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Oshawa Daily Times, 22 Dec 1930, p. 12

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s Lass mad? A SITY DEANS AEST wx ANNI ARN I GRUB Ian -- Gt 1 eh ST pee OL 00 LO SN IATA PAGE TWELVE THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1930 tile, a total average cost of $1.63 | Maurice Sterne, president of the |ized to re-classify persons at any F per rod. This cost is rather high,| American Society of Painters. time, : due to the prevalence of large boul nee et Commenting upon the proposed ders in the subsoil. Under favour-| HIS LEG MENDED ' demenst system, Commissioner Brown [ able conditions, where full use is IN FIRE STATION | said: made of ditching machinery, the| Saint John, N.B.--To suffer | "The rates for compulsory automo- cost need not exceed 28 cents per | broken leg, and smilingly look on |bile liability insurance as fixed by the rod for installation and 64 cents | while it Is being set by a fireman Comisisgiciet of insrance are ap- ting Things Re- for tile or a total of 92 cents per |is but one of the accomplishments | plied to all registrants of motor veh Interes Are rod. of Edward MacDonald, of Pletow, | icles without regard to the record on vealed by "Double The cost per acre of tile drains | N.8., who is in Saint John looking | the individual operator, . 99 ~. | depends on the spacing between |for employment, Another fs tho | "It js argued that the owner whose Female Yeast Fly laterals, At 90 cents per rod the ability of being able to walk quite | operation during a given period has Fire er acre will range from about smartly on a Jan of wooden ops. caused no losses for death or person. LL 16,00 where laterals are 160 feet | when they're in good repair. e- | nel injury should not Le compelled 10 salsa, Coll il svnliing apart, to about $48.00 where later- | cently slipping on ap fce-covered | pay the same rate as the owner temale on its left side and & new als are 50 feet apart, sidewalk here, McDonald had the | whose car is the cay e of several ac- and different sort of female on its Digging was the largest singe | misfortune to break one of his arti | cidents resulting in claims paid by the right has been developed at the item in the labour cost of drains at | ficial Jimbs, He was picked up and |jysurance companies, It is contended California Institute of Technology Ottawa, amounting to 77 per cent |taken to the police station, and |(hat some plan should be devised This type of fly adds to previous of the total labour cost of drains |the injured member was mended in |yhereby the careless owner should he knowledge of the laws governing installed by hand, and to 40 per |a nearby fire station, MeDonald | jenalized on account of the claim heredity and growth, It was ob- | cent where the traction ditcher was had both legs eut off by a train In | caused by his car for which he is tained through breeding methods used. In drains dug by hand the | Nova Scotia three years ago, responsible, It is believed that the devised by Dr, Calvin B, Bridges of | "ot of digging was found to in- fn e---- principly of demerit rating whereby the Carnegie Institution of Wash- crease rapidly with the depth, Thus FIRST AID STATION the careless owner receives a debit ington while working in the labora- the cost of digging a drain four feet Saint John, N.B--The idea of on account of claims caused by his tory here, In a specimen of this deep was 95 cents per rod, as com- | placing first ald stations on way-| ... is ound and would tend to en- fly the two sides differ markedly in pared with 26 cents per rod for a sides, which was put into effect in courage careful driving of motor appearance. drain two feet deep, an increase of | Fngland and the United States by | po.» The fly's lett wing, by curling |0Yer 260 per cent. In land free the Red Cross Boclety, has bern ex-| The Commissioner also recom upward at its tip, appears scarcely from stones the cost per rod of ms {onAed A Canada, _ first > mended legislation to provide a pen more than half the length of the chine digging did not vary material- : ote iy) ORS Was Yate Rioeen y alty of five years imprisonment for right wing, which is sctually tne ly with the depths down to four a a Io nee on sd " 0 in anyone involved in making a fraudu- shorter and narrower. The left |feet, but where boulders were pre- | Hampton Road, 'Ne FUNSwick, | (0 1notor vehicle insurance claim valent the cost of digging was more | the rcene of two serious automobile | 4 0 50 could make wing is lighter in color, The ' left aceldents last summer, and mis ) c eye is darker than the right. There Sian _aireetly proportional to the Aen last summer. and Mary it necessary for parties involved in . accidents to notify | ance om ED eee ot unt air, | Backlling with a rosd grader sremer---- ee accord y Tsuranee Tor onces make the fiy a "mosaic" } VA% found to be the most economi- d 4 . and are the visible signs of the two | ¢31 of the methods tried, costing ANNUAL SERMON PREACHED kinds of femaleness, The charac. |POt more than 6 cents per rod, us 4 London, Dec, 22 -- Vor the 2261) teristics on the left side are ordin- | COMPAred with 25 cents per rod for Aare " eat Store both father and mother, But those on the right side are inherited from the father only, Yet it can be prov- ed that this side remains female, Hitherto all insects of this restrict. ities providing an jncome of $2 successive year the "Great Storm ary female because they are inher. filling by hand. On wet clay land, Sermon" has been preached in St, | ited in the ordinary manner from where the grader could not he used, Giles Christi Mis ploughing fn the excavated soil sles Christian Mission here, Secu with a walking plough proved sat- . a 1 Isfactory. The use of a slush sera: jeu : FRY for is annual a dig) were le wy John y in 141 per for backfilling was not more 1 i 1 - : Si economical than hand filling, Legislation Provides Increas giving for the safety of his fail through the storm of November 26, | ed, one-sided male inheritance have J. M. Armstrong, ed Rates for Careless ad Ven mo ibs 2 Central Experimental Farms 1203. Dania! Defoe who wrote "Rob been males, The inheritance on both sides is transmitted by microscopical, say- sage-shaped bodies called chromo- : Boston Mass, Dec. 22--Insurance somes Which are present in each MANY JEWS ARE Commissioner Merton 1. Brown has MYRTLE cell, 'The cells of the formally fe- 4 4 filed with the Legislature a recom male left side carry two sets of ® heard the mendation for the establishment of M - on ' shy . Po 4 Myrtle, Dee, 17 The Women's : nt. On the right. side the. ells DIS INGUISHED § demerit SYS under which obey Misston try Soelety met at th a ( nel n n 4 LJ cells ators of motor vehicles involved in| ono" tata v. Mra. Dave Leury, on accel woul v . lial , accidents would pay increased liabil Thursday afternoon, and as the af ternoon was very wet and unpleasant there was not as large a gathering as usual, As this was the annual bu siness meeting the following officers were re-appointed: President, Mrs, Merriam; assistant, Mrs, Roy Thomp son; secretary, Mrs, DD, leury; tem perance secretary, Mrs, H, Hudgers treasurers, Mrs, C, Pilkey and Mrs have only one set, which comes from the father, The fact that the . ity insurance rates in accordance fly. remains female in the side con-| ¢ ' i PL ih thei tle . 3 Wh Who wr with their accident records, taining only male-inherited chromo- hd m Je y i Pdr inn bo 0 of the somes bears out a prediction made |. Proves to be Intersting Commissioner, persons involved in ac by Dr. Bridges, an dents would be ra in three cl This was based on his theory of Publication Silents would oS rated yee a franetie ce," e genetic balance which means creased rate of 10 per cent, those in at the nex SF Sich Antiviaual ao. New York --The names of thir. |Class B and increase of 25 per cent : struck between the genes or "de- ty United States Jews who have land those in Class C an increase of terminers" for maleness and fe-| distinguished themselves out [50 per cent, ' 0. H, Downey; visiting committee maleness, standingly in -public or cultural | The classification would be made | "rp W800 0 Ea arr life and through benefaétions in [by a rating and appeal board con. |™MF% Roy Lercy and Sy ares In-.| pon: pianist, Mra I. R. Price, Plans were made for the work for the new year, and the various reports showed that the year Just closing was very successful, but it was hoped that still greater things would be accom plished in the future At the close dainty refreshments were served by THE COST OF TILE DRAINS 1930 were made public recently |sisting of the Commissioner of (Experimental Farms Note) by the American 'Hebrew in its an- | surance or his representations an The cost of tile drains varies con- | "ual Who's Who in Jewry. = The |two associates to be appointed by the siderably, depending largely on the | 1!st includes two governors-elect. | Commisioner with the anproval nature of the subsoil, local labour | Supreme court justices, the winner |the Governor and Council, ; conditions, and the method of in-| of the 1930 Nobel Prize for Med!. If a driver failed to pay the in- stallation, On the Central Experi-| ¢ine, and philanthropists who have creased insurance premium after be- mental Farm, Ottawa, an extensive | made large gifts, ing classified, 'his right to operate a / system of tile drains has recently Major Jewish bhenefactions for | motor vehicle would be revoked, Ap the host .. oss ot Rabin been installed by the Field Hus-|the year were listed at $22,800, | peals from action of the board could | Miss Margaret O'Boyle of Ashburn bandry Division. At prevailing | 000. Outstanding among benefac. Ibe taken to court, labour rates, the cost of installa-| tors of the year were named Mau- | The registrar of motor vehicles tion exclusive of the cost of tie, | rice Falk of Pittsburg Pa., who es- | would certify to the has ranged from 14 cents per rod | tablished the Maurice and Laura | such information as h Ve 0] | under favorable conditions to $2.97 | Falk Foundation with $10,000,- [regarding all accidents in whi work at the old Temperance Hall per rod where large boulders were | 000 for philanthropic uses, and | death, personal injury or ; t Sacrament of the Lord's Suppes Robert E. Heron The cold weather over the week end has halted for a time the repalr age labour cost of drains installed' | who with his sister, Mrs, Felix |be empowered to prescribe rules ing when two new communicants entirely by hand was $1.91 per rod, | Fuld, gave $5,000,000 to establish | regulations for the imposition of pe were received Into the church as compared with 69 cents per rod | an Institute of advanced study. alty charges, 'and 'all persons w Bert Duff was confined to Lis bed where ditching machinery was used, Karl Landsteiner, of New York, |be liable to the demerit elassificatic for a few days the earlier part of For all drains considered, the aver-| to whom the 1930 Nobel Prize in [whether or not they had been or |the week, suffering from the grippe age cost was 80 cents per rod for | Medicine was awarded, was listed | might be convicted of a criminal of A quick but very pretty wedding labour, and 64 cents per rod for' among the honored thirty as was |fence, The board would be author- was solemnized at Yorkminster Bap oft open book to pleasing gifts for smokers. Da asa. Ottawa, : Drivers inson Crusoe," was among those who | 4 i | f SPECIAL SELLING | has been visiting her cousin, Mrs. | tist church, Toronto, on Wedensgday, Dee, 4rd, when Burland Lenora, only daughter of Mrs, Meryl Ruttan Will ing, became the bride of Frederick Vietor Hudgins, son of Mrs, Hatt Hudgin of Myrtle, Ont, with Rev, W. A. Cameron officiating and Mis Burfield assisting at the organ, The bride was charmingly attired in golden brown transparent velvet trimmed with gold lace and brilliant ornament, cut in lopg lines with close fitting turban hat of the same ma terial, and shoes and long gloves tv mateh, carrying a bouquet of moss roses and lly of the valley, The bride wore a long string of amber, vthe gift of the groom. The bride's only attendant was Mrs, John Glover of Oshawa, who was attired in green chiffon and, lace, cut in princess fashion, with hat and | shoes to match, carrying a bouquet | of red roses, The bride was given | away by her elder brother, Edward R. Willing. The groom was attended by Mr, Bliss Walters, the usher be ing Mr, Leonard W, Willing, younger brother of the bride, The happy cou ple received in the pastor's reception room, afterwards leaving for the United States, On their return they will reside their new home, 279 Brookdale Ave, Torouto The above, which appeared in the Toronto papers last week, ix of in terest to friends here, and best wish es for the young couple's prosperity and happiness are extended from friends of this community, The young people of the neighbor hood enjoyed the first skate of the | season at Mud Lake on Monda | night, Mr, Will Cook and Roy Downe , attended the Winter fair at Ottawa, and Guelph, 1 ! ed on ¥riday, Sunday school superinfendent, M Wilfred Graham, was pleased to have attendance of eighty pregent and Mre, Victor Hudgins of Toronto visited the former's mothe; Mrs, Hattie Hudging, on Sunday Clarence Harrison has had the mi | fortune to have four of his five her | of eattle die of flu recently, This | la heavy loss to Mr, Harrison who replace them The first meeting of the Community Club for this season was held in the | | has been shipping milk for Bote | time and it will take some time to | |} | F RESH KILLED Store Mours befqre Christmas: prevalent in the subsoil, The aver-| Louls Bamberger of Newark, N.J.» | properly resulted. The board would | Was observed here on Sunday even | » Choice Young 9 a.m. Until 9.30 p.m. TURKEYS ren etup rooms at Myrtle Station on | peace of all four institutions | mouth students gave regarding the Friday night, Ten tables of Pro | The average Dartmouth student | typical student at their own unjver~ gre: o euchre were played, after {was pictured by Harvard 'a rah- | sity; which the floor was cleared anfl to rab, wah-hoo-wal colleg "He is a he-man, democratic, ath- the strains of the violin dancing was | himself 'heap biy rough f w, is ntic, v ss, rough and ready, indulged in until the wee sma' hours | athletic, alcoholic, crude, uncultivated, | highly-s = sexed-starved." of the morn extravagant or wealthy, poor schol- | tee -- ---- ar, has large physique, wears shorts, | GHOST STORIES REVIVED HARMONY green sweater and a fur coat, likes | People of Portchester, England, the outdoors," | are more certain than ever that ------ Some of the Harvard statements ! ghosts inhabit the famous ancient Harmony, Dee, 19,--C, H, Millard, | were supported by the young ladies | castle of the place, They point to the superintendent of the Sunday school, | of Radcliffe, in the following obser- | recent finding of three skeletons at wag presented Wednesday night at |vation: |a gpot where they say ghosts were the Christmas concert with a lovely "Ihe typical Dartmouth student is | definitely seen to vanish on at least floor lamp from the Sunday school asa rah-raly collegian, is drunk, f three separate occasions last winter, a token of appreciation for the good | roughneck, big, brawny, sophistica The castle was once an early British work he hds done at the Sunday |or cynical, unintellectual and uncul- | camp, then a Roman fortress, later sehool tured but sociable and he likes the | a Norman stronghold, and in the Mis, Fice (8r.) of North Oshawa | outdoor," | Napoleonic war a jail for French is visiting Mr, and Mrs, Roy Ter-| Perhaps the most uncomplimentary | prisoners, Smallpox and others epls willegar, of all the descriptions was Dart- [demics broke out several times The neighbours are glad to hear | mouth's laconic opinion concerning | among the French prisoners, and a that little Ralph Dafoe is recovering | the student body of Harvard oldest | great number of them died and were from his recent iliness, and most dignified university in the | buried there, Portchester Castle has Great joy is shown among the | United States, | been designated by the government children tor school closing tonight | "Harvard men are small, weak, un- | as an Ancient Monument, and the until Jan, 0. athletic, affected, polished, studious | skeletons were unearthed during ree Eileen Luke was presented at the | and effeminate | pair work by Office of Works labor. Christmas concert Wednesday night| Harvard students, although less | erg, with u silver cup, the trophy from | flattering regarding those in other the Rural School Fair. She won | universities, tid not hesitate to en- the highest number of points with |umerate their own shortcomings, | her exhibits, Eileen also had the | "Harvard men" they said, "are in- Following the presentation of | trip to Toronto in October different, blase, indolent, conceited, | "Cheri," an adaptation of a pre-war | The community extend thelr sym. | snobbish, independent, individual, in- | Parisian novel by Colette, London pathy to Mrs, J. J. Terwillegar and | telectual, cultured, sophisticated and | theatregoers are protesting against family in thelr recent bereavement, | cosmopolitan, They speak with an |the production of eertain French The correspondent extends to all | accent, wear old clothes, and usual- | plays, The objections are strongest the readers 1 Merry Christy and ly come from old families," against the sordid works which are This inion was shared by the | supposed to show "life as it is," bug i , located near the | really are only unpleasant pervers | F campus, Harvardians, said | sions that evoke repulsion in the A y gv n, "are intellectual, | English mind, Plays or books which § | conceited, snobbish, indifferent, pos-|do not lend themselves to transla ni | 1 1 eur, quiet, earnest, Lespectac i- | tion are also scored, One London 1 A or ps dividualistic, well-mann | and good | dramatie critic declares that dias fun [hey usual ress sloppily or | logues such as "You are an ass," J Tat , That' -¥ U wear sport clothe with the answer, "That's my profess | slon," as given in "Cheri," may be prosperous New Year "i wit, but it is not worth going to & Boys of Four Institutions 1" 3 rr it, f fife p doy did ye theatre to hear, "Cheri" tells of the Severe in Descriptions ly, studious, intellectual, sophisticated, | mutual attraction of a youth and a . edilcation-coneious. stuck-ut desires | Woman old enough to be his mother, of Selves and Others [to be co-ed, apes Harvard, and wears | With a sordid background of old wos horn-rimmed glasses and low heels" | men who cackle of thelr triumphs Radcliffe girls w pared the task | 'n the past, n advanced TE 4 r------ of describing themselves, - ---- -- upper class- tcliffe and Darts Yale recived its sh of attention Ten British aireraft manufacturers ested to present | from thé other three land 'nit hibi y this season's Parig § ie com 101 ! ed Har» I chiffe lic ' vh SC WOrs ie bi he 15 IT neoy re | | H art in Scotland 1ild has been | large membership, | J <tristmaz [)0 YOUNG, CHOICE, FRESH KILLED GEESE » 26¢ FRCSH HILLED, CHOICE, YOUNG CANDIES Chocolates, 'Maytime' Willard's. 1-1b. box ' Assorted Creams Ab. box 1-1b. box CALL EEA Yopoorn, Jolly Time. Tin Popeorn, Little Bus 10-02 tin paorted. Sma ar. farshmallow's--Campfire Br, 12-00 t| Baking, CAKE CATON'S Almond Iced Rich: Fruit Cake, HLS 7 Ohristie"s--Rich Fruit and Nut. 2 Ratin Finish Christmas Mixture.' A Gift Suggestion wits SOAP| PINEAPPLE PEACHES or PEARS 1 1 TUBE SHAVING CREAM | or /ne rm oo? AYLMER No.zsi Cellophane @G/rt SLICED Tin 26¢ : Sg 1 4o Wrapped Box 29c¢ 3 roe CHICKENS» 30c WILLARD'S 'FIRESIDE' toe HAMS "iw. 25¢ Wrapped B 5c ppey; Sox THESE SPECIALS ON SALE UNTIL DECEMBER 26th 27. BRAZIL NUTS |Storage First 3% For Christmas b.22C EGGS: 36¢ {rid 0 3100) CREAMS AND JELLIES | PORK ani BEANS CANDY 0b. box 19¢ |uBBY'S 3.) 2,.23¢ uat Tins Heavy Syrup Marvel Pastry EXTRA SPECIAL! ORANGES CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS FIOUR | 7 ES» NAVEL = 23C 7 Pound Bag 21¢c Sweet, Juioy, Uniform Size

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