THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1940 3 A Want Ad Will Tell It - Sell It - Trade It or Rent It. T. w! cu "DALTON BURIAL COMPANY Home - Ambulance Service 75 Charles Street ed 1889 Phone 401 stants (24Nov.c) MEAGHER'S FUNERAL HOME. EF day and night service. F. Manager, 8. J. Strow- Puneral gro ¥ 117 King (18Nov.c) | BURIAL CU. 67 KING ST. Ambulance. Residence 09 ™ E. Phone 210. Fy 7 ARMSTRONG AND SON, tors Oshawa Burial Co. 3 and Ambulance Service. Day snd night. Phone 2700. 124 Fg Tas Auditors 0BCAR HUDSON AND OOM- , Chartered Accountants Oonant and Annis Chamber. ™% _Slmove Street South. Telephone 4 Mead Office, Toronto. Battery Service SATTERIES CHARGED 75¢. WITH rental $1.00. Called for and de- livered. Stan Bligdon. 20 Mill St Phone 960 Dental oR. 8. J. PHILLIPS OVER BAS- sett's. Special attention to X-ray work. Gas estraction. Nurse in attendance, Phone 950. House 1312 ry C. L. KELL, DENTIST, 26 North. X-Ray. Phone 1316. Prndonte 18aW. (Nove) Mardwood floors laid, ginished by experts Latest equip- ment. Phone for prices. 100 Nas- isau street. (an Insurance Articles for Sale A RANGETTE, A DINNETTE AND three piece bedroom suite. Apply by Thursday at 309 Jarvis St. (83a) SMALL ELECTRIC STOVE, WITH thermostat. Suitable for small apartment. Used 2 months. Good as new. Phone 223W. (83c) SACRIFICE SALE. HIGHEST quality Gladiolus bulbs: Fall de- livery. Doncaster, 109 Ritson Rd. North. (83e) USED HOT AIR FURNACE IN good working condition, 18 inch fire pot. W. G. Smith, RR. 3, Osniva. (82b) BOARDING HOUSE, ELGIN AND Division, eleven rooms and sun- room, 3 piece bathrooms first and second floors, hardwood up and down. Well decorated and in ex- cellent condition inside and. out. Only $3500. Half cash, balance ar- ranged. Oshawa Real Estate Co. Ltd, 15 King Bast. Phone 25. (82h) FOR SALE--SAND GRAVEL AND cinders. Dump truck services. 170 Colborne W. Phone 605. (81¢) VENETIAN BLINDS, AWNINGS Estimates furnished without obliga- tion. George Reid. Phone 2104, 66 Bond West. (TNov.c) FURNITURE FOR THE ENTIRE home at pre-war prices. Here's sound investment for those precious dollars you want to make go as far as possible. Put the money in your home and brighten it up. Thrifty people will enjoy shopping at the Topp Furniture Co. Even the most skeptical will be convinced of our great money-saving values by com- paring our price and quality. Our location saves you money. Step off Simcoe and Save. Topp Furniture Co., 10 Bond West. Phone 686. (10Nov.c) RED WING "THE BETTER Apples," also Red Wing Apple Juice, delivered to your door twice weekly. Phone before 5 p.m. Monday or Thursday for delivery the following day. Satisfaction guaranteed. Phone Oshawa 1666. (25Nov.c) 'PEACOCK'S INSURANCE SER- vice. Consult us for any of yow needs. Successors to G P Nolan, 22% King Street East Phone 2086. residence 145. i O. YOUNG, GENERAL INSUR- ance. Office phone 793, residence phone 2895. (% Prince Street. : Legal AW 8. GREER, BARRISTER, tor, ete, 6 King Street East con 3160. Residence 3514. Resi- dent partner W. O. Pollard, KC. .. Uxbridge, Ontario. N, CREIGHTON AND Barristers, etc. Bank of ce Building. LINOLEUM AND CONGOLEUM rugs. Select yours from over 300 patterns actually in stock. You are invited to view these at BRADLEY'S New Furniture Store 156 Simcoe South. (23Nov.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, 156 Simcoe South. (8Nov.c) Times are better and if you are sour on your boss, your job or your living quar. ters, now is with a Want Ad in the Daily Times. We'll help write it. CALL 35 AND ASK For Rent ONE UNFURNISHED suitable for preparing light meals. Box 9 Times. TWO LARGE, BRIGHT, FUR- nished bedrooms, suitable for gentle- men. Centrally located. Immediate possession. Private home. Phone 599J. (83c) 4 ROOM DUPLEX, HEATED, ALL conveniences, garage if required. Facing Memorial Park. Apply J. H. R, Luke. (83c) LARGE DOWNSTAIRS, FUR- nished or unfurnished room. West end. Hot water, use of washer, re- frigerator, telephone. Phone 2103W. (83a) | OFFICES WELL LIGHTED, NICE- ly decorated, hardwood floors, hot water heated, well located in mod- ern office building, attractive ent- rance. Bradley Bros. (280ct.tf) FURNISHED ROOM, PRIVATE home. Central. Phone 3249J. (81c) SIMCOE MANOR, LOVELY apartment building, 1 4-roomed and 1 S-roomed, newly decorated | everything modern. See caretaker or phone 169. for office gentleman. Location very central. Phone 554. (15Nov.c) 2 BRIGHT UNFURNISHED rooms near Motors, also electric cable for sale. Call after five, 340 Ritson Rd. N. (1Nov.c) ROOM, | (58ept.tf) ROOM FOR RENT, SUITABLE the time to better yourself FOR AN AD-TAKER Salesman Wanted OPPORTUNE TIME AND REAL | opportunity for good man in In- | surance. Strong Canadian Com- | panies. Drawing account and bonus | to good man. Box 2 Times, (82b) Male } Help W. 'Wanted | REAL ESTATE SALESMAN wanted, part or full time, with car. Bradley Bros. (29Nov.e) |BOYS FOR TIMES PAPER routes, between 12 and 15 years of | age, preferably attending Collegiate. | Apply in person to Circulation De- | partment, Times Office, Monday and Tuesday. TRUCK DRIVER FOR CITY DE- livery. State experience, Box 1 Times. (81c) Female Help Wanted | ed or faded, and EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER and stenographer. Apply Mr. | | Walker, W. J. Trick Co., 25 Albert | St. (83a) | GIRL WANTED FOR FAMILY OF | three in apartment. Phone 2604W. (82¢) Work Wanted CAPABLE GIRL REQUIRES DO- mestic work immediately. Box. 4 | Times, (82b) DESIRES | CAPABLE GIRL | housework. Box 5 Times. (82h) BUCKINGHAM MANOR, 4 AND 5 | room apartments, all modern con- venl Phone 1718. Motor Cars For Sale 35 BUICK SEDAN, FIRST CLASS condition, $350 cash. 2609J. (82b) =CONANT AND ANNIS, BARRIS- térs, 7% Simcoe St. 8, Oshawa Phone 4. Allm PF. Annis, BA, LLM. Ernest Marks. BA. RD HUMPHREYS, BARRISTER. Selt.tor, etc, 24% Simcoe North. Phone office 814; residence 3297 'Money to loan, JOSEPH P. MANGAN, KC. BAR- rister, Solicitor, Office 14% King St. East, Oshawa. Phcne 445 Residence phone 837. W. E N. SINCLAIR, BA. LLB, KC, and J. OC. Anderson, K.C. Barristers, etc. Bank of Montreal Building, 320 Simcoe St. North. *" Phone 9. MFG P. SWARTZ BAR- , Solicitor, Notary. Money to Sw. 11 King St. East. Phone 282. "Residence 3071. A. J. PARKHILL, 3ARRISTER, ete. Mortgage loans 5% %, Nation- a) Housing Act, 5%. 2¢ Simcoe Bt. North. (2Nov.c) Cartage MOVING AND DUMP IRUCKS, wand. cinders, wood, coal, etc. 70 Colborne Street West. Phone 605 (15Nov.c) Expert Watch Repairing P, A. VON GUNTEN, EXPERT. Swiss watchmaker, repair shop at 48 King Street West. Your patron age solicited. (th) Radio Service WE SPECIALIZE IN RADIO RE- pairs. For reliable efficient service phone Charles Wales, 3350J. Tubes ested free. (INov.c) Shoe Repairing 'A COMPLETE SHOE SERVICE, Invisible nalf soling, cleaning, dye- Ing, etc. Fast Service, Phone 362. We Call and Deliver. Modern Shoe Repair, Jack Read, 83 Simcoe Street (INov.c) LADIES' INVISIBLE HALPF-SOLE- ing. All work guaranteed. Call and deliver. Phone 2673R. W. Allison, 8 Athol West. (1Nov.c) Psychic Reading SCIENTIFIC PALMIST, TEA LEAP nterpretation, and cards, by Elsie. 16 Kenneth, 2505. (10Nov.c) Lumber DON'T WAIT UNTIL COLD weather for storm, sash, and com- bination doors. Everything in lum- ber. W. Victor Peacock, 341 Riche mond East. Phone 3310. (13Nov.c) 28 PONTIAC SEDAN, CHEAP FOR cash. 89 Westmoreland Ave. phone 1235R. (81a) Real Estate For Sale BETTER TYPE HOUSE--A HOME --Central, good condition, $3900. Terms, Rug brick bungalow, Rit- son South, $2000. Attractive stucco, King' West, $2500. Real bargain, Centre St. $2200. Masson Street house, must sell, $2500. Bradley Bros. / Phone 169. (83c) ¢ ROOMED BRICK HOUSE, § minutes to Motors. Price $1700, $800 Cash, balance payable at $21 a month. No interest. House well rented. 2609J. (82h) $2400--~ALBERT S71, 5 ROOMS, rug brick. Terms $300 cash. Bal- ance $17.64 monthly and taxes. Possession November 1st. $1800--7 ROOMS. ANNIS STREET. Possession November 1st. $3350--LESLIE STREET. T ROOMS, rug brick, garage, $2¢ monthly and taxes. JONES REAL ESTATE, 10 Prince Street. (3Nov.c) DUPLEX FOR SALE: LOT 108 x 115, 45 ft. lot could be sold. Hot water heating, redecorated. Solid brick, new roof: 2 years, bargain. Owner leaving town. Apply 8. Baldwin, 214 Kendal Ave, or phone 2085, (81¢) Bought and Sold USED CLOTHING STERILIZED, cleaned and pressed. We carry a big stock of gentlemen's suits, pants, men's fall and winter coats, ladies' fall and winter coats. Sold very reasonably. Samuel Schwartz, 21 Bond West. (1TNov.c) For Exchange 85 ACRE FARM, 3 MILES FROM Bowmanville, new house, good barn, electric, hardwood bush, worth ebout $1000. Creek. Would con- sider Oshawa house for equity. Oshawa Real Estate Co. Ltd. 15 King East. Phone 25. (82b) Poultry BARRED ROCKS AND NEW Hampshire Reds. Young pullets and year old hens. Phone 1653R12. (80c) Dressmaking DRESSMAKING AND ALTERA- tions done at 110 Alice St. (3Nov.c) Wanted to Rent BUNGALOW OR HOUSE IN GOOD | Gar- Rea- (83c) district, bzfore December 1. age. Steady reliable tenants. sonable. Phone 2077J. YOUNG COUPLE DESIRES 2 OR | 3 unfurnished rooms or small house, by Nov. 8. Apply Box 10, Times. (83c) | BUSINESS WOMAN NEEDS TWO | unfurnished light housekeeping or | small room for bachelor apartment continuous hot water, Box 7 Times. (83c) or one large 2 OR 3 FURNISHED ROOMS FOR | light housekeeping with all conven- | Box 11 Times. Board and Room ROOM AND BOARD, CENTRAL. Phone 2055. (TNov.c) ROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN- tlemen. Every convenience, central, garage. 114 Elgin East. Phone 1943W. (9Nov.c) Rooms Wanted FURNISHED FLAT OR 3 } OR 4] rooms, all conveniences, south of King St. Phone 950. 8 o'clock till 5:30. ences. (83c) (98ept.tf) | (82¢) | | HOUSEKEEPER, MIDDLE "AGED seeks position, reliable, capable of | taking full charge, references. Box | 938 Times. (82¢) Wanted WELFARE SALVAGE DEPART- | ment donations wanted. Beds, | stoves, furniture, anything useful for needy families. Paper, rags, etc. | Collected. Please phone 630. (INov.c) | "Wanted To Buy WANTED FOR CASH, 34-36 G.M.C. {coach or sedan. Private. Phone | 2376W. : (83c) HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR | ron, metal, rags, mattresses. Phone | 635, Cedardale Iron Metals, back | C.N.R. Station. (17Nov.c) | WE PAY HIGR PRICES WOR | rags, scrap metal and fron 202 Annis. Phone 2423M. (TNov.c) HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID for good used furniture, oll stoves and dishes. Collis Trade-in Store 56 King West. Phone 1030 (4Nov.c) |FURNITURE AND STOVES | | wanted, cash paid, or will accept [trade-in on new furniture. Brad- ley"s Furniture Store, 140 Simcoe (28Nov.c) 1 OR 2 ROOMS FOR LIGHT housekeeping. Central 2 adults. Box 6 Times, (82¢) Landscape Designing NEW HOME OWNERS! LAWNS, trees, shrubs, bulbs, flag walks, etc. Fall fertilizing of trees and lawns Phone 2178J. (11Nov.c) Personal MEN! WANT NORMAL PEP, VIM? Try OSTREX TONIC tablets. Stimulants and oyster concentrates aid to normal pep. Results with first package or maker returns low price. Call, write Jury & Lovell in Oshawa and all other good drug stores. (6Novc) BOOKS -- "THE DECAMERON" | __ complete edition, 528 pages, thrill- ing reading, $1. Free Catalogue, art, unusual books, Toronto Book- shop, 355% Yonge, To onto. (791) Saddle Horses CEDAR WILD RIDING ACAD- amy, Rossland Road and Mary St. Trained horses for beginners and children. Phone 375J. (10Nov.c) Caulking and Weatherstriping preferred. | Lost GOLD RING (WRAPPED IN paper) in downtown store. Valued as keepsake, Reward, Leave at Times Office. (83a) HAVE YOUR HOUSE CAULKED and equipped with metal weather- strip. Guaranteed to stop drafts and leakage; including casement wind- ows. Phone 4564. T. A, Morgan. ' * (10Nav.c) Roofing KINDS OF ROOFING AND Estimates free. J. William St. East (INov.c) ALL repairing. Pigden, 54 Phone 3148. Business Opportunities GARAGE AND D SERVICE STA- tion with living quarters for rent, in small town on main highway. Splendid opportunity for a mech- anic, Box 8 Times. (83c) Money To Loan MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST mortgages on Real Estate. Prompt service Oshawa Real Estate Co. Phone 25, Oshawa. (11Nov.c) Masquerade Costumes MASQUERADE COs- Reasonable. 176 (82¢) LADIES' tumes for rent, Elliott Ave. Dancing Instruction "DANCE FOR HEALTH". BETH Weyms, Masonic Temple, Satur- days. Tots, children, adults. Latest New York dances. Free health class Dramatic club. (1TNov.c) Mattresses and Comforters ---- ttt INNER-SPRING AND FELT MAT- tresses rebuilt just like new. Feather beds stripped, made into comforters. | in daylight | lux" | signs must ~ | the lives | signs are damaged by accident or | ened out at | paint is removed from the metal by { As sp | hazards had to be marked 1 | curves, | not, | many | must be moved to the pavement it- Eiderdowns recovered. Phone 2371J. . (1TNov.c) KNOW YOUR LINES The Evolution In Road Sian and Highway Markings is Geared to reater Safety (By Ted Sanderson in the C.LL. OVAL} New pavement markings on On- tarfo highways are the latest con- tribution to safety and speed in motor (ravel. They represent a tremendous chemical and engineer- ing achievement, clinmxing two de- cades effort by engineers, chemists and psychologists to adapt high- ways to the progressively higher modern speeds. Better to under- stand and appreciate these mark- ings which may yet spread throughout the country, let us, be- fore . attempting an explanation, glance at some of the conditions and problems that led up to them. When early cars chugged over dirt roads at g reckless twenty miles an hour, perhaps the main traffic problem was to get one car out of the ruts when it met another and had to pass. Improved roads, how- ever, brought faster cars which forced highway engineers to seek new devices to protect the: lives of a speed demanding public. Hills were cut and ponds were bridged or filled to take the worst kinks out of the highways. Sharp corners be- came long, sweeping, banked curves; roadsi'e ditches shrank All-weather pavement covered many miles of highway, and even side roads. Nevertheless, hazards still remained. Even in clear daylight inevitable hills and blind curves cut visibility for the fast-travelling mo- torist to distances that represent only seconds at modern speeds. So that motorists might be warned of what to expect just beyond their line of vision, engineers posted painted gigns on the shoulders of the road. Road signs developed with the roads themselves. Eurly signs peel- lost most of their visibility. E, signs were to eas chemists faced tt damaged. Paint problem of pro- viding a paint that would not only | stand un to weather and facilitate | repairs, but ensure maximum visib- ility at @ maximum distance, either or by the car lights at night sign finish over primer on a flat metal proved its supremacy still stand of motorists. Now, "Du- Galvatex base has where road guard over vandalism, the paint shop caustic soda, and new "Dulux" fin- ish puts the sign pack in service at a minimum of cost and delay MORE HAZARDS MARKED Oile problem, however, sooner solved than another ced limits rose, more and is no Warn- ing signs on the shoulders of the highways multiplied In words they told of railway crossings, cattle crossings, intersections, winding roads and what=- ed his observation by sheer weight of numbers. It took too much ef- fort to read all those signs at high speed. Even when briefly worded warnings were reduced to psycholo- gical symbols--arrows, split, angled and curved--that conveyed their meaning in a flash, signs on the shoulder of the road sometimes es- caped the driver's attention, es- pecially under conditions of poor visibility. Here was another problem for the engineer; how to reiteve the driver of attention fatigue, and yet keep him advised of hazards ahead so that he might safeguard his own life and the lives of others on the road. It seemed that somehow of these roadside messages self whare they could register their warning subconsciously with little effort on the part of the driver. Long before this necessity was fully realized, men with brush and paint pot went out to particularly hazardous hill crests and curves and painted lines between the traf- fic lanes. Even uninformed motor- ists, seeing those lines for the first time, sensed that they were put there for their protection and that to cross them was to invite disaster and possible death. While those lines remained clear und visible, they proved their worth in control- ling traffic wherever there was dan- ger in passing a slower vehicle or in leaving the one-way traffic lane for any reason. Nevertheless they faced the paint chemist with one of the most baffling paint problems in the whole history of highway safety. To be effective, traffic lines must have clear-cut edges, and must also present a solid colour with no trace of the under surface showing through a single coat. That coat, applied - while traffic continues to use the road, must be extremely fast in drying. In anything from five to forty-five minutes after it is laid, it must be ready to stand severe abrasion from brake action and spinning and skidding of heavily loaded tires, without lifting from the pavement or smearing in any way, It has to give the greatest possible visibility at a maximum distance under all light conditions --daylight or reflection from head- lights. It must retain that brilliant visible 'colour in spite of -the action of chemicals in the pavement it- self, which tend to stain other paints, Add to all these require- ments, that it must withstand for one year the scorching heat that black pavement absorbs from the nsive porcelain | reflection from | When such | they are easily straight- | old | arises | more | lettered | until they rivalled one another | for the driver's attention and dull- | summer sun; the erosion of rain and sleet and snow; the grinding, cutting efféct of ice and frost; and that it must be adaptable to suit- able means of application. Only when one realizes that all these re- quirements have been met can one appreciate the tremendous chemi- cal achievement that painted traf- fic lines represent. Methods of application, of course, have advanced from hand nrushing, through the stage of the hand- pushed machine that could lay down a mile of line a day, to the present modern truck = mounted spraying equipment that is capable of marking five to ten miles a day. NEW WIDE ROAD MARKINGS With these problems sclved and behind them, engineers of the On- tario Department of Highways have, in 1940, produced a new code of highway markings, using various combinations of painted lines on the pavement, to supplement and reduce the number of signs on the roadside. On concrete roads, of course, like the Queen Elizabeth Way, the great four lane super highway with centre boulevards and clover-leaf intersections recently opened from Toronto to Niagara Falls, traffic lanes are already marked by the black line made by the break inthe concrete blocks, No painted lines are needed there, except perhaps on a few jsolated hills or curves. Most of Ontario's highways, how- ever, are of the asphalt, black top variety, with two, three or four traffic lanes. It is on these black top roads that the code of traffic lines has developed. The new code : features double | lines in the centre of the road over hills and around curves. Sometimes both lines are solid; or one is solid and the other broken into dashes. If the line nearest the driver is solid, he must not cross it or at- tempt to pass the car ahead. If the near line is broken, he may cross it if he sees that the road ahead is | clear, because the line is solid or broken according to the distance a | driver can see ahead If you are approaching the crest of a hill, the line on your side will be solid where | your visibility is cut to less than 700 | feet, The other line may be broken because the driver coming down the { hill may have unobstructed visibil- | ity and can see whether it is safe to cross, not only the broken line on | his side, but the solid line beside it. | | When. you have pasted the crest | and have gained visibility, the line oh your side will be broken. The same principle applies curves where trees or other structions cut visibility. points, visibility is blocked in both directions, so both lines are solid. Fairly open curves, on the other hand, and clear stretches of two- lane highway, may have only a sin- gle broken line down the centre, permitting passing in either direc- | tion as traffic allows. Three-Lane Highways Three-lane highways have two broken lines, ten feet apart, separ- ating the lanes; indicating that traffic in either direction may cross into the centre passing lane as traffic permits On curves and hills a three-lane highway becomes a two-lane highway with a solid line in the centre. Four-lane high- ways have a solid line down the centre, with broken lines dividing the lanes on each side. Drivers need only keep to the right of all solid lines, and use care in crossing broken lines, to be guided safely in the proper traffic lanes as if riding a railway under dispatcher's orders. When aporoaching a through road, formerly marked only by a "stop" sign at the side of the road, or when there is a traffic signal light, a solid strip of paint, twelve inches wide and across the full width of the traffic lane, now warns of the stop. Paint on the pavement can hard- ly fail to attract the driver's at- tention in any kind of light. Even in thick fog, when they may be the only visible guides, one needs only to follow the advice of the painted lines to ride in comparative safety. Bear With Rifle Belleville, Oct. 29.--A bear in the sight for most men, but a bear in the wildwoods with a gun proved to be too much for Martin Beir- worth of Bancroft, an experienced hunter an dlumberman, noticed some bear tracks near the woodpile and returned home for his rifle. He placed the gun beside the woodpile while he was cutting a tree only a short distance away. Upon returning to the woodpile with an armful of wood, Beirworth was horrified to find the bear sit- ting beside the rifle with its arm part way around the barrel. Without hesitation, Beirworth evacuated the woods and returned only after he gathered together a pumber of neighbors armed with rifles. They failed to find. the bear, but recovered the rifle lying on the ground where the bear had knocked it over. on | Ob~ | At some | ay STUART L TH: COCOON DAYS To most people the advent of No- vember means the coming of what is spoken of as the "melancholy days". Almost all our summer birds have departed to the south, only the very hardiest and the latest of the flowers are blooming in a_half wilt- ed way; even the leaves so gor- geously tinted in late October have fallen, and everywhere are signs of approaching winter. But to the nature student there are no "melancholy days". Each: season has its charm and every month brings things in the out- doors of peculiar interest. Novem- ber is no exception. The leaves have fallen, true, but this lets you in on a November secret which you would scarcely find otherwise. Sometimes as you stroll about in leafless No- vember you will find a little clump of dead brown leaves still clinging to a twig. This is worth looking into. Why have they not fallen as the others? When examined, you find that these leaves are attached to a round tough silky body which is in turn firmly attached to the twig. This is a cocoon, the winter home of that grotesque, much de- spised creature, the caterpillar, which creates such havoc on the leaves of our forest trees. He is a greedy beast, the cater- pillar. In fact, we find that its very word comes from the old Eng- lish word "cates" food and the word "pillage" or a "pillager of food". Could anything be more apt? The caterpillar seems to think of noth- ing but eat, eat, eat, all day ond sometimes at night. But there comes and end to everything, even a caterpillar's appetite, And, search- ing about for a suitable spot on his home shrub the surfeited glutton sets to work to spin himself into the silky case where he must spend the next few months, all being well. So tightly woven is this silken case that it seems the severest frosts do not trouble the little sleeping inmate. But two unfortun- ate things may occur, One is the downy woodpecker may discover the | cocoon and breaking it open with his sharp bill make a meal of juicy contents. Or you may find this strange silky object clinging to the twig tnd take it home to examine it further. And this is one of the interesting things to do in bare brown dull leafless November. Go | cocoon hunting. It is the month when you are most likely to see MINISTER STRESSES CHRISTIAN STUDY Port Perry, Oct. 30.--Humanity is | raised nearer to God by the minis- | try of growing children," Rev. M. R. Jenkinson, Pickering, told dele- gates to the Oshawa Presbytery Young People's Officers' Congress meeting here over the week-end. Addressing the Sunday afternoon session in Port Perry United Church, he declared that Christian education of children is an import- ant work. "Hitch you life to an ideal so great that what happens to you is incidental" he advised. [ Other speakers addressing the 150 | young people from Ontario and Dur- ham counties included Rev. F. K. Joblin, Scugog: Rev. D. E. Pugsley, | Cannington; Rev. W. J. H. Smyth, | Port Perry, and George Lewis, pre- sident of the Bay of Quinte Con- ference of Young People's. Departmental groups discussed administration problems, with the meeting in charge of Roy Ormiston, Brooklin, president, and Merle Thompson, Burketon, business man- ager. The output of Canadian newsprint during the first eight months of 1940 totalled 2,300,000 tons as against 1,800,000 tons in the corresponding period of 1039, a gain of nearly 27 them and find them sharp eyed downy wi There are many kin Some are large, some vary in shape, round, pointed. Some are w leaves as described, oth bare twig. And many a found under stones on th but all are spun for the s pose. They house the caterpillar cozy and p throughout the winter, a that glorious life in store fi during the coming summer, wt becomes the perfect creature moth, who with spreading w knows no such limits as a st tree as did the caterpillar, In Canada we have many ma speciaes of moths, and no two a exactly alike. All have develope from caterpillors, and for the mos part are quite different in ap- pearance, as each caterpillar has his own ideas of how and where | to fashion his cocoon, so you can see there is room for plenty of study in this little field of nature study alone. November is your op~ portunity. By watching the cater= pillars eating while yet the leaves * are on the trees, finding the cocoon in November and keeping the coe coon at home where it will emerge during the winter months, you can piece together the whole story of a Moth"s life, any one part of which is incomplete alone, Brantford Roofing and Builders' Supplies McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES, LIMITED PHONE 1246 | When in Need of Drugs Call FOWELL'S DRUG STORE 35 Simcoe St. North Phones 1360 - 2259 PROMPT DELIVERY ., Save the pieces! broken lenses. broken frames. AB tA JEWELLERS On Oshawa's Main Corner We replace Let us repair WATCH REPAIRING Let us repair your Watches, Clocks, Jewellery, ete, Work Guaranteed. D. J. BROWN THE JEWELLER 20 Simcoe St. S. Phone 189 Karn's Drug Store FOR PROMPT DELIVERY Phone 78-79 NEXT P, O. Fine Watch Repairing Our Specialty FELT BROS. Established 1886 12 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH Armstrong Fuels Coal - Coke - Wood PHONE 272TW OFFICE: 59 CHURCH ST. We Treat You [] The Year O per cent. Chases Huntsman wildwoods is usually a terrifying Beirworth, who was cutting wood | a few hundred feet from his home, | m On Active Service Mm complete and accurate list of the who have enlisted with any of His and return to this office: Name in full .... Regimental No. .. EE Place and date' of enlistment Birthplace and age .. Names and address of parents EEE PRR PEE RETR REE PIN 1 In order to enable The Oshawa Daily Times to prepare a request the relatives of such members to fill in the following form oe EE or next of kin ............ re Other particulars .......... PP i RR eases ve Sess tenaas men and women from Oshawa Majesty's Forces, the publishers (Print Surname First) I RR EI SPY