West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 27 Mar 1930, p. 1

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such» W hairlotlomandn an of Great Butch Lst twelve montlu Vs Stables k and Lisle 300d quality data colors. pen for your cllraith Shoe Store. 'TY EXPENSIVI passed into new lines of as usual. It price§ on of slippers not replac- I'SGS never : qual- :hemâ€" ment. it you 1 o’clock .25 pfing Near .25 “vi Slippers SALE il 12 tin-natthowheelmdmmbruktho meUmtedegdomisthebeatmar- monotonyottholangtm). ketmmeworldra'tobacco. Youmay This wmhoachap m for doubtthetmthottmsmbut someomededrwadmaflng the Mpituthcopinlonoftbeumtedsmta West.ulu.Anenwm1mhhtntMComulat Oardlfl,who.lnnmn8 onthhmbject,makeaafewmtuaiung E E5 33 g? 5 i E E thumbabmty them.“lhnylaam think.” m.flnmtothomhounwmdmm- lunahpmhuu‘mmmoflmmutbomfinmdwcm pects of a most pleasant journey ahead exhibits. The commmsioner spent the of them. The distance from Durham summer of 1929 in Ensland. and an up- is roughly 2,000 miles, and the inten- pendix of compulsory insurance laws in tion is to go out by North Bay, Sault European countries and Australasia. as Ste. Marie and Winnipeg. It is a zongmell as a disc“ of the W com- drive and rather than a an the work pulsory insurance bill in Great Britain. I tint he is 0" the lootwt for another meow. umsn 10311000 08:38 Mr. and Mrs. H. Allen at town intend leaving for Edmonton. Alberta them the first of June. and as they intend motoring all the way have the pros- MnandMnfl. Allen ”Motor to McDonald, which was sprung as a 3m- misconmcoompanyandmatedno end of fun. LEAVES FOR WEST ABOUT JUNE 1 Edmonton on Visit to Daughter.â€" Chance for Cheap Me for Some- nno Who Can Drive Car. were 'releaaed. three or music for die gauge bang {supplied by bl... h‘-_ 1.-.! "I“ was reserved tar the hockey playere the executive committee and their lad At the reception tendered them on Friday evening there was nothing left undone that would make for the success of the gathering. The house was v‘ v--- year, so far as home-brew sextettes went, has the Ontario record for all-home players. and the fact that they came so near the top in both Ontario leagues speaks well for the brand of sport they put up. Everything considered. Dur- ham citizens may well be proud of the showing of the boys this winter, and we doubt if there is another town in tho yearwasunique matleaat one in- stance. Thumeyputupagoodbrmd Vere put out of the 0. H. Wmflm d VOL. 64.-â€"N0. 3275. D. .J- League in February. The report by Hon. Justice Hodgins. however, goes further in the question and is more drastic than the plan of the league. The actual report of his lordship covers 200 typewritten pages. It lists sixty-six witnesses who testified at ihearings held in Albany and New York City. N. Y.; Springfield and Boston. Mam; Hartford. Conn; Washington. ND.C.; Baltimore. Md, and Toronto, and is accompanied by almost one thousand pages of testimony and by fifty-nine exhibits. The commissioner spent the summerofl9291nEngland,andanap- pendix of compulsory lnsmance laws in European countries and Australasia. as weiiasadigestofthcproposedcom- lower class. or, ii'in class “A" eliminate him from classification. Similarly. an hoflenco while so classified will auto- matically raise his classification to class “”C. The name of all persons so classified must be published within one week in the Ontario Gazette. It is interesting to note that the sug- gestions embodied in the report are very similar to those endorsed at the annual meeting of the Ontario Motor twelve months will automatically drop _a classlfled person from a higher to a ypersons responsible for more serious ac- cidents or guilty or more serious of- Iences are classified under class “B"; and persons responsible for the most serious accidents and guilty 0: the major oflences are classified in class “C”. Class “A" carries a demerlt rat- ing of 10 per cent, class “B” a demerit rating at 25 per cent and Class “'C‘ a demerit rating of 50 per cent. The in- sumac ram on these will hold good for at least a year at r the motorists are so classified. A 0 car r°cord for I However those motorists who violate this law must pay train lomsopercent in excew or the standard rate for au- tomobile insurance. Hm lordship pro- poses a classification of these based on the operating record of the individual motor-it. Persons responsible for minor accidents or guilty of the less serious oflences are classified in Class "A"; remain outside of t as'long as they do not bring themsel within it. Although the report considers that Icompulsory automobile insurance is in- advisable for motorists generally, it ad- vocates the enactment of a so-called “financial or safety responsibility law”, which, in brief, requires any motorist as soon as he is convicted of a serious violation of the highway traffic laws to pay security against future casual- ties and also pay the damages caused by his accident. Thus every motorist is considered a careful driver until he is involved in an accident. After the ac- sponsibility before his license is return- ed to him. ‘ This proposed change has met withE ap roval in many quarters. The com- missioner himself poinm out that the A complete file containing the record or every motorist in Ontario who be- comes involved in a motor accident anywhere in the province will be made necessary it legislation is passed in accordance with the suggestions of the Hon. Mr. Justice Frank E. Hodgins, of the supreme court of Ontario which are advanced in his recent interim report pn the compulsory insurance of motor- Be Responsible his Is Basis of Suggested New Law Aflecting Ontario Motorists.â€"Thosc Causing Accidents Would Pay Com- pulsory Insurance at Higher Than Standard Rates. CANADA’S NEW SENATOR Hon. James Murdock, who has been appointed to the Senate to fill the seat made vacant by the death of Sir Edward Kemp. 0r Quit Driving DURHAM. ON TARIO, CANADA, THURSDAY; or the Young Women’s Auxiliary of Knox church was held on Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. R. Cation. During the business discumion it was decided to accept an invitation to at- tent a meeting in Hanover on April 8. The members also plan putting on a concertinthoformofaoontestpro- graminthechurchonAprnli. The public are invited to attend. After some time spent in sewing Mrs. Alder gave a report of Stewardship and Fin- ance of the Presbytery of Grey and a report of the Conierence branch meet- ing held in Toronto. Mrs. 'Catton and assistants served lunch at the close of the meeting. emctamemormtothehtelmd SPONSORS BALFOUR MEMORIAL Dr. Chaim Weizmann, president of the World Zionist organization. lgrounds was appointed and Mrs. Spar- ling and Mrs. B. McIntyre were named as delegates to attend the annual con- vention in Hamilton on the 9th, 10th and 11th of April. The next meeting is being held at the home of Miss Margaret Hunter and takes place the first Tuesday in May. after Easter. This play was reoentli' presented in Mount Forest. where it the ordinary Durham cinoert goers are assured a real treat when it arrives. _ The committee to whom is entrusted Canadian Greys Chapter of the I. O. D. E. held their monthly meeting at the home of Mrs . A. W. H. Lauder on Monday afternoon with the regent. Mrs. R. M. Sparling in the chair. The Chapter voted an expenditure of $1,000 for Town Hall improvement and will be responsible for the portico that is to be erected at the front of the building. Negotiations have been completed with the Mount Forest Choral Society for the presentation of their play. “Aladdin’s Lamp", in Durham shortly country. After an examination the doctor pro- nounced life extinct. Voted $1,000 For Hall Improvement A sad feature of this affair is the fact that the wife is practically alone here as she has no relatives in this who notified the constable and coroner. Constable Beamish arrived in a few minutes and found the man hanging with his knees almost touching the ground. He immediately cut the body down and as there were still signs of life he applied artificial respiration until the coroner Dr. Brown, arrived. accompanied by Dr. Stalker. gone to work or not and started to look for him, and between one and two o’clock, she found him hanging in a 1y purchased a small home on Market St., and about two months ago he brought his young wile out irom the homeland. He was at his work in the iorenoon and as he was not feeling well at. noon his wife was_not sure whether he had months when Mr. Joseph Tomch.~ a young Austrian, hanged himself at his home. Mr.Torochayoungmnnot35 years at age, came from Austria about three years ago and after residing in Montreal for a time, came to Hanover about a year and a half ago and se- cured employment at the Speiez Pumi- ture plant. Empire Held Regular. Meeting oh Monday Afternoonâ€"Monnfi Forest Choral Society to Present “Aladdin's Hanover Man Is Dead by Hanging She ingugdytely called the neighbors ’, dug out cellar under the kiti KN OX Y. W. o! Daughters of the monument | no... vuuuu um m no 06111“ inland forward lino broke for thank.”- lne the team have further distinguished r900? We on tho-part of the themselves in agricultural work. Ced- mistowel team rather marred the ‘ ric Kirkpatrick of New Brunswick won 3 WW W the “outsiders" a scholarship presented by the New who witnessed the game, but as we farm course at Tun-o ‘Wm (‘01- portment we Will say nothing about it. lege. Clara-d Edam h” m tak- hm it (I! MW youth. Who mg a short ””39 gimme M. will grow out of thege thing eventually. [ ‘II...’ ._I!_ _ tu_ral _P1:ogucta Rafiâ€"flak -m'vâ€"vv r-v'“‘ departments of agriculture. and VS} Pmi. Ness. or Macdonald College and Prof. Steckley of Ontario Agricultural College, who were judges at the contest last fall in which the team was select- ed. The team will also undergo a ten- days’ training course in Britain prior to the international contest, visiting the principle herds for the purpose of getting additional judging practice. Arrangements for the boys on the June 20th, on tn @119 Star line, To Represent Canada In English Contests 10 14 3 MARCH 27. 1930. Onmday nightot has week the boys mdcirls'hockeymnfiottho HIGH SCHOOL HOCKEY .g TEAMS GOING . STRONG Won mmwgmm RN ML. cm Vnn From ”dowel at Walkerton Last Thursday Night 4 to 2 in Game Full of Excitement and Closely Contested. Listowel Clarly Ontclassed in Con- of the 3mm: Coluinbh 1’31! azuN BEL. CHAMPIONS $2.00 a Year in Canada; $2.50 in U. Governor Canon has :21 mt gondlttons in China: GANGSTER IS NOT WANTED IN v -.._ w. v wcuvovlv“ all the support we can give them. no astheoldtownisnotslowtomteu at the wicket when the tune is o theywfllnodoubtlineuponAprul to deal the W. listen to tti Minute-stone before ”i

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