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Oshawa Daily Times, 3 Dec 1930, p. 6

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PAGE SIX THF OSHAWA DANY TIMFS WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1930 NORTHERLY AIR MAI. SERVICE IS BEING RFSVMED Mail Flights For Winter Season Have Been Inaugurated (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) Edmonton, Alberta, Dec. 3.--The nt flight of W. R, May, chief the Commercial Airways, n, poining the nose of his red monoplane toward Fort , marked opening of the win- tev flying season. The Joural says: "The flight marks the resump- tion of flying activity in the north ern districts, halted when the dread 'in between' season struck the north on October 9. From now until the spring 'break up' aero- planes will be busy in what is ex- pected to be a season of unpre- cedented activity, The purpose of May's flight was to carry part of the mail which had accumulated at McMurray since October 9, to the morth. During the next few days the Commercial Airways fleet will be engaged in moving this . mountain of mail in order that the first scheduled flight from Mec- Murray to Aklavik may be under- taken without undue difficulty. "Landing at Fort Smith, the flier used the new winter landing field there for the first time. This field is one of the dominion's 'farthest north' aerodromes. It was built by order of the depart- ment of the interior so that fliers might have good landing condi- tions at the administration centre for the Northwest Territories. "While pontoon-equipped mach- ines have no trouble landing at Smith in the summer months, ice conditions on the river there usu- ally force fliers to settle two or three miles from the town in the winter. The new field has two runways and will permit landings almost in the heart of the settle- ment." HALF CENTURY OF SERVICE REWARDED WITH MAYORALTY London, Dec. 3.--~Amongst the new Mayors who have just come into office is Alderman Cross, of Shrewsbury, who was first a mem- ber of the Town Council exactly BO years ago. He is 82 years of age, and was Mayor previously in 1894. His father was twice Mayor of Shrewsbury. Councillor Ward, who has been elected for Harwich. is a Trinity House Pilot and the first pilot to hold the office. Councillor Mold, Banbury's new Mayor, is a mar- ket gardener and he is 72 years of age. Alderman Henry Warburton, elected for Bolton, began life as a baker's vanboy. Last year he was elected President of the Nations! Federation of Master Bakers' As- soclations. Alderman Simonds (Dunstable) is a railway clerk at Luton, and succeeds another rail wayman----a platelayer. Mr, Tyr- whitt-Drake (Maidstone) holds of- fice for the sixth time. He fis known as the Showman-Mayor, being the owner of the largest pri- vate menagerie and circus in Brit- ain, by which means he has raised over $25,000 for local charities. ANGLICAN CHURCH SHORT OF CLERGY Church of England Finds Number of Candidates Declining Yearly (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) London, Dec. 3 -- The Anglican Church here needs 588 candidates every year for ordination, but the im- mediate prospect does not offer more than 500. This is the conclusion of the committee appointed by the Church Assembly to consider the question of the staffing of parishes. Nobody seems to know exactly how amny clergy are engaged in parochial work in England, but number is es- timated at 16,745, a deficiency of 1,158 It is conceivable, the report says, that before the war the home Church was over-staffed and that its present difficulties are due more to an un- systematic distribution of men to an actual shortage. The Commission makes a number of proposals for providing supple- mentary help, including one that suitable middle-aged men who have lived for many years in the same place and are not likely to move should be ordained as voluntary clergy who would continue to follow their secular callings. The decline in the number of candidates is at- tributed to the secularisation of the time, difficulties in the formularies of religion, misunderstandings about the life and work of the clergy, and fin- ancial barriers. An important 'recommendation is that assent to the Thirty-nine Ar- ticles should no longer be required as part of the doctrinal test for admis- sion to Holy Orders. They are con- sidered to be unsuitable in their pre- sent form. Attention is also called to unfair caricatures of the clergy, and particularly to some recent war nov- | els, and authors of which appear "to have set out deliberately to ridicule and belittle" their work. Concluding on an optimistic note, the report says: "There is nothing in the position today which calls for discouragement or despair, though it gives grounds for anxiety and calls for foresight and immediate action. There are signs of a steady improve- ment in the quality of the ordinants." NEW SCHOOL HAS OLDTIME VIEWS Opposes "So-Called" Mod- ernists and Stresses Old Time Evangelism Halifax, N.S.--"Realizing the need for old time Evangelism, with a Hell for Sinners and a Heaven for Saints," the Baptist Pastorates of Kingston, Melvern and Lower Aylesford have founded and taken under their man- agement the Kingstan Bible School, an institution affording courses in Evangelism, Colportage and allied subjects. Missionary work, and the Ministry, "We stand squarely for the old time fundamentals and opposed to the so-called modernistic views." de- clares Rev. J. B. Daggett, superin- tendent. "We believe that the most non-progressive and reactionary class in the land is the so-called modern- ist. We dispute most emphatically that the scholarship of the day is with them. Especially do we dispute that advanced scholarship accepts the evolutionary hypothesis, but hold just the reverse, that the scholarship of | the day if refuting, lock, stock, and barrel, the Darwinian Theory." "The sad results of much modern ministerial training are quwic appar- ent to that large section of our laity who have been brought up to believe the Bible implicitly and who are ex- pecting results from Bible preaching and teaching," says the prospectus, Listed as instructors are John J, Sidney, known as an evangelistic preacher, Rev, Horace L. Kinsman, Rev. Mr. Daggett, Edward J. Mec- Kenna, and Cliarlotte Kinsman, Not even the prefix of the ministry, how- ever, appears in connection with these names in the literature of the school. "We are omitting titles, Today let- ters after men's names are standing for little," is Mr. Dagett's opinion. Too many degrees are being conferred, until they are becoming a joke." } The prospectus of the institution which was to be known as Kingston Bible College, but was altered to "School" at the opening two months | ago, points out that "There. are those | nearest hospit who realize the greatest gift a man | day was the unusual experience | fir ed .y the san Where Deadly Monoxide Gas Has Been Banished by Science Clo ELECTRICITY PLAYS BIG PART Electrical ventilation has rend- ered the air in the new Detroit- Windsor Fleetway Tunnel purer than air in the streets outside, in spite of the quantities of carbon monoxide gas given off from thousands of motor cars passing through the tube each day. The above picture shows the tunnel at the point of the international line and inset is the ventilation build- ing at Windsor where Canadian General Electric generating sets and control boards are used in the tunnel lighting and ventilation systems. has for preaching is the inborn pas- sion for winning souls Chri vhich same has been proven by : . finite Call to that service. This last and primary qualification is often found among those who have not had the opportunities for modern educa tional training." The school plans t give a course of study that for their work persons unable to take a University Course. Applicants for en ed to be members in goo some Evangelical Church The school's statement of dc faith includes the verbal of the scriptures, the virgin | iginal sin, and the personal pre-nul lenial return of Christ Several students of the already been granted Ii preach by their pa RUSHED TO HOSPITAL TWICE IN ONE DAY Montreal, Dec. 3. is arc requir- 1 standing of school ha cnses storates Being rush e ambul al twice in the sam t, | recently, & | will fit} | st tw befell The Willlam Unanares nan was found un- ewalk early one ved to the hos- it was found he had xd from a fainting » evening he call- nd hegan wrestling playfully with his hosts A third party interfered and, al- | though his intentions were harm- less, Unanares got frightened and leaped throuzh the window to the | str 8 below, Again he 1 nsclous and in the am- had come to wan which { morning | pital, w! i simply | spell, - The 1 {ed on friends a or of o flight | | $200 000 DAMAGE IN NEW HAMFSHIRE FIRE confirmed criminals. (By Cane Press Leased Wire) NH, Dec 3 ry, driver -Sev- eetic was esti- [ mated at $200,000. The fire was jo unkonwn origin, CLAIM NEWCASTLE IS DIRTIEST TOWN London, Dec. 3--The dirtiest town in England, so far as the pollution of its atmosphere goes, is Newcastle- on-Tyne. This is the verdict of a Report published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, Liverpool comes next, and, considering that Liver- pool's near neighbor St. Helens, de votes itself so largely to the produc- tion of coal and chemicals, it is not surprising to find it in third place. In a town like Leicester, which most folk would regard as a fairly clean place, the atmosphere is five times more polluted nu one district than in another. London, though, has a fair- ly equitable distribution of impurity. AVIATION COURSE BEGINS AT MGILL Students "Enrolled Ground Training Lectures Montreal, Dec. 3.--Fifty avia- tion enthusiasts recently attended the preliminary lecture of a series on aeronautics being delivered at MeGill University by Captain T. H. Finney during the winter season. Arrangements have been made with Stuart Graham, local air in- spector of the Department of Na- tional Defense, for the students to be examined at the end of their course and for a certificate to be fssued to those successful, This will be exchanged for a commer- clal pilots' licence after the neces- sary flying tests have been passed. EXPERIMENTING WITH YOUTHFUL CRIMINALS Chelmsford, Eng., Dec. 3.-- Vhen Chelmsford Prison, which has "een closed as a penal establishment since the heginning of the war, is reopened shortly, new experiments will be tried in the reformation of voung criminals. It will be reserved for convicts between the ages of 20 and 30, who will he taken from Dartmoor and the Isle of Wight, to prevent them from association with for immortalized 'by Charles Dickens, led to proceedings being taken by! the London County Council at Bow | Street Police Court recently against the owner of the premises. He bad | been served . with a' summons re- quiring him to secure the external walls and returns abutting on the road, together with the roof and certain timber work, When the case was called in court however, it was reported that the reqirements of the council had been carried out, and the summons was withdrawn. DECLARES JA77 IS FLEETING PRODUCT Doctor of Music Says Folk Songs Live For Centuries Stockholm, Dec, 3--Jazz melodies and ragtime songs live only for some months, while the ancient folk songs and airs live for centuries, Doctor V. Dahlgren, Master of the Arvika School, said in a lecture delivered the other day, to the Swerish Order of Good Templars. "Notwithstanding this fact a severe flght against the fleeting musical products of our time ought to be organized, since this mus- ic tends to deteriorate the musical taste," the speaker said. Already in primitive periods the in- dividuals strove to express their feel ings of gladness and sorrow in music, and their tunes were repeated by oth- ers and thus carried from mouth to mouth and from generation to gen- eration. Those ditties and airs sus: vived, and still to-day Swedish songs and melodies dating from the fif- teenth century are sung. The Swed- es are often' called a singing people but it is a noteworthy fact that the old Swedish tunes are more numer- ous than the songs. This seems to prove that the Swedes are more like- ly to olay than to sing. If these songs and tunes had had the same superficial character as the rusic hall tunes of today they would not have been able to survive for such ER TROY ly ! Bug BACKACHE, Ty EN RHE pq aTIS In them there was im- bued something more than a fleeting and pleasant series of note Lhey expressed a condition of the soul and were hence preserved. Even the pre- sent generation will find soiace and pleasure in performing the oid music. The modern musical trend, how- ever, the speaker pointed out is char- wcterized by levity andd emptiness of feeling. The airs grow popular ih a few days, are su ind whistled, but after a short time dwindle i7to com- plete oblivior The songs do not express anything at all, except an in- citement to dance. The : rhyth- metical but void of Conse- quently they die so nro- longed series of su cal fire- flies tends to low il taste. Here the apostles of song and music must s ih ener- getic work pre uditiona! music and a ling of musical culture. a long time. NORTH AMERICAN WATER- FOWL Waterfowl censuses are bring en throughout North America 3 specified day 1 month Ly many hundreds of volu observers. Re- nosts of censuses taken in the United States, Alaska, and Mexico, 2re made to the United States Biolog zal Sur- vey, Washington, D.C., and of those taken in Ca to the offi. e of the National 1 s B h, Decartment of the Interior, Ottawa, Canada tak- PUBLIC City of OLD CURIOSITY SHOP to the! principal | Dee. 3.- Old Curlosity Shop in wW.C.. London, | safety of the | Portsmouth street, London, | Fi ears for in| Toronto, November 14th, 1930. NOiICL Unemployment Relief Work Toronto Notice is hereby given to NON-RESIDENTS OF TORONTO that it is useless to look for unemployment relief work in the City of Toronto, as only BONA FIDE RESIDENTS OF 10= RONTO FOR AT LEAST 12 MONTHS WILL RECEIVE CON- SIDERATION for employment on any unemployment relief work undertaken by this city. Mayor's Office, BERT S. WEMP, Mayor. DIAMONDS ALE \ / = ; WATCHES LARGE ASSORTMENT OF NECKLETS All colors. Values up to $3.50. To clear, 1100 Pieces CHINA Dinner Cets $17.95 ALARGE | ASSORTMENT 4 97 Piece Limoges Travelling Sets Reg. $10.50, Sele Pile $7.25 Reg. $11.00. Sale Price $7.50 Reg. $5.00. Sale Price $2.85 Reg. $9.50. Sale Price $6.75 and many others at a saving . Dinner Set $28.50 CHINA Cups and Saucers ver. Beautiful cabinet of guaranteed Sil- 50 Pleces. Stainless steel Knives. Rap. UE00. 'Sale veins .. 497 8 Reg. $1.00. Sale Price LARGE ASSORTMENT FINE LEATHER ZURSES ALL REDUCED 12 SIZE GENTS' POCKET WATCH White Gold filled fancy shape with Knife and Chain. Boxed. Reg. $25.00. Sale Price $12.50 EMBLEM OR LODGE RINGS AT REDUCED PRICES CUT GLASS SHERBET GLASSES, GOOD seansssannae 6" 89c Open Evenings till Christmas A ------ DIAMOND RINGS In green and white sea Also many others at greatly reduced prices during this sale. written with every A guarantee diamond SILVERWARE Grandfather Reg. $250.00. Sale Price $125.00 CLOCKS Solid oak case, 80 in. high, West. minster chimes every 15 minutes. For my Lady's Dresser, TOILET SETS and Green. Sets come in beautiful gift boxes, from $5.75 SET AND UP All Reduced For Quick Sale in natural, Rose, Blue, COMBINATION E.P.N.S. Silver Cake Baskets viisiriviirnrinniss E:P.N.S. Pie Plates 3 Piece Silver Plated Tea Sets .. Silver plated Salt and Peppers, pair ...c.oovnvieinnen $1.98 Cold Meat Forks ......oovnnee 50c¢ Berry Spoons wiv. 50c¢ $1.00 Cigarette Case and Lishter EVANS' MAKE Reg. up to $17.50 set. abl 1 Other sets at $3.95 Authorized Agent for the Famous BULOVA White and green Ladies' WATCHES A complete assortment FINE CUT GLASS Water Sets Sat rice 91-99 Reg. $20. $10.95 $15 95 Sale price Reg. $30. MEN'S 10K SOLID GOLD Signet Rings 53.95 Baby Rings - 10K Solid Gold, 1 Initial 29 c Free. Others each, $1.00 $1.25 and $1.50 BURN 32 King St. W. Oshawa Corner Prince Street Wrist Watches a EL TTT TTT TITTLE Y JEWELRY STORE Phone 389 59¢ Ladies' Smart Wrist Watches In green and white, fully guaranteed. to choose from 2 Initials engraved free Use The Mails To Buy! Even if you live out of the city and can't come to our store in person, there is no reason why you should be barred from these super values. We're really no further away from you than your nearest post-box. y Any of the articles described on this page will be delivered, post-paid, at the advertised price--no extra cost. Simply write us what you want and en- close a cheque or money or postal order and we'll send the article to you by return mail. RTT PTT PRT PP he

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