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Oshawa Daily Times, 24 Sep 1931, p. 12

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PAGE TWELVE THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1937 EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS| To Modernize Morrisburg. Morrisburg Canadian Club has appointed a committee of three to work with the officials in pr to install complete electrical cooking equip- ment in its rooms. The installa- tion consists of two large and saveral smaller stoves to replace the ofl equipment used at pres- eit. This will cost approximate Jy $100. The club's membership limit having been raised to 300, pow names were taken by the executive to be solicited for membership as well as names of past members for resubscription. Had Big Turn-out. Vankleek Hill. -- There was another large turnout of spesta- tors for the fleld day on Satur- day, which was the closing day of the Vanleek Hill Fair. The track was in excellent condition but the weather was a little cool to permit the athletes to show their best form. All events were closely contested and the inter- est of the spectators was hold to the very end. Heads Hebrew Congregation Ottawa.--At the annual mest- ing of the Sons of Jacob syna- gogue on James street held Sun- day morning, Adolph Sherman wae re-elected president of the congregation, Other officers elec- ted for the coming year are: A. Bookman, vice-president; A. Fon- berg, treasurer; B. Dworkia, fi- nancial secretary; J. Bookman, recording secretary; J. Goldstune T. Baker, A. Garelick; M. Dwork- in, C. H. Zarllsky; M. Grosswan, B. Gobler, and 8. Palef, all trus- tees. W.M'S. Entertained Madoc.--The W.M.8. of Trinity United Church, Madoc, entertain- ed members of the W.M.S8. of Queensboro, Hazzard's Cooper, Eldorado and Ivanhoe at their parlors in the United Church on Thursday afternion, Sept. 17th. The rooms were beautifully deco- rated with fall flowers aud the many kmall tables were adorned with vases of roses and wi*h the snowy tablecloths, silver and glass made a very gay appear ince. Al At Large Belleville. -- Other cities may have their "sea serpents," but Belleville at present has two alli- gators at large and their wherea- bouts is desired by their owner, Mr. J. A. McFee of this city. While attending the Toronto Ex- b:bition some time ago, Mr. Mc- Fee purchased two baby alliga tors for the children of the dis- trict. Upon arriving homs he p aced them in a cage in his back- yard and waited developments The developments were not quite what Mr. McFee had anticipated as the alligators forced their way out of the cages and completely dieappeared last Friday niga", Pustoral Changes Brockville.-- Rev. T. A. Car- michael, who has been stationed at Delta for five years, has recelv- ed a unanimous invitation from the official board of the United Church at Alvinston, in the Lambton Presbytery, of the Lon- don Conference. He will preach bis farewell sermon Sunday next, Rev. Mr. Sheppard of Alvinston is going to Victoria Avenue Uni- ted Church, Chatham, and it 1s expected that the minister in Chatham, Rev, Dr. C. E. Laker, wil) come to Delta. Commence Hydro Work Bath.--The initial work pre- paratory to the incoming of Hy- dro power to the village was got under way the early part of last week, and the work consists of the digging of the holes for the Hydro poles. Nine men are en- gaged in the work, and it is a source of much gratification that local men are engaged. This is as it should be, as the work will to a certain extent assist in the relief of the unemployment situa- "iop which happily is not very ex- tensive here. Drank WoogP Alcohol Kingston. T. J. Rigney, crown attorney, stated that there would be no inquest held in con- a SHE must have M' BOVRIL When "she" has that sinking feeling. Bovril is a fine pick-me-up. The strength of Beef. "WHAT TO DO" is the burning question when the baby cries way on into the night. Many times a simple remedy such as REXALL MILK OF MAGNESIA paves the way to peaceful slumbers: Our advice is to always have a bottle handy. PROCURE A 25¢ OR 50c BOTTLE AT THE REXALL STORES JURY & King ¥.~-Phone 28 LOVELL Simcoe S.--Phone 68 Make Sure of Comfort This Winter. Order Your Supply Now D &H Cone-Cleaned ANTHRACITE Premium By-Product COKE DIXON COAL CO. | Telephone 262 Five Direct Lines nection with the sudden deaths of Frank Seaton and Wilfred gn Dr. R. J. Gardiner, vor- submitted » report in con- pine with the matter and the -authorities are agreed that the deaths of the two men were caused by drinking wood alcohol. Play League Games Pleton. ~The Prince Edward County Softball league games are drawing to a close with the last game to be played next week. In the first game Eurekas defeated Cities Service 11 to 1, and in the second game Cities Service won 4to 3. The two teams are evenly matched and the remaining game should prove a real thriller. Plan Big Convention Kingston. Arrangements are being made for the annual convention of - the Frontenac County Women's Institute to be hele in Kingston the latter part of October. The tentative dates for the meeting are Thursday, Oct. 22 and Friday, Oct. 23. It is expected that Hon. T. K. Ken- nedy, Provincial Minister of Ag- riculture, and Hon. W, G. Martin, Minister of Social Welfare, will be present, also Miss Powell, as- sistant supervisor of Women's In- stitutes in Ontario and Mr. Put- nam, superintendent of Women's Institutes, Military Staff Tour Gananoque. -- The military staff tour, which opened here at the beginning cf the week, Is in progress today under the direc- tion of Brigadier W. B. Anderson, M.C., D.8.0., district officer com- mauding Military District No. 3. Senior officers from nearly all in- fantry, cavalry and signal units of this district are taking part. Appointed Court Clerk Kingston, Word has been received in the city that an ordey -in-council has been passed ap- rointing H. E. Richardson of this city 'registrar of the Surrogate Court of the County of Frontenac. Mr, Richardson succeeds Miss Helen Fraser. 014° Man is Missing Smiths Falls. --- Relatives are seeking information as to the where abouts of Henry Evoy, 73 -yvear-old resident of Smiths Falls, who has been missing from his home for over a week. He was iast seen on September 8, and was wearing a blue serge mit, gray shirt and black cap. He Is described as of stout build, five feet six inches in height, and veighing about 170 pounds. Re- cently he was in ill-health, Killed Big "Muskie" Kingston.--The latest fish sto- ry comes from Little Cataraqui Bay, where the Russell Construc- | tion Company outfit has been en- | A blast | gaged in blasting rock. set off on Monday brought to the surface of the water a huge mas- kinlonge commonly called a "mus kie." The skipper of a tug work- | ing In that vicinity told a Whig- | Standard reporter on Tuesday | morning that the fish measured | four feet from the tip of its nose | a to end of its tail, Raising Hospital Funds Pembroke. --- An important circular from Bishop P. T. Ryan regarding the diocesan hospital debt was read Sunday morning in all the Roman Catholic churches of the diocese of Pembroke. When the new east wing of the Pem- broke General Hospital was com- pleted in 1921, debentures were yssued for a term of 10 years to take care temporarily of the in- debtedness, and in 1927 a com- miitee of the diocesan clergy was tirement of these debentures as they fell due, Anniversary Services Prescott, -- Anniversary ser- vices of' Maynard United Church were held on Sunday, September 20, and despite unfavorable wea- ther were largely attended, Rev. H. M. Servage, of Heckston, was the special speaker for the oc | Terry, Glant Is named to raise funds for the re- | Klein, casion and special music was ren- | | Relic of Old Duke of Kent dered by the cholr, Ran Into Cow Victoria Road. -- While driv- ing into the village by the Cobo- conk road recently, Mr, and Mrs, Howell and children narrowly escaped a fatal accident when their car struck a cow and over- turned in the ditch, giving them a severe shaking up. Medical ald was called and as yet no serious injuries have been reported. 500 Unemployed Smiths Falls, -- D. H. Gem- mell, chairman of the municipal advisory board on unemployment in Smiths Falls, in a statement today, expressed the opinion that some difficulty was anticipated in meeting the unemployment situa- tion in this town, He stated the employment of all those out of work, numbering about 500, ev- en with the assistance of both Federal and Provincial Govern- ments, would appéar to entail an expenditure that could uu, at the present time be borne by the municipality, 5 A Mean Thief Lindsay. -- One of the world's meanest thefts was discovered on Monday when it was found that ihe box holding the collection for the needy at St. Paul's Angli- can Church hdd been broken in- to. Canon Marsh opened the church at ten o'clock in the morn- ing and when he went in later at two o'clock: he found the boxes open and the collection gone. Fortunately the = collection had been removed a little over a week ago so the thief could not have gotten much for his pains, To Expend $8,000 Campbellford. -- Providing no | objections are raised by the rate- payers of the town approximate- ly $8,000 will be expended this fall by the town of Campbeliford for water and sewage work to be dene in connection with the gov- ernment unemployment rennet scheme under the Local Improve ment Act. This decision was rea- ched last evening at a special meeting of the council held in the clerk's office with all mem- bers present, Mayor J. M. Bygott presiding. Suffered Heavy Loss Fraserville, -- Robert Holden, a farmer of this district, suffered a heavy loss early on Tuesday when his barn containing the feason's crop was. totally des- troyed by fire. The cause of the fire is unknown. Holden first no- ticed it when he awoke at b o'clock. Although neighbors ral- lied to fight the flames, their ef- forts were Jovetiomw to prevent the barn's truction. However, the pigs and horses were saved. Rural School Fair Millbrook, -- Nature was in her kindliest mood on Friday, September 18, fhe weather being ideal for the twentieth annual Rural School Fair of South Cav- an district, a unique feature be- ing the fact that every one of the nive schools were represented in the parade which took place promptly at 1 p.m. before a well filled grandstand, at the Agricul- tural Park, Millbrook. Merchant Died Suddenly Port Hope. -- George N. Pat- terson, coal merchant and a for- mer member of the town council, serving in the capacity of deputy reeve, passed away suddenly Sat- urday afternoon at the family residence on King street, He had been ailing for the greater part 0. the summer, but his death on Saturday was most unexpected. He was in his 8st year. Back To Standard Time Kingston. Kingston's five months of daylight saving time wiil end at 12.01 on Sunday mor- ping next. Clocks will be turned pack and citizens will be able to catch upton the hour's sleep they lost on the last Sunday in April, when the clocks were turusu on an hour. No Rink this year Cobourg Decides Cobourg, Sept. 24.--The res- ponse to the canvass made for funds to finance the proposed ar- tificial ice arena at Cobourr was disappointing, and the committee in charge has definitely decided that the objective cannot be reached at the present time. No doubt at some later date when times are more advantageous the matter will again be taken up and a new campaign started, as such a place for recreation {is much needed in Cobourg. In the meantime, however, all promises for stock subscriptions already made are autcmatically cancelled in accordance with the conditions under which these were o.2de, SIMMONS CINCHES "Hypnotized'" Women Lucky At Casinos on French Riviera Paris.--The sensational luck at gambling tables of several mysterious women players, ru- mored to have been hypnotized by some unidentified master of psychic phenomena, was investi- gated by operatives of French Riviera casinos. The sudden appearance of the women, who were reported play- ing without appearing to give any thought to the game, and a coincident rage among regular players for lucky stones, scarabs, and dubious mystics, was said to have caused such consternation that the Ministry of Interior prob- ably would be compelled to in- vestigate the entire situation. Ong of the strongest complaints was made to M. Baudoin, direc- tor of one of the Nice casinos, He was informed by several players and by members of a profession al gambling syndicate. of the strange luck of the women, The complaints were to the effect that someone like the fictitious Bven- gall, hypnotic master of Trilby, was sitting behind the scenes and controlling them in an effort to break the bank. The women players were de- scribed as apparently '"impres- sionable" types who might easily be influenced hy hypnotism. They appeared, fashionably dressed, at the baccarat tables in Nice and Juan-les-Pihs, playing somewhat as if they were going through a ritual, They had a luck. Their winnings were es- timated to average around 80,000 francs (about $2,200) each night, but they never overplayed their | luck. Some of the witnesses were of the opinion that the women did not know where they were, and it wag remarked that after winning a certaih amount they invariably rose without delay and left the tables. It also was observed that they departed in expensive auto- mobiles. As an indication of the belief in the hypnotic "system," it was pointed out that the actress, Dol- ly Davis, submitted to a test which enabled her to win several thousand franes at Nice. She permitted herself to be hypnotiz- ed, although she was skeptical, and played without knowing just what she did, according to her story. She gaiq it was all "much like a dream." Miss Phyllis Woodcock, inter- nationally known society woman, has won 300,000 francs on the tip of an Egyptian astrologer, and Mies Alico Morris, of Cincinnati, was reported to have won 59,000 francs after visiting a fakir who has been practicing recently at Juan-les-Pins, Divorced Man Prefers Death To Life Without Former Wife Chicago. -- Katherine Carque- ville Stevens Lecherq found her- self faced by a tangled romance which, having once narrowly avoided tragedy, was still charg- ed with dramatic indicents. For her divorced husband, George M. Stevens, Jr., who tried to take his life, was quoted as saying he would geek death again unless she returned to him. The threat wag attributed to him by Mrs. Alexander Carqueville, mo- ther of the former wife. The situation was all the more complicated because both were remarried. Mrs. Stevens, heir- ess to the Thomas Jeffery auto- mobile fortune, interrupted her honeymoon with Robert Lee lL.echerq at Buffalo to" hurry to Stevens' bedside when she heard he had attempted suicide. And Stevens, himself, was married to another woman, of whom very little was known excepting' that she is 32 years old, and comes from Kansas City. While Stevens' father planned to take his convalescing son to the family home at Mt. Vernon, LEADERSHIP IN BIG 6| N.Y., the story of the tangled af- Bebe Ruth, alone of the Biz ~ix had an opportunity yesterday to fatten his average, but the Bambino could do no better than ene hit in threo attempts, and his 'erage remained stationary at +72. The Yankee slugger now is asst red of second place in the fin- aj standirg, even if he has a seri- ous slump in the few remaining games, Al Simmons of the Ath- leties, who has hit safely ian 12 straight games and hoosted his average to 301, is a cinch to lead the American League for the sec- ond straight year, G. A.B. R. H. Pet, Simm's, A's 126 504 106 197 .391 Ruth, Yank. 141 516 144 192 ,372 Morgan, In.. 131 463 87 162.350 Hafey, Card 119 437 93 153.350 52 607 120 212,249 Phil, 145 581 120 198 .341 LONE BUILDING LEFT STANDING ON SEA SHORE Settlement of Much Interest Halifax, Nova Scotia, A small round building, mounted on tho top of a steep hill overlooking Bedford Basin, {8 the solitary re- mainder of a dozen buildings oc- cupled by the Duke of Kent one hundred and thirty-one years ago. At an outing of the Nova Scotia Historical /Soclety recently, a number of members explained the topography of the Prince's Lodge property, and recreated for the infcrmation of the guests, the es- tate as it appeared at the begin- ning of the nineteenth century. Of the twelve buildings shown on the plans of Valentine Gill, an engineer who first reported on the Shubenacadie Canal proposal, Princess Lodge alone remains. Beside the lodge there was a small building in the rear. In front was the band stand and the Rockingham Barracks near the shore of the Basin. The library was a separate building on a line with the residence and south of | it. A building marked Smith's house was in front near the main road and along to the north, The coach and square houses were on a line with the Smith house but further north, The Chinese tem- ple was neat the brook and south of the library bullding. 'I'nere was a small building in the rear | between the main building and the library. The garden house was on the border of the lake at the east end and the duck house on the west end. Mrs. Frances Gore, novelist, and widow of Charles Gore, died in 1861, leaving the Prince's Lodge property to her son, Aug- ustus F. Wentworth Gore. He came from England to be pres- ert at the lodge property when the Prince of Wales visitsd the locality in 1860. Augustus ¥. W. Gore and wife conveyed the pro- pity in 1879 to the following: Henry N. Paint, William (. Moir, William H. Neal, Will D. O'Brien and Thomas' Durney. The prop erty later passed through other Lands. fairs were recounted by Mrs. Car- queville, Describing Mrs. Lecherq's visit to Stevens' bedside, Mrs. Carque- ville said: "Kay went to the hos- pital to tell George the truth, She felt that George had suffici- ently recovered to be told that she would not return to him-- that she is happy with Mr, Le- cherq George then said he would attempt to kill himself as goon as he gets out of the hospi- tal, He said His own present marriage was simply an attempt to forget Kay." The superintendent of the hos- pital, Miss Lena Johnson, said Stevens was "almost hopelessly discouraged." "He feels," she continued, "that he has ruined his own life, and that of his former wife, her present husband, his second wite, his father, and the entire Cara- queville family. His présent wife loves him, yet ghe said she will not stand in the way of his hap- piness." Mr, Stevens' father "was under- stood to be arranging a divorce for his son from his second wife, "Such delicacy of flavour - is not Sound in other teas "SALADA" TEA 'Fresh from the gardens' v SALES OF FERTILIZER An increase of 100,000 tons in the amount of fertilizer used by Canadian farmers is reported fre 1930 by the Fertiliz- er Division of the De- partment of Agricuiture at Ot- tawa. Sales for 1929 totalled 223,750 tons as compared with 321,206 tous for 1930 gest increase reported wag in the Province of Quebec, where Lhe 1930 consumption totalled 55, 544 tons, more than twice the 22,738 tons of the preceding The lar- |. year. The use of mixed fertili- zers increzzed by nearly 50,000 tons, while some 95,000 tons of superphosphate were used, dnd sales of Canadian made nitrogen in the form of sulphate of am- monia increased from 7,847 tons to 13,727 tons. "Our prison system fis futile, purposeless and utterly ineffect- ual."'--Lewis E, Lawes. "Our prowess will decide our fate, not visits to London." --Ma- hatma Gandhi. LADIES' STYLISH 1 FOOTWEAR ALL SIZES AND SEVERAL STYLES IN STRAPS AND PUMPS "We Fit By X-Ray" SEE OUR WINDOWS The Burns Co., Ltd. OSHAWA 89 livered. Phone 1110 Carneta 's Greatest Clothing Value SIBERRY'S TWO-PANT SUITS 95 Two Days Only Friday & Saturday Sept. 25 & 26 Hundreds of Suit Ends and Samples to Choose From-- Perfect Fit Guaranteed. A Deposit is all you need, the Balance can be arranged for whenever you want the Suit de- SEE OUR WINDOWS TONIGHT Siberry's 27 King St. E. Opposite Post Office

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