| AGE TEN = THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1940 "ommons Get in Hurry | Called Back RO. | alked out un the Senate yester- Ottawa, Nov. 6 -- The = ay and had to be called back to »¢ itself prorogued. The second session opens on hursday. The Deputy Governor-General, ir Lyman P. Duff, had completed | sading the Speech fcom the | Throne in English and in French. 'here came a pause. Mr. Speaker Hen, standing before the Bar of | he Red Chamber with the oiner| sommoners, fidgeted with his hat, yoked toward the gowned figure f the Clerk of the House, then put | he hat, which looks like an apple urnover, squarely on his head, The sergeant-at-Arms shouldered the aace and the procession of MP's | _noved out along the corridor. The Throne Speech did not men- fon prorogation. That comes later \s a little separate ceremony. With | he official notification just about | 0 be given, the Tommons had sleared the Senate door F. L. C. Pereira. Deputy Secretary 0 the Governor-General, saved the situation. He wen:i after 'the re- reating Commoners and brought -hem back where they were official- y told that the first session of the Nineteenth Parliament had ended. When ihe second session of the | present Parliament opens up Thurs- | day the Throne Speech will give the basis for the debate of the coming | month. The only other matters to pe submitted to the House before Christmas, according to present plans, will be documents and re- ports placed on the table The historic slip yesterday came within fifteen minutes after the Commons had accepted as a gift from his family the chair that Sir John Bourinot, the great authority on rules and procedure, had occ pied for the many years he served as Clerk of the Commons. Except for the retreat of Commons, it was a day of no prises with everything happening {according to schedule. Four new { members were introduced -- (WO { Liberals and two Conservatives -- with Naval Minister Angus L. Mac- donald taking his seat for the first time. As Mr. Macdonald took seat Tom Reid (Lib. New minster) the piper of the House rushed up to greet the only Gaelic speaking member of the Cabinet. Power "Out in Cold," For a minute or 'two there were so many Scotsmen around that Irish Chubby Power maae a face. Mr. Macdonald was introduce the aur- IN | the Prime Minister and his fe Maritimer, Hon. J. L. Ralston. MN King and Hon. C, D. Howe did the honors for L. A. Breithaupt, who succeeds Senator W. D. Euler in North Waterloo. Conservatives Leader R. B. Han- son and Joseph H. Harris Intro- duced G. R. Boucher, new member for Carleton, and Ernest Perley of Saskatchewan gssisted Mr, Har in bringing in A. H. Bence, the t dark, handsome man who Is first Conservative elected for S atoon in ten years. There were comments in the gal- lery about the appearance of the new members. The Naval Minister is the shortest of the four, but it is a long time since g group of new members have added so much to the good looks of the House. The Throne Speech yesterday dealt with the past. "Canada has willingly accepted the widening responsibilities which the events have placed upon her," it] said. "The measures which you have taken had in view the imme- diate task of sharing more pletely in the defense of Britain and securing our own country more effectively against internal subver- sion and external attack. They have also had in view the long-range task of ensuring the ultimate de- feat of the enemy." Today political fireworks will be in the making when House members of all three opposition parties meet in caucus to chart their sessional coursz, Conservative Leader Hanson, who offered considerable criticism of the Government's war effort during a speaking tour he made a month ago, will confer with his party col- leagues at a meeting expected to last all day. Members of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation will de- | cide on a House Leader for the new | platfor com- | to Prorogue SCUGOG HOLDS Rly RALLY DAY SERVICE Rev. F. G. Joblin Gives In- | teresting Address at Large Gathering (Mrs. D. Hope, Corr.) SCUGOG, Nov. 5.--Sunday No- vember the 3rd was the occasion of our Union Rally Day Service which was held in the Centre Church with a good attendance. The three superintendents, Mr. John Reader, of the Head Sunday School, Mr. Walter of the Centre, and Mr. Fred of the Foot, were all cn the n, peach doing their part of the program. Miss Reta Mathers of the Foot school gave a very in- | about the little | h to Jesus to Rev. F. G rave his interesting ad- {1 the Beautiful Isle e phonograph were sung Cro! teresting reac boy who gas Gerrow, Wm. Mark 1 of Port Perry i itors wusewives save ipso nd were out Here i can ao all Cam box 10 who have been to hear to for his sister's, in Osh- for a few home stay Mr. © of Port | son and hi the former . and Mrs, Al- yper was attended by tors, lawyers, mer- milkmen were 'glad Imen, We ndy Miller and H. McHcul, of visitors ed and recent recently. K, Mr. Anson Martyn, and are all em- Motors in ng of last week was rainy but when a hot roast | session, It is a | that M. J. Colds town-Biggar) w ced to con- | tinue as House Lead in the ab- { sence of J. 8. Woodsworth, veteran C.CF. head who has been ill since last g. : Mr. Coldwell ready let it ke known that he and his collea- gues will demand a full statment of the Government's war effort and its future plans, and will urge ad- vanced social legislation. (C C.F. Rose- has First Bottle Convinced 'Him Syntona Was Great Medicine Brought Relief From Dizzy | Spells, Rheumatic Pains in| Legs and Ankles. Conditions | Often Due to Faulty Action | of Stomach, Liver, Kidneys or Bowels. | All around us are grateful men | 'and women who have used Syn- | tona and found it to be just what | they needed to put new energy in | their rundown systems and to re- lieve conditions that are due to faulty assimilation of food and poisonous waste matter in the sys- tem. Today, we quote the experi- | ence of Mr, Edward Coker, Anc:s- ter, Ontario, as reported only a few days ago: "In the last few years I was subject to dizzy, biltous spells. Often when I got up In the mornings everything | seemed to spin around and I felt sick | and lightheaded. I had rheumatic pains all through my legs. My ankles got | sore and swollen and often they were | 80 bad I could hardly walk. TI am a great believer in natural herbs, so when I read about all the | herbal ingredients in Syntona I decided 10 try it. Well, before one week passed I began to feel better. The dizzy spells left me completely and tnat rheum- tic condition in my legs and feet he- Ian to clear up. Now I am feeling fine once more, I sleep Letter and I | ahh. | Ww) MR. EDWARD COKER mornings and feeling rested y for the da id s work If you who read this suffer with | disorders of the stomach, liver, kidneys or howels,or any of the long train of distressing symptoms, such as headaches; backache, ner- | vousness or tired, irritable feelings, make up your mind to begin taking Syntona today, It is fine for the whole family. _ Syntona is sold and recommended in Oshawa at Jury & Lovell's Drug Store. Future Torpedo Officers of The R.C.N. Future torpedo officers in the Royal Canadian Na vy are here shown receiving a lecture on tubes in the naval training barracks on the East Coast, I "MOVE GERMANS FROM MUSKOKA Internees Find New Quar- ters Not So Com- fortable Lieuten- Kray » intern- escort covered ald was | ita- the had been sent to him "from home.' He added: "They are very good, and keep you nourished, but they are very hard on the nerves. We don't use them if we can help it." "I've had my little joke," said the recaptured internee, describing how he had climbed into an empty case in the camp yard, got a fellow prisoner to nail it up, waited until it had been transported some dis- tance from the camp, and then kicked his way out. He found him- self near a town, so he walked around for a while, looking in win- dows, "glad to see so many things that I had not seen inside the prison camp," he related. Kray then bought a ticket on a train and arrived in Toronto Mon- | day morning. Wandering up York Street, he entered a hotel and asked | Peter Radchuk, beverage room clerk, to change some English money into Canadian currency. He said he had to catch the 9:15 train for Montreal, and could not wait until the banks opened. Radchuk recognized the Nazi from a description broadcast on the radio and notified police they would find him at the Union Station. Detectives searched approached Kray and asked to pro- duce his registration card. When he was unable to do so, they arrest- ed him. He admitted he was their | man. CHRISTIAN 'IENCE SUBJECT Punishment" was the lesson-sermon "Everlasting the subject of | for First Church of Christ, Scient- ist, 64 Colborne St. East on Sunday, The Text was Right- eousness him that is up- right in but wickedness overthroweth sinner" (Prov- erbs 13:6). Selections from the ed the following from 11, "Say ye to the righteous, that it 8 well wi him: for they their doings shall be of his Golden keepeth the way: the Bible includ- Isaiah 3:10 all be eat the fruit of unto the wicked it th him: for the re d hands shall be given him." citations from the Science textbook, "Sci- Health with Key to the by Mary Baker Eddy the following from page No final judgment awaits for the judgment-day of om comes hourly and contin- even the igment by which man is divested of all mat- rror." Correl Christian - and we ence mortal 1 erial EXPECT-SOLDIERS WILL HAVE BETTER HEALTH THIS YEAR Housing in England Better | and First Division Men have been out from the Dominion only a few months, "Last winter our men were new to the country and they had much to learn about keeping their health," continued Maj. Brown. "They are acclimatized now and I feel that one can certainly expect a lower in- cidence of respiratory diseases, such as the common cold. We have had sparingly few infectious diseases." Maj. Brown was enthusiastic about the billeting arrangements, | whereby most of the troops in the Are Acclimatized By ROSS MUNRO, Canadian Press Staff Writer With- the C.A.SF., Somewhere in England, Nov. 6 (CP) troops in England, carefully bille:- -Canadian ed and toughened by rigorous train- ing, are fit and ready to weather the winter months ahead, officers of the Royal Canadian Army Medi- cal Corps believe. "There should be much less sick- ness than last winter, which was one of the most severe on record," | Maj. Milten Brown of Toronto, De- the station, | puty assistant of hygiene in the composite Canadian-Br.tish Corps, told The Canadian Press "Our rec- ords show the sickness rate among the troops is slightly lower than considered normal, and we have | hopes that this rate may continue.' Maj. Brown was associate profes- sor of hygiene and preventive medi- | cine the University of Toronto before the war fhe deputy director, cal officer in corps said the health of Canadian soldiers in England is good. He is confident the rigors of the English winter will not produce ar erious problem "The troops not concentrated in such-a small area as was the case last. winter," said Maj. Brown. "Their living quarters much more spread out and their new bil- lets are being loc 1 after carefully Such 'things as spacing and ve tion have been a major ¢ tion. These factors wil maintain the troops in the colder weather." The 1st Division has been in the United Kingdom nearly a year now and is accustomed to the vagaries of the E h weather, Through casual fraternizing with men of t 2nd Division much information about clothing and ingenious meth- os of combatting the damp has @®cen passed on to the men who senior medi- the area, also are £00( | such | in addition to corps are living in houses in small | towns. "They are fortunate in having xcellent living conditions in wartime, The sanitary conditions are good and such things as facili- ties for baths are contributing to | comfort and health, Also living in these towns aids the mental attie tude. The men have movies to go to auxiliary service: shows, and entertainment is provid: ed in many instances by civilians." SECOND WRECK TAKES ONE LIFE Blackout Blamed for Collision in Cum- berland London, Nov. 6--Qne person was killed and forty were injured, six- teen seriously, when the Londone Perth express of the London, Mid- land and Scottish Railway collided night jn the blackout with a freight train near Gretna Junction rd. It was the second train wreck in England within twenty-four hours. At least twenty-four persons were killed and fifty-nine injured Mon- lay when a Penzance-bound train was derailed in Somerset, the worst accident in Britain in three last train years In la: lig accident the en- gineer = zilled instantly, but it believed there were no. other i Monday's accident was buted to war causes, but it d last night's was due to was FORMER PREMIER CHARGED Mandalay, Burma, (CP)--Dr Maw, former premier of Burma, will be tried here on charges under the Defence of Burma Regulations, coupie of | ber of indo: all got busy Je loodli me a Ge | to Toront WNTOBAHOLSE ~~ = TONE NOV 18 Expect Premier Bracken Will Announce Election After Session t of all the other » camp occupied pez, Nov. 6 (CP) legisiature Manite- meet in November 18 the newly-formed will session under ce of non- is Sdn surg 2 was expressed partisan cabinet wna In a uncing fifth, and probably ! of the 20th legisiature last Premier John dication of the islative pregram member will be asked to consider. It is he- lieved the program. w be light, however, with the majority of bills containing minor amendments to | existing legislation | Following the coming session, Mr | Bracken is expected to announce! | an electicn voters will | be asked to choose between follow- ers of the non-partisan administra- | tion and who may be | selected to oppose thz coalition » had English money in his While a lot of money has fron from : DOCK - the date of the : he jast, session x time been taken away night Hil 4 \ Il have mone) 3racken gave no in- nature of the leg- which Lhe or POSSeS: | prisoners clubbed tog s believed to ald the pr recom in his attempt to ge bric details v sa home to his No concentrated food found in hi ession. Concentrated food has been from Germany in jockages in 't belief, offi- vailable as to pPos- red sent Cros 3 2 the naive date wnen cials say, that ing here. - Most of this a type of and it freely given to the prisoner from Canada is given to prisoners prisoners were stary- has been has candy been candidates Y Foor zl | -1 expected to give | idea. | With all main legislature groups | now' united threugh membership in the union cabinet, 1 slators swift, assent to any | bills which may come before them | at the coming session. | | Railways' Reverie Up $30,000,000 in 1939 Ottawa, Nov. 6 revenue of Ce | Increased mor { 1939 from the | Dominion Bures are - Total | (CP) steam railways 1 $30,000,000 in previous year, the u of said today in a preliminary report on the year's railway operations Revenue amounted to $367.179.095 compared with $336833.400 in the | year before, the report said. Oper- ating exvenses increased to $304,- 373,285 from $29 38. Statistics | | | | | NEW MONEY PARTY | Sydney, Australia (CP) -- AN "atokist" was a candidate in the re- cent federal election in Australia. He explained his policy was * ism, meaning the circulation maney free of interest.» 'atok- of in 'Germany, officials say, The pri pleted yesterday, has been going on for several days. The Officers will now be by themselves, "except for about, 100 other ranks, who will he transfer of ners, com- | .available to shovel snow, split wood | and do other chores. Under the Geneva Convention office be asked .to work. if they desire, and have developed a fondness for ting wood. There has shuffing of pre camps. movement, I's canno They can work some of them SpilL= been a good prisoners to sure in some of the There was fear that might result in _an deal of relie ¢ crowded Lhe | tempt at a wholesale break | States During the move yesterday prison- ers asked questions about the United elections. TG a man that Rocsevelt he they were feated. Had a "Little The 38ight-seeing German naval o' icer who slipped out of a Muskok: internment camp as a "joke" Monday night, hidden inside a sealed packing case, was cut short yesterday by {wo Toronto de- eager de- Freedom" escapade of ga | Become a Regular Subscriber to the SHAWA DAILY TIMES You Too Will Enjoy It Every We invite you to subscribe through the regular Carrier Boy who serves the homes on your street, or telephone the Circulation Department, 35. There are items to int member of the family-- A SPORTS -- LOCAL EVENTS -- SOCIAL ITEMS LATEST WORLD NEWS -- COMICS [ I OO mE | Read Them All In THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES Day erest every Ba -