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The Wingham Advance Times, 1932-09-15, Page 7Thurs., September 15, 1932 Dont ' j �. just as "Pennsylvania" Pennsylva a9;i.. „ ask for and MOTOR OIL get 100% Pennsylvania at its best Crown T)omirtion r' Oil Co. Limited, Distributors, Hamilton, St. Catharines, Toronto eye r, ,.ir ,u ;. �omromr.4m• . . eoloom.ommotszat u.®omaoo®.mmao®om11,w1o<asa,r News In • Form WorldWide Brief ;Storm and. Tidal Wave' Cause Great Damage Nassau, Bahamas — Eleven are dead • and many injured on Abaco Island of the Bahamas group, following .a `.storm and tidal wave last week. Communications were disrupted, :and word from Abaco reached here only? after Government officials vis- ited : the island by aeroplane. Six settlements on small bays were struck by the hurricane on Monday, and almost all buildings were wreck- ed The only shelter for the surviv- ors in one settlement is .a house with the roof blown off. There is great reed for food, water and medical supplies to relieve distress. Premier Gives Hotelmen :Little Encouragement If hotelmen of Ontario want reg- Another Gold Discovery tulations changed so that their guests Sudbury Another gold discov- snay havethe privilege of drinking ery, the fourth in less than a year, beer and wine in, hotel dining rooms flashed across the. prospector's hori- as they may do now in hotel bed- zon last week with the . arrival in _rooms, the Government of Ontario Sudbury of an aeroplane •carrying At:ill give serious 'consideration to the request, said Premier Henry. "But I am .not particularly anxious that, such a request should be made," the premier added emphatically. This statement from the premier Presidents, Esser, Gaef and Rauch, but he turned a cold ,shoulder to the efforts of a possible Nazi -Centrist coalition to unseat the von Papen Government. He left no doubt that he intende_ to stand by the Cabinet, and the on- ly choice the Opposition has is be- tweeen dissolution of the Reichstag and adjournment pending further ef- forts to find a common basis for co- operation. The President will receive the yar- ious party leader in .pursuit of such efforts, but political observers do not expect' much in the way of results. On the contrary, it is expected that the Chancellor will present a decree of dissolution before the Reichstag can vote no -confidence. THE WIN GUAM. A.DV i.NC,c'^T1• ES ing Harry Thomas, unemployed war veteran, in a boathouse in the local jungle, Reid did not plead or elect, and was •remanded one week by Jus- tice of the Peace Vincent Eastwood and Mayor Roland Denne. The pri- soner broke down as he was being led from the dock. De, Valera Will Set Time Limit Dublin President Eamon de Valera of the Irish Free State will shortly issue final notice to the 'Un- ited Kingdom of his intention to im- pose a time limit on the offer to sub- mit the land annuities dispte' to in- ternational arbitration, If the United Kingdom agrees to his terms of arbitration, said Mr. de Valera, the annuity money involved, willtrans- ferred totals $8,000,000, .be. from' the Free State Suspense account to the Bank for Internation- al Credits at the Hague;, otherwise he gives warning that the Free State will use the money for the relief of sufferers from the present "econom- ic war" which arose out of the an- nuities dispute. B. C. May Have Union Government Victoria — Premier S. F. Tolmie of British Columbia, stepped upon the traditionally treacherous ice ,of "Union Government", with the sup- porters of such a move confident. that the footing has been made more secure by the extingencies of the times, and with the confident march of the National Government in Eng- -land to assure him. The premier said he would short- ly issue a statement which will in- clude a clause favoring the establish- ment of a union government com- posed of "men, who, regardless of other considerations, appear to. be Stimson Officials Released After serving less than a year of their terms, at Portsmouth Peniten ler const era t tiary for issuing fraudulent prospec able to render the best service to tures in connection with the G. A. Stimson companies, now in the . hands of G. T, Clarkson, ,liquidator, Fred- erick rederick G. ;Johnston and Lawrence E. Clark,exectuives of the companies, have been released on ticket -of - leave. the state," and • .along the lines of the National Government in Eng- land" as the best method of meet- ing present conditions. Receivership Writ Issued Against Abitibi Firm Legal action, decided !upon at a conference in Montreal last week, took definite form when .the Mont- real. Trust Company, in a writ is- sued at Osgoode Hall, directed ag- ainst the Abitibi Power and Paper Company of Iroquois Falls, asked for administration and execution by the New York mining engineers and a court of mortgages trusts made June Party of prospectors ,with news of a 1, 1928, betweendefendant, the Ab - strike in Raney Township, in the itibi Comanpy, and Plaintiffs, Mont - Swayze gold area. real Trust Company and National Raney Twp. lies directly north- City Bank of New York, whereby the property and assets of the Abitibi Company were vested in, mortgaged, pledged and charged in favor of the plaintiffs as trustees for the' benefit of ; holders of first -mortgage gold bonds of defendants. Plaintiffs ask payment of principal of these bonds and interest. west of Swayze, scene of the spec - arose from the wide interpretations tacular Kenty find, and is north of of . a remark he had. made to a large number of hotel operators who vis- ited him at Queen's Park, seeking the privilege of selling beer and wine in then establishments. When the premier, during the course of the discussion, inadvertent-, ly said there was room for argument in favor of hotel guests drinking beer and wine with meals, reports spread with lightning speed that the request of the hotelmen had a chance of go- ing through. Butin interviews later in the day Premier Henry declared bluntly that lie had given the hotelmen not the slightest hope that they might be- come vendors.. An Order -in -Council was signed ap- The right to sell remained solely proving the general plans of the en - and adjoining Denyes Township, where the Beaumont discovery arous- ed considerable new excitement this summer. On the heels of the latest nws, field scouts and prospectors who have been following up closely the Halcrow and Denyes discoveries. have turned their aeroplanes and can- oes into Raney and 'Rollo Townships. A rush of major proportions is ex- pected. Beauharnois Will be Able to Deliver Power Ottawa, Sept. 7 -The project has advanced another stage. Beauharnois with the Liquor Control Board.- Un- der no consideration would any pri- vate interests be! allowed to sell, he said. Germany Headed for Another Election Berlin — Germany seemed headed for another election, which nobody wants. President von Hindenburg granted a formal interview to Hermann Goer- ing, National Socialist President of the ; Reichstag, and the three Vice- terprise, which contemplate the de- velopment of 500,000 horsepower, near Montreal. Froin a technical standpoint, . all obstacles to .the company delivering its initial instalment or power conse- quently are removed. Barring any delay through physi- cal inability, the Beauharnois Light, Heat and Power Company is now enabled to supply 35,000 horsepow- er to the Ontario Hydro Commission on Oct. 1. rg...*i('X a%3(•:t•'i%Mdh%•li (3 r4--Xa:• kkiF••: ;ir* Tenderfoot Showed Them Something ng lily JACK WOODFORD ,; ;4• X k ,E* T X :r** ]F iF9i *** Yc-r: 9F9E•** H !' WAS in New Tairk that afarvin 1 lirst met Eulalla, Ile had never seen girl like' her before, He couldn't imagine, at first, what It was about 'int that was so strangely different. She was not palely beautiful, ,e,s •host of the. girls he knew were—hire 'got house flowers. She was ruddily, alihfly beanti'el, Tier lithe,. slim fig Ire had a brisk swing to it as she walked. Her hair seemed to have teen dyed by the sheer .gold of sun- light itself. Her teeth were perfectly .at•ehed pearls. She was so pretty he made him gasp. And then meet- 'ng her, dancing with her, taking her `o an show or two, he began to under- •tancl. She was a girl from the "wide open paces," such as he had never seen )efore• That strength and power in 'ler lovely, bright' eyes came, doubtless, from looking along wide vistas; that clow in her cheeks was from early -horning rides over her father's ranch lfarvin fell madly, desperately in love; so much so, in fact, that, he followed alalia back to Arizona,' to be near her. Eulalia's father welcomed him, but lust a bit derisively, until he learned that Marvin could ride. Then he pro- vided him with a horse, and they all got ready to start out together. Eulalia's father's foreman was to ride with them over the range. The foreman was a>husky, roughly hand some man that Marvin could see was -I love with Eulalia; Eulalia, Marvin wticed, viewed the foreman with at !east admiration, perhaps for his rugged manliness. Marvin had to ad- mit that he didn't cut much of a figure in the ranch picture. Trouble started as soon as Marvin mounted his horse. He had never felt. such horse muscles under him before; the horses he had ridden through Cen- tral park were, he realized now, al- most toy mounts as compared with this one. The horse reared. Marvin fell back- ward sprawled in the dust. The fore. man and Walla and her father were most solicitous; but he could see the glint of contemptuous amusement in their eyes when they . glanced at Eulalia; the glances seemed to say: "Is this supposed to be a man!" And so it went, day after day. In New York, Marvin remembered, he had made some progress in Eulalia's affections; but here . her interest in him seemed to be wavering. He was heartbroken; for she was the one girl for him, he knew: Not that she actually was contemptuous of him because he couldn't ride horses, and couldn't get along in the ranch coun- try . but somehow because he did not show up bravely, in juxtaposition with her father and the foreman. At last, desperate, he spoke to New York over the long distance telephone.- A. day and a half passed, and a buzzing was heard over the ranch. "That's funny," Eulalia's father said, "must be a mail plane off its route." "Not atall," 1Xarvin corrected; !`just my plane I had sent down. Thought you'd all like a trip in the air—that is," he added pointedly, since the foreman was present, "unless 'you're afraid. , " The foreman turned visibly pale; Ettlalia's father looked startled; but he frowned. Eula- lia was ecstatic. She said: • "A ride in a plane! Marvelous. And of course Don and Dad aren't afraid; they've both often admitted to me that there isn't anything in the world they're afraid of.." After that, there was no question about the ride being a foursome. It was mean, Marvin had to admit, to turn tail spins and do barrel rolls; but, after all, they had deliberately provided him with an almost tmride- able horse. At the end of the ride Don and Dad were wrecks! - -"Never again!" Don swore, trying to make his legs behave so he could walk away from the plane as fast as possible. "I'm too old to learn new tricks like that," Eulalia's father declared without reservations; "though I envy you youngsters growing up in this gen- eration." It was as they walked after supper, with the chromatic tints of the sun- set's afterglow painting the raw land In pagan colors, that Marvin said: "Honey, I'm wild about ranch life." "And I'm crazy about city life," she admitted "though I sometimes thought maybe city men were puny as com- pared with western plains men. But as compared to running a plane, bust- ing a broncho is child's play," /'How about our incorporating," he suggested, "and spending our time fifty-fifty ranch and city?" "A swell idea," she echoed, The man in the moon saw their em- brace and approved, even if, in the provin distancegly.- , ^a jackal did bowl disap- i ,l •s1: f f" ; Parliament to Meet About October 20th Ottawa — The dale for the open- ing of the Canadian Parliament will be fixed after `the return of Prime Minister R. B. Bennett from West- ern Canada. Resulting from recent intra -Em- pire communications, the impression is that it will be decided to convene the Canadian Parliament about the middle of October. Oct. 20, or with- in the week preceding, it is learned, will be the date chosen. Opening dates for the British House and sev- eral other Empire Parliaments will virtually synchronize, • The early de- sire of the Canadian Government was to convene Parliament about Oct. 6. But, as these sessions are being call- ed for the fall to give early ratifica- tion to Imperial Conference trade agreements, no purpose would be served• in choosing widely varying dates. Will Order Inquiry • - Into Lost Funds Winnipeg The Manitoba Gov- ernment will appoint a Judicial Com- mission to investigate losses of Uni- versity of Manitoba trust funds when Premier John Bracken returns to the city from East. Hon. R, A. Hoey, Minister of Education and Acting Premier, definitely announced. It is understood the Commission may also be instructed to investigate the extent to which university and Anglican Church funds interlock. John A. Machray, 67-yeareold Church of England Chancellor and former University Bursar, who controlled. trusts of both institutions faces trial on a charge of thelft of $901,175.30 of university moneys. Charged With Murder Peterboro — Harry Reid, Campbell - ford, appeared in Police Court, and was formally charged with murder - MOW, YOUNG ITN, — Y�1� 331ST LEN A TNOSE NOODIeIMS NERC: AND COME 1144114 MEI 7 • , Named Commissioner of Excise Ottawa •- Hugh D. Scully, invest- ment banker, Toronto, will be ap- pointed Dominion Commissioner of Excise, it was announced. He will succeed G. W. Taylor, who has re- signed. The actual appointment, by Order -in -Council, will be made very soon. Vessel Blows Up -44 Dead And Many Injured New York The old wooden steamer Observation, pounding slow- ly through the muddy waters of East River, Friday, blew up' -with a tre- mendous explosion that hurled about 120 screaming, twisting nien from her 'shattered deck. At least 44 of the workmen•• who were tossed into the air by the blast were known dead. Some ofthe victims of the explo- sion were shot high in the air amid debris from the 'steamer, and their bodies thudded violently .against the buildings on the shore, some 400 ft. away. Others, mangled and uncon- scious, dropped into the murky wa- ter and did not reappear. Still oth- ers, screaming and struggling weak- ly, were pulled beneath the surface when the hull of the Observation sank in a whirl of bubbling, boiling water. Although the exact toll of the dis- aster, probably never will be known, police announced that 12 men were missing and about 64 were injured, some of them critically. It is believed that a .boiler explo- sion was the cause of the tragedy, First Boy: "Your father must be an awful mean man—him a shoemak- er and makin' you wear them old boots." w'apyp,4141,111 ,.,,w w.wt...y;eje,A. PAGE ,$J YJ N BARGAI N and a great chance to HELP CANADA Canadian farmers produce the wheat from which Shredded Wheat is made. Help Canada's greatest industry by treat- ing yourself to this great food bargain at least once a day—You'll profit:: so' will Canada, DED 12 BIG BISCUITS IN EVERY BOX HEAT MADE IN CANADA -BY CANADIANS V OF CANADIAN WHEAT. Judge: "Why have you not made those alimony payments?" • Defendant: "I can't start till next month, judge. There are still' four instalments due on the engagement ring." * * *. An ambitious mother was trying to dissuade her son from becoming engaged to the girl of his choice because the girl had no fortune. "Well; mother," the young man expostulated, "I have heard you say that neither you nor father had a penny when you married." "That's so," the mother admitted. "But," she added, "1 accepted• your father because I knew he would get on in the world." "Exactly," the youth returned. "And she's ready to accept me bee cause he did get on!" Second boy: "He's nothin' to what your old man is—hint a dentist and your brother only got on tooth.". * * * * "So you told Mrs, BrOwn, did you? And what did Mrs. Brown say?" the defending counsel asked the witness. Opposing counsel objected to the question as irrevelknt, and a long. and heated argement.ensued before the judge allowed the question to be putt "Num' exclaimed the triuttiphant counsel turning again to the witness, "what zi d. Zvifs, 13r'o'lwn say?" " 1'otliin' ' was 'the reply. Si. Paul's Age Unknown The exact date of St. Paul's birth is not known, but it is supposed to have been between the years 5 and 10 of the Christian era. As it is believed that Christ waS bent genie four years previous to the date frofn which we count Our years, it is to be supposed that Paul was &Meii nine to fourteen years younger. Peed was born at Tar• sus, in Asia Minor, but was sent to 7erusalenr to be educated. Re was be- headed at Itome in the year 67 or 68, during one of the persecutions. of the ChristiahS under Emperor Nero, HOLLANDIA'S WORLD -FAMED FLOWER.. BULBS Order Bulbs direct from I-Iolland's best Bulb Farris Encouraged by numerous orders lately received from your country, we have decided to expand our business and maintain a per- manent market for our world -famed collections of Dutch Flower Bulbs for home and garden. 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