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Oshawa Daily Times, 7 Aug 1940, p. 7

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1940 \ PAGE SEVEN (28 Se N Wy =X 3 J. % 8 = AR HUDSON AND COM- ny, Chartered Accountants. OFFAT HUDSON AND COM: ny, Trustees and Liquidators ponant and Annis Chamber, 7% meve Street South. Telephone 4 lead Office. Toronto. : Battery Service ATTERIES CHARGED 75¢. WITH ntal $1.00 Called for and de- vered. Stan Bligdon. 20 Mill St one 960 Dental DR. 8. J. PHILLIPS OVER BAS- ott's. Special attention to X-ray ork. Gas extractiun Nurse in ttendance Phone 959 House 1312 DR. R. E. COX, DENTAL SUR- n, ® Simcoe N. Phcoe 233 Hours nine-twelve, one--five-tbirty, venings by appointment. (11Aug.c) PR. C. L. KELL, DENTIST, 26 Bimcoe North. X-Ray. Phone 1316. idence 1462W. (28Aug.c) Hardwood Floors B. W. HAYNES, .SUILDER Hardwood floors laid, sanded hed by experts Latest equip- ment. Phone for prices. 199 Nas- u street. (th) Insurance PEACOCK'S INSURANCE SER- ce. Consult us for any of your nsuranee needs. Successors to G Nolan, 22% King Street East Phone 2686, residence 145 J. C. YOUNG, GENERAL INSUR- nce. Office phone 793, residence bhone 2895. 4% Prince Street. Legal W. 8. GREER, BARRISTER BoMcitor, etc, 6 King Street East Phone 3160. Residence 3514. Resi- dent partner W. C. Pollard, K.C, Uxbridge, Ontario, SWARTZ. BAR- Money to Phone 282 A NING F. ter, Solicitor, Notary. oan. 11 King Si. East. Residence 3071J. J. PARKHILL, BARRISTER Mortgage loans 5% %, Nation- Housing Act, 5%. 2¢ Simcoe St. North. (1Sept.c GRIERSON, CREIGHTON 'AND er, 'Barristers, etc. Bank of ommerce Building. etc. ONANT AND ANNIS, BARRIS- ers, 7% Simcoe St. 8, Oshawa: Phone 4. Allin F. Annis, BA, JB. Ernest Mprks. BA. S, BARRISTER, Simcoe North. residence 3297. R. D. HUMPHR. Bo..citor, etc. 24 Phone offjce 814; oney to loan. DOSEPH P. MANGAN, KC, BAR- ister, Solicitor, Office 14% King St. Bast, Oshawa. Phone 445. Residence phone W. E. N. BINCLAIR, BA. LLB, K.C, and J. O. Anderson, K.C. Barristers, etc. Bank of Montreal St. North. - ilding, 20 Simcoe Phone 99. Undertaking AGHER"S FUNERAL HOME. Prompt day and nigat service. F. J. Meagher, Manager, 8. J. Strow- r, Puneral Director. 117 King Bt. E. Phone 907. (17Aug.c) F. ARMSTRONG AND SON, proprietors Oshawa Burial Co neral and Ambulance Service Day and night. Phone 2700. 124 King East. UKE BURIAL CO, 67 KING ST st. Ambulance. Residence 68 ng St. E. Phone 210. Cartage IOVING AND DUMP [RUCKS, d. cinders, wood, coal, etc. 70 olborne Btréet West. Phone 605 £ (13Aug.c) 4 "By Mortgages AONEY TO LOAN ON OSHAWA br other property. Mortgages now force purchased. H. C Higgin- botham. 19 Ontario St. Phone 328 (28Aug.c) Expert Watch Repairing A VON @GUNTEN, EXPERT Bwiss watchmaker. repair shop at 6 King Street West. Your patron- ge solicitéd. (tf Money To Loan IONEY TO LOAN, ON FIRST mortgages on Real Estate. Promot ervice. Oshawa Real Estate Co. Phone 25, Oshawa. (10Aug.c) Lawn Mowers AWN MOWERS SHARPENED ollow ground for long service 76c Work guaranteed. Parts and ra. pairs. Called for aid delivered inter Brothers,, Oshawa. Phone nw. 4 (28ept.c) "Roofing "KINDS Of ROOFING AN "Belring: Estimates, "free. J. Pigden, 54 William St. East. Phone 148, Pi (11Aug.c) 32 Articles for Sale LOVELY PONY AND COMPLETE outfit including riding saddle and bridle. For information phone 2054R, (25¢) JOHNSON OUTBOARD motors. Ontarjo Motor Sales, Phone 900. (22Aug.c) SAVE ON PAINT AND WALL- paper at Nelson's, 14 Bond St. West. Phone 841. Free estimates on house decorating. VENETIAN BLINDS, AWNINGS USED tion. George Reid. Phone 2104, 6u Bond West. (6Auge) LINOLEUM AND CONGOLEUM rugs. Select yours from over 300 patterns actually in stock. You are invited BRADLEY'S Furniture Store, 140 Simcoe South. (22Aug.c) BRADLEY'S BEDDING SHOP. special opening offer, everything in bedding, inner spring mattresses, studio couches, cribs, complete, dropside couches beds, tubular steel cots, dropback day couches, angle iron, high riser, and all blade bed springs. Bradley's. 140 Simcoe South. (6Sept.c) August Furniture Sale Wilson's Furniture Co. Studio Couches 50 beautiful studio couches to choose from. Very. attractive cov- erings. $1495 up. You can save 40%. Mattresses New spring filled mattresses, gen- uine damask ticking, all sizes, extra special, $7.95. Also felt mattresses rolled edges, well filled. Wonderful Value, all sizes, $4.49. New Chesterfield Suites Luxurious suites, in the latest styles and most attractive cover- Sale price $39 up. Liberal ance on trade-ins. Bedroom Suites Thrillingly new, smart waterfall design, lovely selection. Sale price $39 up. Save 40%. Breakfast Suites Choose from a grand selection, all styles and colours. Sale $18.95 up. Floor Covering Specials Inlaids, congoleums, feltols, heavy linoleums in all widths. Visit our very large floor coverings, rugs, and carpet dept. Save 40%. Our. lower prices positively save you money. Wilson's Furniture Co. 40 KING W. - 20 CHURCH ST. A (25Aug.c) Room and Board ROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN- tlemen. Nice locality. Every con- venience. Central. Phone 1943W. BOARDERS WANTED, CENTRAL All conveniences. " Phone 2055. (38ept.c) Financial WE PURCHASE MORTGAGES and agreements secured by suburb- an and rural property. Phone North Shore Realty Co., 80, Osh- wa. (6Sept.c) asAugo) | ff * Estimates furnished without obliga- | to view these at] ings, fully guaranteed construction. | allow- | (10Aug.c) | | of woods Indians in theor constant | patrol of the spots where foreigners | American side of the river, where |. ning rapidly down the street. They '| forth along the highways, and their For Rent 6 ROOMED HOUSE, NEWLY DE- | corated, new furnace, available im- Phone 532J. (24c) LARGE . COMFORTABLE FUR- nished room. Simcoe St. North, near schools and Collegiate. Breakfast if desired. Apply Box 440 Times. (24¢) MODERN 6 ROOMED HOUSE, with brick garage, 495 Mary St Available immediately. Phone 532J. (24c) TENTS, BOX TRAILER, AND double or single brick garage. Phone 119J. BUCKINGHAM MANOR, 4 AND 5 room apartments, all modern con- | veniences. Phone 1718. (dJulytf) SIMCOE MANOR, LOVELY apartment building, 1 4-roomed and 1 5-roomed, newly decorated, everything modern. See caretaker or phone 169. (5Aug.tf) UPPER FLAT, ¢ LARGE ROOMS, city water, lights. Apply 344 Pine avenue, (25¢) STORE FOR RENT, POSSESSION September 1st. Apply 184 Simcoe south. Phone 653J. (26¢) SMALL FURNISHED 2 ROOM wpartment, duplex, all conveniences, near G.M.C. Phone 1778W. (26¢) 3 LARGE ROOMS, CENTRAL, good locality. Possession immediate- ly. Apply 209 Kendal avenue. (26a) (26Aug.c) | LADIES' INVISIBLE HALF-SOLE- ing. All work guaranteed. Call | | and deliver. Phone 2673R. W | Allison, 9 Athol West. (28Aug.c) | i -- | A COMPLETE SHOE SERVICE. | | invisible half soling, cleaning, dye- { ing, etc. Fast Service, Phone 362 We Call and Deliver. Modern Shoe | | Repair, Jack Read, 83 Simcoe Street | : North. (30Aug.c) : Motor Cars For Sale '28 PONTIAC ROADSTER, GOOD tires. Cheap for cash. 9 Gibbs ave- | | Detroit River, the St. Lawrence, | nue, off Park Road north, Work Wanted PLASTERING, General repairs. (26h) Phore 1412M. (16Aug.c) Livestock ONE GOOD COW FOR SALE. Phone 2427TW. (24¢) CLYDE GELDING; 1500 POUNDS, 5 years, broken double and single. Guaranteed sound. Reasonable. "Willow Acres" Farm, k Telephone 2456, Bowmanville. (26c) SOW WITH 13 PIGS. APPLY Pratt, Park Road north, nes Ross- land. (26¢) Personal MADAM NEVADA, PFALMIST Psyrhologist, Phrenologist. 11-9. 98 Albert St. Wanted To Rent 4 ROOMED FLAT OR APART- ment, heat, light, and water in- luded, for September 1st. Apply Furnaces FURNACES INSTALLED, CLEAN. ed and repaired, Eavestroughs, etc. For real comfort, economy, and durability install a "Mack" -- the furnace built to last a lifetime. A H. Taylor, 237 Clarke St. (24Aug.c) Business Course SHORTHAND, SECRETARIAL, accountancy, comptometer, dicta- phone. Classes commencing Tues- day, September 3. Oshawa Business College, 18 Simcoe North. Phone Office 1314W, residence 399. (9Aug.c) Summer Resorts SPEND YOUR VACATION AT Moore's Forest Hill Lodge, located among the Pines on the sandy shores of Rice Lake, half mile east of Gore's Landing. Good fishing, boats and tennis, etc. Reasonable rates Drive out for fish, chicken or steak dinners. Address Cobourg, R.R. No. 1, Telephone Cold Springs Ex- change. (16Aug.c) Male Help Wanted WANTED BY LOCAL ORGANIZA- tion, male stenographer between the age of 18 and 23. Apply stating age and previous experience if any, to Box 504 Times, (25h) BRICKLAYERS WANTED. APPLY H. A. Wickett Ltd.,, General Motors, Bldg. 62. (25d) Box 507 Times. (26¢) Real Estate For Sale 6 ROOMS, ON MARY, NEAR LAU- der, modern home, best location in city. This is one of our best proper- ties. If you are interested in a good home see us at once. Jones Real Estate, 10 Prince St. (28ept.c) 5 ROOMED BUNGALOW FOR sale, conveniences, wired for elec- tric stove, near Robson Leather Co. Apply Box 502 Times. (24c) BUNGALOW. FOR SALE FOR less than rent. No Real Estate need apply. Phone 2594W. (26¢)- Lost i LOST -- SILVER METALLIC bracelet, Saturday night. Phone 3137J. © (28e) LOST -- WHITE PERSIAN CAT, any information phone 3019M. Ld (25¢) "ANGUS", SCOTTISH TERRIER, black, male, back clipped. Phone 418W. (26a) BLACK ZIPPER CHANGE PURSE, Tuesday morning, downtown area. Reward. Phone 80M, (26a) BETWEEN FOUR CORNERS AND Regent Theatre, or brown leather zipper billfold, con- taining money and name on card, initials "J. H. 8." Please phone 1722W. Reward. (26c) MACHINISTS, TOOL MAKERS, moulders, electricians, over 40 wish ing to take advantage of the Gov- ernment's Refresher Course, apply to Box 509 Times. If satisfactory, we will sponsor you and give you em- ployment at good wages. (26,28,31,33) Male or Female Help Wanted NOW IS THE TIME TO QUALIFY for a Government job as Olerk, Postman, Customs Clerk, Steno, ett Three Dominion-wide exams held since war 'began. Free Booklet M.C.C. Schools Ltd. Torpnto 10. Oldest in Canada. No agents. (Wed. Pri. tH Wanted To Buy HIGHEST PRICES PAI" FOR iron, metal, rags, mattresses. Phone 635, Cedardale Iron Metals, back C.N.R. Station. (16Aug.c) WE PAY HIGH PRICES FOR rags, scrap metal and iron. 202 Annis, Phone 2423M. (18ept.c) HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID for good used furniture, oll stoves and dishes. Collis Trade-in Store, 56 King West. Phone 1030. Hin (3Sept.c) GOOD GENERAL PURPOSE FARM work horse. Give full description and cash price to Box 508 Times. (26a) in Theatre, | 'MEN OF 30, 40, 50! HEALTH (VIM, PEP) subnormal? Try Ostrex tab- its to aid recovery of normal pep. If not delighted with results first package, maker refunds its price. Call, write Jury & Lovell in Oshawa and all other good drug stores. (Sept, 3¢ DRUM TASSELS PROVED HANDS OFLOST OFFICER Fingerprint Records' Solve Mystery of Missing Man In Africa San Fransisco -- To encourage voluntary finger-printing an auth- enticated story, stranger than fic- tion, was told at the Golden Gate International Exposition here by the students of the Alameda City School of the Air. It is believed by sponsors of the voluntary finger-printing movement to be one of the most exceptional cases showing the value of finger- printing for identification. The story concerns the authentic led into the heart of Africa, where they were captured by head hunt- ers. While waiting in prison for their turn to die, they notided a drum with the American flag painted on the head and with two tassels sus- pended from the sides. The men succeeded in escaping They took the drum with them. lish village they showed the drum to a physician, who declarsd his belief that the drumhead was made of human skin. He soaked the drumhead and the two tassels in caustic potash, which caused the tassels to swell, revealing the fact they were the skin from two human hands. Imprints were made from them and sent to Washington, where by an examination with finger-prints on file at the Navy Department, iu was established they were the prints of a retired naval officer who had made an expidition into the heart of Africa, adventures of two men who travel- | before their day of doom arrived. | When they finally reached an Eng- | | U.S. Guardians of Boundar- | ies Alert for Fifth Column- || border patrol, who have matched | Grande, they watch the spots where | of a problem now, for Canada's war BORDER PATROL READY TO MEET ALL TREACHERY ists--Watch Rio Grande Washington--"8Sign-cutters" of the wits and guns with smugglers and rum-runners are alert for the track of the "Fifth Columnist" seeking illegal entry into the United States. Guardians of the long-unfortified boundaries of the nation, they com- bine he modern radio tower and fast squad car with the trail tricks might "sneak in." New vigilance centres on the southern boundary. Along the Rio a man can wade across the shallow river. They watch "Cordova Island," a patch of Mexican soil on the an alien can change nations by run- watch the cars passing back and eagle eyes search desert bypaths for tracks. On the southern tip of Florida-- only 50 miles from foreign-owned islands--they watch the sloops and speedboats passing in and out of the bays and harbors. Keen, suspicious eyes fix on the 'pleasure boats" dashing in and out of the resorts. Cuba and %he British Bahamas long have harbored the smuggler breed The trackless woods and fast streams of northern Maine are less governmént has put stricter controls | | on aliens within, But inspectors keep making their long treks by foot through the dense | woods, and boat patrols watch the | | Niagara, Puget Sound. STUCCO AND | Canadian conscription, or political trouble in Mexico, might double | overnight the job of the watchers of | the northern or southern limits of the country. Shortly, 712 new patrol officers will double the force whose tradi- | tions go 'back to Jeff Milton--ex- | press messenger, sheriff, Texas | ranger, Chinese inspector -- who maintained a one-man, one-horse, two-gun patrol west of Nogales at the turn of the century. # Orders Coffins Jeff was the man whose long pur- suit of three train robbers ended | with a telegram to friends: "Send | | two coffins and a doctor." | science, Hours | (20Aug.e) | low | all the aid of modern the border patrol of the | Immigration Service still remains a | frontier service, like the Canadian Northwest Mounted Police. Their special art is "sign-cutting," | inherited from the Indians and the | cowboys. This outdoor tracking-- | following the trail of footprint, | With is vital to the job of catching a | "wet" alien before he loses himself on the inland highways or in the big cities of the coast. But the border patrol backs up its | "gign-cutters" with "check-stations' | along the highways back 50 or 70 miles from the border. Here cars are searched, suspicious persons spotted, known smugglers of aliens seized with the goods. "The sign-cutters'--usually work- | ing in pairs--often trudge for days | through the desert brush of the | southwest or the woods of the | North, following the minute sign- | posts a passing man leaves on earth | and underbrush. | Four teams--two horses, two men --still patrol the mesquite-covered | desert border in the southwest where patrol by automobile is out of the question. The radio towers, standing high above the flat border towns of the southwest, had added a new gro- tesque--but effective--feature to the patrol. Since the word has spread that the radio towers brought in an average of one alien a day when first set up, allen-smuggling has decreas- ed in their territories. The towet man calls to the patrol car by radio, directing the patrol- men's operations from his observa- tion point: "Calling Car 26. A man Is cross- ing the standpipes area near the foot of Charles street. Yowll have to hurry . .. He is coming up the drainage ditch toward Santa Fe street. Head him off in that direc- tion . . . He has stopped on Santa Fe street. He is wearing black trousers and a white hat . . . He is at Santa Fe and Tenth street . . .Damn it! That's him right in front of you!" In recent years, some smugglers of aliens have taken to the sky, fly- | ing their "customers" in by airplane. The border patrol has no air service. | | | | but it has snagged flying smugglers | by watching their hideouts. The | smugglers dare no land their con- traband at established flying fields. Drives Into Machine On one case, a patrolman halted an escaping plana by driving his car head-on into the moving machine before it could take off. ? To-day the border patrol--trans- ferred from the Labor Department to the Justice Department--is in a position to co-cperats closely with the counter-éspionage agénts of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Chief Willard Kelly,a quiet tena- | with ed SR ~7- © SL Fy dX Fc cious man still in his thirties, is a "career man" of the border patrol. He entered the service as a patrol inspector in the Maine woods when the border patrol was established in 1924, Kelly's men have a reputation as sharp-shooters, which springs part- ly from their continuing training in firearms. This starts at the train- ing schools, where recruits go through a stiff course in immigra- tion law, "sign-cutting" tactics, fingerprinting, radio, jui jitsu and police work. On the southern border, the men must learn Spanish; on the Maine border they must speak French. Only woman officer of the service is the girl who teaches French to the man of district one. DELIVER MAIL BY AUTOGIRO WHOLE YEAR Urge Experiment Be Con- tinued--Roof-Top Air-Mail Service Maintained Philadelphia--A year's experimen- tation with the world's first auto- giro air-mail 'service has left several important questions unanswered and the experimenters are hopeful that Congress may authorize its continu- ance for at least two more years. Last week-end marked the com- pletion of the 2634th flight of a malil~carrying 'giro between the roof of the Philadelphia General Post- office and the Camden and Phila- delphia airports. This meant that 85.8 per cent. of the scheduled trips had been made, some 10 per cent. more than had been expected, and that 83,766 pounds of mail had been carried in the new shuttle service for which Eastern Air Lines con- tracted on an experimental basis, It meant, moreover, that roof top landings had been made in sus- tained gusts of wind with velocities up to fifty-five miles an hour and it left Captain John M. Miller, chief pilot, convinced that build- ings in future must be designed flying in mind, with their edges rounded and perhaps slotted in insure a smooth flow of air ac- ross their rooftops. Dependable Service Even Captain Miller, a veteran of flying circuses and the first private owner of an autogiro, confessed he was "pretty badly scared" when he made the first landing and take-off to open the service from the rooftop airport on June 6, 1939. But now he is convinced that the 'giro service can be maintained at any time the | regular airlines are able to operate. During the last year, however, all the Biro flying has been done in the daytime. The technique for night flights is an unknown quantity and | Captain Miller is eager to try this out with various rooftop lighting systems as well as to experiment with instrument flying with a 'giro on regular schedules. There has , : ; Meta of tonics, stimulants, oyster ele- | broken twig and misplaced stone-- 4 heen no solution as yet for problems presented by the formation of ice on the rotor blades and by the erosion of the blades by rain or ' | sleet. The Kellet Autogiro used during the year was a redesign of an army type and was built here at a cost of $25,000. A wingless or direct con- trol type, it has a fixed tail except for a small rudder; possesses a three-bladed rotor, with blades twenty feet in radius and one foat in chord; is powered with a 225 horsepower Jacobs engine with a | fixed pitch propeller and was de- signed to take off with a maximum gross load of 2,400 pounds. Try Improvements With improvements continually being made in the autogiro field Captain Miller considers it impor- tant that extensive tests be made with a craft having constant-speed propeller, a new type of rotor blade cutting down vibrations to about 25 per cent. of the present amount; a tapered blade using a National Ad- visory Committee for Aeronautics section instead of the present straight blade with Gottingen sec- tion; a new type of rotor starter and a controllable pitch rotor, manually controlled for a direct take-off and accelerated take-off, making it possible for a 'giro to jump off and descend vertically. During the first half of the ex- perimental period, company regula- tions forbade flight unless the ceil- ing was 1500 feet and visibility three miles. Later these were re- laxed to provide minima of 800 feet and one mile, and Captain Miller says the ceiling easily could be re- auced to 400 feet now that the air- lines have moved from Camden to the new Philadelphia Airport and the 'giro no longer would have to fly over the central city district The flights have shown, accord ing to Captain Miller, that the post- | office roof is not ideally suited to its purpose, designed as it is with penthouses on two sides, often gen- erating turbulent eddies with which pilots have had to battle in land- ing. It is suggested that the near- by Pennslyvania Railroad Station roof might be obtained for the east west landings. Because of the = comparitively 'small siz2 of the mail loads carried here, the 'giro shuttle service was regarded in some quarters as hardly trasible for a city such as Phila- delphia, whereas it' might be for Chicago or New York, with much heavier loads. fs ill under the doctor's care. ASHBURN ASHBURN, Aug. 5.--Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Scott and son Billy, of New Toronto, also Mr. end Mrs. H. R. Bryant, of Whitby, spent the week- end with Mr. and Mrs. S. O. Bryant, on return from a trip to Callander and further points north. Messrs, James and Andrew Heron visited one day last week with Mr. and Mrs, Leslie Guardhouse. We are sorry to report that Miss Bella Mole had the misfortune to fall down cellar and break her arm. Dr. Bert Harper, of Timmins and his mother, Mrs. H. Harper and sister, Mrs. H_ Foster, of Toronto, were visitors this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. 8, O. Bryant. Miss Marion Spencer spent a week at her home here. We regret that Mrs. George West Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Ar- thur Reynolds during the week were Mrs. L. M. Lee, Mrs. Chennell and Mrs. Usher, all of Toronto, and Miss Doris Welsh, of Moorefield, Mr. Walter Reynolds, of Toronto, and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Heron. Rev. Robert Simpson will be pres- ent next Sunday to conduct the morning service at eleven fifteen o'clock. You are welcome. The Ladies Guild enjoyed a s0- cial afternoon on Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Ashton. After the business was dispensed with g guitar s0lo was given by Mary Lynde and a reading by Gertrude Parrott, then followed a social hour over the lunch hour, Mr. James Doble has accepted a position at radio station CFRE Aurora. The Ladies Bible Class will meet at Miss Marguerite Calls' home on August 19th, Monday evening. | Last Sunday morning at the | morning church worship hour the | congregation enjoyed hearing the | representative from the British and Foreign Bible Soclety. The choir sang "Carry your Bible with you." Miss Thelma Bryant spent last | Wednesday in Whitby with her | cousin, Miss Glenys Huntley, (Too Late For Last Week) The morning church service last Sunday morning was a very impres- | sive and Interesting one. It was conducted by Mr, Irwin, a member of the Christian Business Men's As. sociation known as the "'Gedeons." He was assisted py Mr. Dickie who, although he was unable to see through the eye, read the scripture, the 15th chapter of St. John, and told of the wonderful work being done by the Gideons. Their chief task is to place bibles in hotels, Jails, hospitals and rchools. Mr. Dickie stated that some 1,660.000 bibles had been placed in hotel | rooms so far. He also told many | interesting stories that had come back to them from people who had received hep from reading these bibles. Mrs. Irwin rendered two beautiful solos, "Be still my soul", and "Follow Me." The choir sang "If your heart keéps right" Next Sunday at eleven o'clock a representative from the British and Foreign Bible Society will be pres- ent to take the service and speak | on the .work done by that organ- ization. The Bryant family reunion was held last Saturday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Bryant. when a very enjoyable af- ternoon and evening was spent. The Town Line Ladies spent a RAZORBLADES FOUNDINGITY BURIED IN 1440 Ruins Located in Jungles of Honduras -- Household Utensils Used New York The story of a Central American "city of the mon- key god" whose inhabitants used razor blades 1,600 years ago was brought here by two Massachusetts archaeologists. Deep in the jungles of Honduras, Theodore A. Morde said he and his companion, Laurence C. Brown, dis- covered the "lost" city, capital of an agricultural civilization - of 'the Chorotegans, probably contempor- aries of the Mayan Indians. Evidently, said Morde, a major catastrophe wiped out the civiliza« tion. Centuries of jungle growth covered the dead metropolis, whose build- ings "had stone foundations .ahd which was surrounded by' a stone wall, Morde, of New Berford, Mass, and his colleague, of Worcester, de- clined to give the exact location of the city because of their intention to return with a large expedition to start excavations thus far made impossible by floods. Sculptored idols, stone household utensils, a six-note flute and primi- ive razor blades were among the articles they brought back to the Museum of the American Indian, sponsors of the explorations. They also reported evidences of gold, silver, platinum and oil in the tegion, to which they plan to re- turn next January, pleasant afternoon at the home of Mrs. Walter Lynde on Wednesday of last week, when a quilt was quilted for the Red Cross. Mr. Harold Taylor, of Toronto, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs, A. Reynolds. 3 The annual Taylor reunion was held on Thursday afternoon at "Lynbrook Park," when relatives gathered from far and near to spend the afternoon together, Mr. and Mrs. Sherwin, Lyle and Dorene, spent Sunday with relatives near Peterboro. About one hundred members of the Leash family, enjoyed last Thursday afternoon at Oshawa-one the-Lake, when they held their annual family reunion. . Miss Emma Fisher spent the week-end at her home here, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Tunney and son Donald, of Sarnia, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. R. Tunney while Mr. Tunney was spending the week-end at his home with his family. TIME TABLES . TRAIN AND BUS SCHEDULES CANADIAN NATIONAL AND CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAYS Effective Now At C.N.R. Station Eastbound Pool, Daily. Pool, Sat. Only. Pool, except Sat. & Sun. Pool, Dally. ily. Sunday orly. Pool, Daily.. Westbound Dally. NOS arms SJ8B/A8S PovuvoP vouToPe BEBE 333338 Na Seas S]8BEN At C.P.R, Station Eastbound 11.57 p.m. Dally, Pool. estbound 5.53 a.m. Dally, Pool TORONTO-OSHAWA BUS LINE (Gray Coach) (Standard Time) WESTBOUND Leave Oshawa 5:45 a.m. Daily except Sun- days and Holidays 7:1 6.20 a.m, - Daily except Bun. days and Holidays Daily Dally Dally Saturday only Dall Sune idays - 83 » 3 CO M3 av a WN ~R~C© Nw WW ww www 1=2-2-2- Daily exce days and Daily Dally except Sune day and Hollda: Saturday, Sunday and Holidays ally Saturday Sunday and Holidays Dail vy Saturday, Sunday and Holidays ally Sun, & Holidays 8 88 we UY TU © TU Vusre 35 38 vo B3 BS bh p pp BpEBa: BEB BP --- = 2-1 ove EASTBOUND Leave Toronto Arrive Oshawa 6:30 a.m. Daily except Bune day ana Holidays 7:55 am. 7:40 a.m, 100 a.m. Daily 9:00 a.m. Cally 0:25 a.m, " Des y 55 a.m. turday on Dall ? Saturday only Dally Daily except Sum- day and Holidays Dally Dally Saturday, Sunday and Holidays Dail ir # Bes: AME W341 ga BEz SEs y Saturday, Sunday and Holidays Daily Daily BH WN JUN LNNeS 88 88 888 8 TP uy YUw PUTT 82 pB H#3@ E3gpiEn Bpp B3 pBp ppb vou YU YIU age Save the pleces! broken lenses. broken frames. Bassetts JEWELLERS On Oshawa's Main Corner We replace t us repair Armstrong Fuels Coal - Coke - Wood PHONE 272'W OFFICE: 59 CHURCH ST, We Treat You [7] The Year O WATCH REPAIRING Let wus repait your atch Clocks, Jeweners) ete. Work: Guaranteed. D. J. BROWN THE JEWELLER 0] 20 Simcoe St. S. - Phone 189 Brantford R and Builders' foo McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES, LIMITED PHONE 1246 Fine Watch Repaiting Our Specialty FELT BROS. Established 1886 +2 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH Karn's Drug Store FOR PROMPT DELIVERY Phone 78-79 NEXT P, O.

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