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Oshawa Daily Times, 12 Mar 1931, p. 6

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1931 p 1 With the completion of the v » y yy-duty : ve | § hoilities for treating 210,000 tens copper annually, the Canadian ning and Metallurgy convention In a paper spared Hy A. H.'A. Robison and . H. Loses, it was predicted thot uc- (a Quebec and Montreal, John L} copper refinery at Bast, Canada, will was told today. "fhe present gap between pr H jon figures and refining cap il bo bridged pono abat of 5 ® * iy men from all sections the -day convention here, heard larly around St, Hyaeinthe. da, who are attending LA uickly, once th 8 n° the world "J& number of papers delivered on «different .phases of the industry. lopmients in aerial exploras 4 foresaw the time whon light {ma es piloted by experienced! prospectors would penetrate the || unexplored parts of the north in sider numbers. At the pre- hohe time'a few planes piloted by mining ebgineers are working in thé hort, le the Mght machine is need ited numbeérs today, . the largest share of the aerial explora- tion work is conducted by ground crews working in corjunction with planes, Mr, Jewitt said. jo crews are taken into the min- country in the spring and ked up beforg the freeze-up, up. THiS system. Mr, Jewitt sald, greatly increased the soason's ace tivity and also the number of men necessary to a crew. Gas in commercial quantities may be discovered in the area be- B. deMille declared In another paper delivered to the convention. Geological surveys indicated, be sald, the presence of favorable structures in that section, particu- hredded Wheat "for the Shredded Wheat is a real Lenten food which contains all the body-building elements in the whole-wheat grain. Nothing is added, nothing taken away. 'Light, nourishing and easily digested. Eat it with milk or cream and you will be healthy and strong, ready for every test of physical and mental endurance. Lenten Fast Wel Jewitt, in speaking of recent | JOINS INSURANCE FIRM From the 'head office in King- ston, Ont,, comes the announce- ment that W. T, Fortye has been appointed Soecretary-Treasurer of the Mutual Rellet Life Insurance Company, dn succession to the late J. N. Alexander. Mr, Fortye brings to his new duties a ripe business experience gained in the field of finance. Born at Peoterboro, where he 'at- tended the public and high schools, Mr, Fortye entered the service of the Bank of Montreal in 1910 and nerved in Montreal, Toronto, Chicago and Kingston, with two years in Lhe head office of the Bank of Montreal as inspector for Ontario. Barly in 1015, he entered the Great War with one of the bate talions from Hamilton and later was transferred to the Royal Canadian Dragoon& in which he attained the rank of Captain, Demobilized in May 1919, he re-entered tho services of the Bank of Montreal where he re- mained until 1928, when he was appointed Manager of the firm of F. W. Macdonald & Company, Stock Brokers. Two years later, Mr. Fortye joined Hanson Bros. Incorporated, of Toronto, severing his connection with this company to come to the Mutual Reliet Life Insurance Company as BSecretary- Treasurer, for which position he is so well qualified, FAKE MARRIAGE 10 ENTER USA. Ready-cooked, the ideal Lenten food. DDED HEAT WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT missioner Reveals Fraud by Aliens Boston, Mass., March 12.-- Mrs. Anna C. M. Tillinghast, Boston's commissioner of immigration, (oid several hundred mambers of the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Canadian Club of Boston recently that aliens were getting friendly United States citizens to go to the old country and marry thelr wives in order to got the women into' this country outside the quota. Some naturalized aliens = were even marrying their sisters in order to get them into the country, she sald. Just at present, slo sald, she had several of these fraudujent matrimonial alliances to untangle, ull of which were entered into even without the semblance of a divorce, ghe declared. Of course, when the women were admitted ns wives, they did not live with their pseudo husbands, she explained but returned to their real Isbands, or relatives, and the matter was ended until they need- | ed a certificate of their arrival or Friday & Saturday, Mar. 13-14 || AH Rubbers will po reduced to suit the thrifty buyer . THESE. RUBBURS ARE FIRST IN QUALITY Men's red-roled sole rubbers, size 6-11, Pair Bogs', size 1.5. Small Boys', size 11.2, Pair ,.. | 95¢ 'ee 'Ladies' Rubbers. Size 2-8; Pair ......,. Childe pine 5-10Y;. 69c toe 11:2. pg) } 4 pe 4 BE ET TRY TP RTT TT ribber boots. See 6.11, Bae. 92499 'Boys' fleece lined rubber boots Size JB... Pair .............en..... i: Boys' or Girls' fleece lined A rubber boots, Size 11-2, Pair Small Boys' or Girls' fleece lined rubber $2.10 $1.85 «10%3. $1.60 er tongue. Sizes 0-11, Pair 1.5 $1.80 PAIR ] with extra heavy $2.19 © the choice of all sizes at . ILL LTD.| "The Store of Better Values" A a yma. a gt | 12 Simcoe Street N. : | ther document - which 2 GREAT BARGAIN DAYS IN PBONS Olio oeunigh : RUBBER FOOTWEAR|| | ability of { the resolutions of the Council, ! suggested a five million bushel move posed fest reo- the immigration the fraud was quired searching records, Then brough to light. Owing to restrictions on immi- gration, she stated, various expedi- ents were being used to get into this country. One little girl, she paid, had stowed away In the ven- tilater of a ship coming to Boston and had remained there 31 days | without ever washing her hands or face during all that time. When Mrs. Tillinghast asked her why she did it. sho sald she wanted toget to America and there was no other way, as the quota was filled. MANION OPPOSES REQUEST OF WEST Large Grain Shipment Via Hudson Bay This Year Impracticable Ottawa, March 6~~The impractic- the suggestion by the Saskatchewan Traffic Council that in- augural test this year of the Hudson Bay route should comprise the mov ing of five million bushels of grain | is dealt with in the correspondence | made public Tuesday between Hon, KR. J. Manion, Minister of railways { and Hon, J. A. Merkley, Provincial | Minister of Railways of Saskatche- wan through whom was sent here One ment; another referred to facilities for handling livestock and a third to proper marine insurance rates, The Minister of Railways points out that when in 1927 it was decided to extend the railway to Churchill a five-ycar plan, starting in 1928, was calculated. Four years' were cone sidered port yct in deference to western sentiment a limited test, if possible, was arranged for this fall "in order that any deficiencies might be cor- rected and attention attracted to the new route in advance of formal mauguration in the following sea son, Dr. Manion points out that the road has been finished a year in ad- vance by unusual effort, The pro. however, will "entirely Boston Immigration Com-| | pers will not TITLE 'ROYAL necessary to develop the b Wellington, New Zealand, March 12-Stories of the earthquake show that in one hospital in Napier where 200 people were patients heroic res- cue'work was carried on by the nur- ses who survived, All the night- nurses were asleep in the Nurses Home, a three storeyed building, which collapsed. One nurse was 'thrown ight throuo™ the place where e wall had been a moment before. t nurses died, while half a dozen sustained fractures, one a broken back. Only three were uninjured, The emergency hospital consisted : of a double row of tents about 100 yards long and through the night af- ter the earthquake it gave an inde- scribable feeling to hear the nurses Hipeatedly giving two low whistles as the signal for the sailors to come and carry away patients who had died. Another nerve-wracking experience was to hear people passing up and down between the tents calling the names of relatives in the hope of re- ceiving a reply, At the school in Port Ahuriri the children had been allowed an extra five minutes for Jax and it was dur- ing this extended play hour that the earthquake happened, ntherwise a different story would have Been told. Work was going on in the operat. ing theatre at the time of the dis aster. Fortunately the operation was was just about finished, and by the united effort of the theatre staff it was possible to remove the patient from the swaying building without injury being suffered by anyone, A wonderful instance of pluck and pro- fessional conscientiousnéss was that depend upon the completion of the elevator which the contract calls for being completed by Sept. 15. Even supposing there is no delay, the mar- gin is very small considering that the freeze up last year was on Oct. 15, Moreover, in September the dredging work will be at the peak and every ship placed alongside the elevator will involve the removal of the tugs, dredges and scows engaged in the harbor deepening. "In view of all this," says the Minister, "it is somewhat surprising that organ- izations supposed to have the best interests of the Hudson Bay project at heart, and to be desirous of fac- ilitating progress, should seriously suggest an inaugural or test move- ment, of 5,000,000 bushels of grain, involving, as such movement would, the presence at Churchill of from 20 to 25 vessels at a time when a clear harbor and no interference whatever would best serve the true interests of the undertaking as a whole", The" Minister thinks western ship- I be disappointed with insurance rates, + Tales of Heroism Come From Earthquake City, (NFIDENCE OF of Dr. White, of Hastings, who worked in the operating room for hours after he knew that his daugh- ter lay beneath tons of bricks not far away, having been killed while she was having her hair dressed, At one place groaning was heard from within a wrecked building, and when an entrance had been torced through the roof it was disocvered that a woman was pinned in the wreckage by her leg. 'One of the doctors then went down at consid- erable risk and amputated the wom- an's leg at the knee joing as she lay, $0 that she could be lifted out. A thrilling account of the collapse of the Masonic Hotel building is give en by a young lady. She was near the kitchen when the shake came, and she said that immediately huge blocks of masonry smashed all around, "I ran to the nearest door, where T found another girl," she said. "We could get no further, but crouched down as the huge building crashed about our ears. Our nostrils and mouths were filled with a sub- stance resembling putty, produced from the dust and plaster. A shaft of light came through a narrow gap, and we pushed and struggled until we were able to clamber out into safety. It was a fearful experience, We Sau huke pillars five feet thick snap liK€ carrots. We seemed to be fighting uphill through heaving mas- ses of debris for hours, The earth- quakes sounded like the constant discharge of cannon under our feet. Another of the girls in the tea- room reached a side door when she became trapped, She was pulled out still alive, but we scarcely recogniz- ed her; she seemed to have been turned into a different person." 'SNOWDEN GAINS HISCOUNTRYHEN Chancellor Disregards Ex- tremists in Clearly Fac- ing Problems (By Thos. T. Champion, Canadian Press Staff Correspondent) London, March 12.----- Rt. Hon. Philip Snowden, Chancellor of the Exchequer, whose speech concern- ing the state of the national. fin. ances has been described as the gravest pronouncement made to the country since the early days of the Great War, possesses as ar- resting a personality as any iu present-day life. His face is one of the keenest of the hatchet type. A. grieveous accident in early life wrecked his physical frame, and compelled his retirement as a civil servant. Perhaps it was this misfortune which pardonably as- sieted him to the cultivation of an acid tongue. Snowden not so many years ago could have passed very ry tor the original of W, 8S, Gilbert's King Gama, who found life "extremely flat, with nothing whatever to grumble at." Snowden, who is now 67, enter- ed Parliament relatively late in life, having turned 40. In this he was llke Joseph Chamberlain. They were alike, too, in going to Westminster with a great reputa- tion. Snowden"s maiden speech created almost as big a sensation Smith, has always continued Snowden never ciples for tactical Socialist Party. although unsuccessful the seat, he had the Soclalist "Hot invented the phrase by his experience Revenue Department. temperament. nacifist and valuable connection hard against those ag did the maiden speec' of F. L. afterwards Earl of Birk- enhead, But amongst those who | remember hearing both efforts it | Will always be allowed that where- |as F. XE, Smith spoke head. alone Snowden spoke, as he to speak, from the heart as well as the head. sacrifices dialetics. Des- pite his one-time venomous tongue he has always been one of the most popular figures of the Commons. When Philip Snowden entered Parliament for Blackburn in 1906 he was well-nigh the idol of the Six years earlier, in' gaining polled town the largest vote which had ever been secured till then by an apostle of Socialism, Snowden, in- deed, may be said to have created Gospel" and brought. it into active politics in England, Although he was never a Communist it was Snowden who "The Idle "'eh." From his early days he had a flair for high finance. No doubt hig abilities here were stimulated in the Inland In passing it may be mentioned that Snow- den was born in the bleak Bronte ~nuntry of Yorkshire. Maybe this had a nascent influence over his from the Snowden during the War was a conseriptionist, He lost his seat at Blackburn, in consequence, and he also lost his lance newspaperman. Though he was opposed to the War he fought members of his party who supported the Rus- slan Revolution. Both Mrs, Snow- den and he are looked at askance by many Socialists on. account -of thelr attitude towards Russia, In his general outlook there is no doubt Snowden Las mellowed as the years have passed. If he had had his own way, it seems, he would rather have been a newse paperman than a Cabinet Minister, He is still a member of the Trades Union called 'the National Unjon of Journalists, "I have never really taken to politics," he told a gathering of this body. recently, "The House of Commons has never gripped me. You get into a current very often by accident, It carries you along, and it is very difficult for you-to reach back. Politics is certainly fascinating. It is exciting at times, but. there is a dark side. There are great possibilities of tremendous influ ence, but there are great tempta- tions, great dangers, and {t takes a strong character to resist them." prin- in that SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY & SATURDAY . AT THE STORE Pineapple Cake, each ..18c Date and Nut Lunch, each 18c Butter Tarts, dozen ,...18¢ Taffy Tarts, dozen ..,...18¢c a free- Monney's Bakery 34 King Street W. MEATS GROCERIES sTOP&SHOp FRUITS VEGETABLES OUR BEST GIVEN SCHOOL College of Surgeons Is Granted Right to Use Prefix : " be Melbourne, Australia, March 12 -- its surgeons' college and is now en- titled to the prefix "Royal", Inform- ation has come from the Prime Min. ister's Department, London, that His Majesty the King has been gracious- ly pleased to approve of the prefix "Royal" for the college, which, in consequence, will be known as the Royal Australasian College of Sur- geonn The college is an Australian and New Zealand ' organization, and its chief objects are to improve the stan- dards of surgery and of surgical training and research. To further these objects and to assist Australas- ian graduates who cannot afford the time and expense involved in a visit to England for the Jipose, the Roy- al Australasian 'College of Surgeons has arranged with the Royal College of Surgeons of England that the pri- mary Fellowship examation of the Royal College of Surgeons of Eng- land shall be held in Australia, A cable message has been received from the secretary of the Royal Col- lege of Surgeons of England that the examinations will begin in Mel- bourtie on August 11, The aims and functions of the Aus- tralasian college are similar to those | of the English college, and a close association has arisen between the two colleges. A gratifying expression of this is the fact that the council of the Royai College of Surgeons of England is presenting a mace to the Australasian college. The president of the Royal College of Surgeons, Lord Moynihan, will visit Australia early in 1932 to present .the mace. Lord Moynihan besides being one of England's greatest surgeons, is one of her greatest orators. He has done more than any other surgeon to fur- ther ' the knowledge of abdominal gery, and the fact that he will per- sonally present the mace is regarded as a special honor for the Royal Au- stralasian College of Surgeons, he mace, which is an exact re- lica of one given. as a mark of oyal authority to the English col- lege is being designed and executed by Omar Ramsden, a famous London silversmith. . It will bear the arms of the English college, the arms of the Australasian college, which have re- cently been granted to it by the Col- lege of Heralds, the arnis of Austra- lia and the drms of New Zealand. Special RetMission has been granted His Majesty for the use of the orb and cross in the design of the mace, Lady Syme and her children have given the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons the sum of $12,500 to form a research endowment fund in memory of the late Sir George Syme, the first president of the College, The interest derived from this amount will be applied to foster surgical re- search, particularly in diseases com- mon in Australia, INAUSTRALI Australia has taken a step upward in | COFFEE FRESHLY GROUND 1.3 MILD CURED MEALED COTTAGE ROLLS ~ I8c¢ NO. 1 TALL TIN CLOVERLEAF SOCKEYE SALMON AYLMER ASSORTED SOUPS Pins He EXCEPT CHICKEN AND CHICKEN WITH RICE "SUNERA" Westinghouse Mazda Lamps, 25-40-60 6" $1.40 2 bs. 23¢ Fancy Rose Rice eens 3 ibs. 20c¢ ' 34c¢ watt .. Hpratt's Dog and Puppy Biscuits Magic Baking Powder, 160%. convenes Conse nnins 8.0.8, Cleanser, 8 pad size .... 8.0.8. Cleanser, 6 pad size .iy0iiie Pot Barley sens pkg. ET TT TE "ees sesensnsne Pearl Barley. , Bplit Peas ... seen 2 lbs. Robertson's Scotch Style Marmalade, 16 oz Yorkshire Relish Sa C. & B. Branston Pickle, Borden's Chocolate Malted Milk Aylmer Fancy Crushed Pineapple, 2's squat a 22¢ Aylmer Fancy Tid-Bit tin Pineapple, 2's squat ..,....... Gum, any kind ....... 3 pkgs. 3 boxes 25¢ Pe 23¢ co Bb. Ae sees new ouw we 1b: Sc Jr 21c Saice-s WI. 29¢ 3% 1b, tin 33c¢ MILK FED LUX . S02 urs oe 23 VEAL LEGS - cm DP 14c CUTLETS - - ib. Je 13¢c LOINS Friank on Ib. 20. Boneless FILLETS "1b. 24 LOINS of LAMB - Ib. 20- Rump Roast of BEEF mw. 15¢ 10c Finest COOKED HAM FISH Fancy Smoked Haddie 1b. 10e¢ Choice Baby Halibut " Half or Whole Whitefish Ib. 15e¢ 1b. 11¢ Flat Rib Brisket 1b. De Roasts of Prime Young BEEF SHOULDER FOR BOILING OR CHUCK OR POT ROAST » 10 Thick Rib Blade or ROAST - 15 NO. 1 GRADE MESSINA LEMONS 2 a2. Re | SEEDLESS NAVEL ORANGES 2 doz. 35 ------ 1

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