's method only aims to keep the skin healthy, to quicken eircula- tion through the tissues, to il stimulate the action of the | 'pores. But, in consequence, "the skin grows lovely, For every step of the Elizabeth Arden Treatment enlists the aid of nature to prevent Ml and correct 'wrinkles coarseness and other blem~ jshes. You can follow the method of an' Elizabeth Arden Treatment every 'morning and night at home. cleansing, toning and nour- ishing the skin with Eliz- abeth Arden's Venetian Cleansing Cream, Arden's Skin Toni¢, Venetian Spec- jal "Astringent and Orange Skin Food. Elizabeth Arden's Venetian Toliet JPreparations Sold by +The Rexall Stores '° |. LIMITED Il Xing St. B. Simcoe St. 5. in South Burleigh, at the east end of Stoney Lake on May 12 and 13, Stuart. Murphy. appeared before Magistrate O, A. Langley at War- saw and pleaded mot guilty. He was remanded to Jume 20. Wel- lington Tate pleaded gpilty when charged before Magistrate Lang- ley at 'Buckhorn with having com- mitted a similar offence at Nogies Creek in Harvey Township, and was fined $25 and costs, MANY TOURISTS EXPECTED Picton.--Judging from the large number of inquiries being made for summer' accommodation, Secretary L. B, Calnan, of the Prince Edward County Publicity Committee, con- siders that this will be a' record year for the tourist trade in this district. GIRL STRUCK BY CAR Belleville,-- While she was re- turning from scheol, the seven- year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Warner Wood, residing onthe 6th concession of Sidney, suffered se- vere bruises and a bad shaking up when she was struck by a car driv- en by Mrs. Walter S. Northcott, 240 Pinncale street. TAXI DRIVER KILLED Lakeview.--John Fraser, 276 Stlverbirch avenue, 'Toronto, was instantly killed here at 6 a.m. this morning when he drove his taxicab into the side of a transport truck, His car was utterly demolished. NURSES GRADUATE Penbroke.-----Graduating nurses of the Pembroke Cottage Hospital, were Misses Mary Phippen, Bath: Cathrine Clarke. Cobden; Hazel Graham, "Penbroke; Margaret Mc- Farlane, Eganville; Adele Denni- son, Renfrew: Ivie Jamieson, Fores- ter's Falls: Tolene Cameron, Arn- prior: Mildred Ross. Cobden; Beu- lah Connolly, Shawville; Isabel Me- Lean, Beachburg, and Annie Mec- Lelland Cobden. TABLET UNVEILLED Brockville.--In St. Paul's church a tablet was unveiled in memory of Mrs. James T. Fitzpatrick, erect- ed by the members of the Women's Auxiliary, in which she was a loyal and untiring worker, Cornwall.--Rev. Dr. Arpad Gov- an, of Williamstown, was elected president of the Montreal-Ottawa Conference of the United Church at the sixth annual session of that body. : SKELETON OF GIANT MAN IS DISCOVERED (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Texcoco, Mixico, June 10--The skeleton of a giant prehistoric man has been discovered in the nearby village of San Andres Jaltenco by Dr. Carloas Basasri. Dr. Basasri is head of an expedi- tion which was sent out by the De- partment of Education to explore the Texcoco region. which ig rich in ancient relics. The skeleton was sent to Mexico City. for study. TOM MIX ORGANIZES ABSTINENCE CLUB Montreal, June 10--Tom Mix, noted movie star, is organizing a total abstinence club. Here with a 'circus opening a Canadian tour, the cowboy recruit- ed 75 clubmen. Any man who gets through the whole Dominion tour without taking a drink wins $5. Likewise, any ome who slips and sips is fined $'5, Slippers and sippers are expected. Mr. Mix announced that at the last Canadian stopover a banquet would be held and paid for out of tne fines. "Those stock market guys are crooked." --*'Scarface Al.' Capone. "Women are becoming a power, but a power in the home, not in in- dustry."--Henry Ford. "Self-confidence is either a petty pride in our own narrowness, or a realization of our duty and pri- vilege as one of God's children." -- Phillips Brooks. "Dramatic criticism is, has been and eternally will be as bad as it possibly can."--Bernard Shaw, | | sidered ter of m 3 med by the 'MADE WAR ERRORS "Second Bismark" Would 'Not Have Permitted Hasty War Declaration Berlin.--A letter written by the late Prince Bernhard von Buelow, often called Germany's 'second Bis- the history of that conflict ;might have been written differently. Prin- ce von Buelow wrote the letter to Theodore Wolff, editor-in-chief of the Berliner Tageblatt, with the understanding that his views might be published after death. He died last year, The Wrince, who was considered the Iron Chancellor's foremost dis- ciple and often was described as the only 100 per cent chancellor since Bismarck, throughout the nine years of his chancellorship (1900-09) rigidly adhered to Bis- marck's dogma for Germany to fos- ter 'friendship with Russia at all costs, on one hand, and always keep aloof from Great Britain on the other. "But in 1925 his letter confessed that had he been Chancel- lor early. in the war he would have left nothing undone to reach a peaceryl settlement with Great Bri- tain, "I should never have approved of the Reichstag's foolish peace re- solution nor 'the Kaiser's whining peace letter to Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg," he said. 'But through some ' serious intermedi- ary like the King of Denmark, the Pope or the King of Svain would have advised the English of our readiness to give up Belgium with- out any reservations, 'neatly and clearly." If necessary, I should even have been prepared to consider a French-Lorraine combination And even if there had been no in- clination on England' part toward peace, which I doubt, there was no excuse for our blundering into Wilson's, plan. On the contrary. it behooved us to concentrate all our forces, all our energies at hame and at the fronts for a fight to a finish. The result could not have heen more disastrous than after our capitulation. 'I should never have given Aus- tria carte blanche in dealing with Serbia but should have insisted on knowing the contents of the Aus- trian uitimatum before its despatch to Serbia. In no circumstances should I have allowed the Austrians after only a hasty perusal of Ser- bia's reply. to pronounce it adequate to sever all diplomatic relations and start military activities, Nor ~hould T have had Germany send France and Russia a declaration of war and thereby estranged first Ruman- ia and then Italy from our central European amity agreement. Here- in von Bethmann and von Jagow committed a grave blunder. QO course, I should never have agreed to an invasion of Belgium as long ag the Belgian neutrality was not being violated by our ad- versaries. I doubt whether I would have permitted the submarine cam- naign, certainly not at the time and in the circumstances in which un- fortunately this mode of warfare was introduced. "And T should have insisted that immediately after the outbreak of the war our navy go into action irrespective of the risk and peril involved." ST. PAUL'S WILL REOPEN JUNE 25 Special Thanksgiving Service to be Held to Mark Occasibn London--$t, Paul's = Cathedral will be re-opened on June 25 in the presence of the King and Queen. A special thanksgiving service will be - conducted. Ther will be 400 clergy in the vast chancel and more than. 4,000 persons are expected to make up the congregation. Restoration has been going on for seventeen years, half the time orig- inaly required to build Sir Christ- opher Wren's architectural and en- gineering masterpiece. Nearly $2,- 000,000 has been spent on the re- pairs and for five years parts of the cathedral have been closed as unsafe, The huge church wag built at a cost of $20,000,000, raised largely by a tax on coal entering the port of London. Its foundations are only four and a halt feet deep. 'Beneath them are six feet of earth and' below 'that a bed of wet sand twenty feet deep. Ty i The dome alone weighs 68,000: 'tons. It is supported by eight hol-, dow 'piers and in the course of the centuries it has tilted dangerously, almost' of plumb, That t entirely ceased. bu safe. Mos the renovated ¢ tootateps of W through the centuri at Jor OF the. | shines : ext porous. 'The soot rs ees ned 1a sment, The largest pipe is on the pedal board. It is 32 feet long, of three inch pine and weighs nearly a ton. marek' indicates that had he been |, Chancellor early in the Great War | Main picture shows the steamboat in 1840. harbour. of the illumination. In 1840 the South Shore. ago is realized in the bridge-- by 165 one thousand candle-power incandescen for this unique installation were designed illumination engineers of the Northern Electric Company Limited. i wharl 'as it looked Superimposed Is the main span of the Montreal Harbour Bridge where it crosses over the steamer channel of the Ovrl: a view of the new bridge at night showing the brilllancy ) people of Montreal dreamed of a bridce to join the harbour with the communities of the . The site they then selected was that cn which now stands the magnificent structure known to us, three generations later, as the Montreal Harbour Bridge, officially opened on May 24th; 1930. The single 16 candle-power gas lamp in the foreground is ty it was not till 1880 that electric light was installed in the Harbour o Ninety Years Ago Comes 'I'tue ical of the scientific darkness of its day, for Montreal. Today the dream of ninety years one of the world's finest monuments to modern science and engineering--illuminated t electric lamps---a total of 165,000 candle-power. Special plans by the engineers of the Harbour Commission in conjunction with in| the 1 of 20 Calc 4a hie of ed bs an i i sanced she poh hei : : terior 1s sti { 8m) i of the sod whl ed 1 of ity of ¢ ; ple A Tie fut ig ie of Portland stone, | £ safety belt broke | winds, that shook his. to death yesterd: I Eo Jemteras n expert pilot, and. veteran of dor tlghts he 'was |. Tn -o-gilding the rassive cross a y dome, 3 aves of pure gold were used. It is all 24 carat leaf, like the gold with which the the ancient Egyptians covered their mummies 4,000 years ago. Exposed to London fogs and smoke, the new covering of the cross Is expected to hold its brilliance for at least hall a century. The cathedral reputedly occupies the site of an ancient tem- ple to Diana, Tle first cathedral was started in 1083 under sanction of William the Conquerer. It was damagéd by fire in 1135 and not completed until 1300, In 1561 lightning shattered its high spire and the great fire of 1666 wiped out the first cathedral Only two years later Sir Christopher Wren started the present structure, "floating" it on its treacherous bed in a manner that has proved an example ever since to architectural engineers throughout the world. # -- FRANCE FACING TROUBLE IN EAST Residents of Indo-China In- spired by Reds to Rebellion Paris, June 10---Digquieting rum- ors. of almost daily bloodshed in French Indo-China, despite the Government's efforts to minimize the situation are beginning to alarm the Paris press. Long editorials urging the need of swift, decisive action and of pro- fiting by Britain's experience in In- dia are the rule. "There is every evidence that Moscow is inspiring the Annamites to the same program of passive re- sistance and refusal to work and pay taxeg which is troubling India," Leon Bailby wrote in his organ, "L'Intransigeant." "If 20,000,000 men fold their arms, lve on rice and dried fish, refuse to provide food for the citis and paralyze posts telegraphs, telephones, 'mines and factories, it is not difficult to en- vision * what: France will be up against." GIRL, 26, PROPOSES TO OCTOGENARIAN Ottawa, June' 10 ---- Alexander "Sandy" MacDonald, who celebrat- ed his 83rd birthday last week has a unique 'birthday 'gift--a 'propos- al of marriage from a 26-year-old girl of Vankleek Hill. : ., "Sandy" said he hasn't decided whether he will take another wife. On seveh other otcasions he has been a horvauy Jr) room, He is x | vividly ; hfs. many. ex. 'periences, in' Ottawa and Bytown uring' the pi : a Capital f © (By Comsdian Presaslassed Brownsville, Texas, June. ] fet "belt broken by. vic E..J, Snyder, 33, 1 tendent of tna, Mexican bon iiat toil foam Ne 1 7 at Brot numarous - gh demonstrating the craft when the accident occurred, He fell fro 'less than 200 -teet, | gh 76 years, He first | Beotla: 5.03, STOPS AN ATTACH ON RADI TRUST IN US. Senator's Speech Declaiming Combine Suddenly Shut Off Air New York, June 10--An "SOS" call, which caused suspension of broadcasting in the New York area during the portion of the speech of former Senator James A. Reed of Missouri in which he attacked what he called the "radio trust," remains mysterious. During Senator Reed's speech from Sedalia, Md., the Tuckerton, N.J. station of the Radio Marine Corporation reported to the naval communications here that it had heard an unidentified SOS call, Naval communications automatical- ly notified local companies to stay off the ajr. There was no further signal and after a time broadcast- ihg was resumed. Investigation failed to elicit any information as to the source of the call, It was said at Tuckerton that nothing further was heard. Naval communications at Washington and the coast guard there had no re- cord of any "SOS" call at all. The Mackay radio station here and the Sayville, 1.1., station tried vainly to pick up the call when it was learn- ed that a ship was supposed to be calling, Aftef Senator Reed had finished the "Radio trust" portion of his speech, it was said, the interfering signalg ceased, It was learned that the Columbia Broadcasting Company is making as thorough an investigation of the "SOS" call as possible, in hope ot tracing it to its source. y CAUSE OF COLDS AND CURE FOUND, SCIENTIST CLAIMS (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Baltimore, . Ohio. June 10, Widespread interest has been aroused by a 'scientist's announce- ment' that. he had discovered the cause of the cominon cold and deveioped a cure and preventive, Dr. J. A. Preitfes, assoclato of the University of Marsland medical school and an outstanding patho: logist, mace the announcement fin a paper before the Maryland Bio- logical Society 'he has devised a vaccine which he belleves cures a cold. and gives patient immunity [fo one to three years, TEN FACE DEATH, 1. APPEALS, REFUSED or 'ten 'death sentences im connection ET 1 i y uncil, CT wolvn bihird Wh nad bean. son. tonced to death, were saved: from xegution, by the ofl. which commuted their punishment to life sonment, y-twWo other im- ir, | prisonment sente |. were con- ord {roms fod 'ih Ee ey ed i 3 erst CH 2 STIFF SENT *|" FOLLOW JAIL ESCAPE he Ca rh % yo Guelph, June (10. -- Sentences ranging 'from two to seven years in Portsmouth Penitentiary were x Pi (By Conadian Press) 1 | Hani, 'Tonking, * French Indo | '| Chipa, June 10.-~The appeals handed out by Magistrate Wait in police court to five prisoners charg- ed with escaping from the Ontario Reformatory, June 2. Robert Douglas, John Toth, and Perey Crist, each received two years; Jean Maurice charged with escap- ing and assaulting a guard, seven years and John Verdun, on the same two counts, five years. AUTO HITS TRAIN AT BARRIE, THREE HURT (By Canadian Press) Barrie, June 9.--Three Elmvale residents are in Royal Victoria Hospital here after their automo- bile crashed into the engine of a Canadian Pacific Railway (freight train near the raighurst station, about twelve miles north of Bar- rie. Herb Goddard, driver of the car, sustained two fractures of the leg and head injuries, while his father and mother Mr. and Mrs. George Goddard, received lesser Injuries, the former suffering three broken CONVENTION OF TECHNICAL NEN Canadian Society to Meet at Acadia University This Month Wolfville, : N.S.--Extensive ar- rangements are being made by the Governments of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick, and provincial members of the soci- ety, for the reception and enter- tainment of the two hundred dele- gates, representing the Canadian Society of Technical Advisors, who will hold their annual convention at Acadia University, Wolfville, June 23 to June 26. The C.S.T.A. is a national organ- fzation of over 1,500 members, em- bracing practically every technical advisor in Canada, Included in {ts membership are a number of col- lege presidents and other leading men in the civil, agriculture and industrial life of the Dominion, The President is J. P. Sackville, President of the University of Sask- atchewan. The C.8.T.A. onvention will fol- low that of the Canadian Seed Growers' Association at Acadia University June 1 9to 21, The Technical program will open with a meting the morning of June 24, Several lectures will follow and at 4.30 the delegates will be taken on a drive to Grand Pre Park and through the Gaspereau Valley,LAt 6.30 o'clock a joint Maritime ban- auet will be given the delegates at Acadfa University dining hall by the Dgpartments of Agriculture of the three Maritime Provinces. Ad- dresses of welcome will be made by Hon, O.°P. Goucher, Minister of Ag- culture for Nova Scotia; Hon, Wal- ter Lea, Premier and Minister of Agriculture for P.E.I. Hon. Lewis Smith, Minister of Agriculture for New Brunswick, and Dr. A, B, Bal- com, Mayor of Wolfville. This ban- quet will be followed by the presi- dntial address of J. P. Sackville, Wednesday will. be devoted to business, lectures and a picnic at Cape Blomidon. Thursday's pro- gram will include the conferring of fellowships and scholarships and election of officers. The same even- ing a banquet will be given by the Nova Scotia Department of Agri- culture at Halifax, Hon, O. P, Gou- cher will be chairman. Leaving Hal- ifax by car on the return trip, June 27, the party will go via Truro Parrsboro, Nappan, Amhersiiti and Sackville to Cape Tormentine, gr- riving at Charlottetown that even- ing. . After a tour of the Island in charge of J. A. Clarke, Superinten- dent of the Experimental Station, Charlottetown, the party will tous Back through New Brunswick. POSING 45 CORPSE, DONS BROTHER FOR FUNERAL EXPENSES Sault Ste. Marie Man Tries Novel Scheme, But It Didn't Work Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., June 10- Pregending to be dead and then try- ing ®o collect your own funeral ex- penses from your own brother sounds like a strange means of raising money, yet J. Miller, alias W. A. Barr, whose home is fn Bris- tol, Tenn., but who has been living in the Bault, tried to do so. He ap- peared in police court and was ordered deported to the United States. Sometime ago Barr wired his bro- ther in Bristol, signing the message J. Miller. The message was to the effect that W. A, Barr was dead, and his dying wish was that his brother would have the body taken to Sunny Tennessee for interment. The brother in Bristol wired back asking Miller to find out what it would cost to have the body taken south, Mjller replied saying that it would cost $176. and he asked to'have the money sent immediately By this time the undertaker in Bris- tol was on the job, and he tele- graphed T. E. Simpson's under- taking parlors to look up the corpse, embalm it and all expenses would be guaranteed. "The wicked are wicked, no doubt and they go astray and they fall, and they come by their de- serts; but who can tell the mis- chief which the vtry virtuous do?" --Thackeray. -- Introducing--- M. F. (Matt) Armstrong ND ribs and bruises and the latter from scalp wounds and severe shock, NEW PROPRIETORS OSHAWA BURIAL C0. Funeral Home 87 CELINA STREET FUNERAL DIRECTORS WE AIM TO GIVE SATISFACTION & SERVICE Private Funeral Chapel, First Class Equipment, Ambulance NIGHT--PHONE A. W, (Army) Armstrong 1082 aR Quaker Puffed Wheat and Cony No. 8757-13600 ftished--112 lines x3 cols, Casiadian News, 1930 128903 OR BTR Astonishing Guns Shoot Food to Eat | Wheat and rice grains givers their most nutritious form H™ are wheat and rice grains shot from guns! To give them 2 new deliciousness... a more perfect digestibility. : First the choice, plump grains are sealed in gunis. 'Then revolved in fiery ovens. Then fired. This causes 125 million explosions in every grain. It blasts open every tiny food cell. Thus every particle of the grain is made as completely diges- tible as though it had been cooked for hours. And : Wheat and Puffed Rice artain the virtual i 57157 Puffed Rice