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Oshawa Daily Times, 22 Jul 1927, p. 2

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"uf = 26th ve THE OSHAWA DAILY DAILY REFORMER ANEW (Eqgablished 1871) tok $4 x independent newspaper published every aliconoon except Sun s and legal holidays, at Oshawa, Gua, by undy Printing Company, ited; Chas. undy, President; A Alloway. Secretary. ail 'Oshawa Daily Times is a Jewber of the Canadian Hab s, the Canadian Daily Newspapers' Association, : e Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Bureau of hs abs Ty »¥% a *i a int anad 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: id ed by ¢ doy in Oshawa, 15¢ a week. ih dials mail in the Cot ties of Durham and Cre $4.00 | Jmogayear ; 'elsewhere in' Canada, $5.00 a year; United vad Sates, %. 50 a year. etyiasl. TORONTO OFFICE: wr Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street, Telephone i --claide 0107. fi. D , Tresidder, representative. peer FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1927 "2. DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING BEST : '" The best business brains of the continent wsupport the newspapers' claim that their ad- ising service ig the most effective, and, for at reason, the most efficient, How emphati-"] gly this opinion is held amongst men of the hy est business experience was set forth in an _ vefis delivered by D. F, Kelly, president of The Fair, Chicago, before the National Electrie Lighting . Association's convention at Atlantic, City, early in June, As quoted in "Electrical Merchandising" fon I i the 'eurrent month, Mr, Kelly said:-- "We are frequently asked to express an opinion relative to the comparative drawing power of various advertising mediums, such as magazines, bill-boards and so on, Without ppearing to hold a brief for newspapers, we are of the opinion that, dollar for dollar, our return from newspaper advertising is much eater than from any other form of advertis- ing. We would advise manufacturers to link ip their newspaper advertising with the adver- ising of local dealers, They will thus inform he public where their product may be had, and hould produce best results," The obvious service of the newspaper is to ell the news, to keep its readers informed of urrent events whether of world importance, ational value, or community interest, But a newspaper's other service is no less ital to the community which it serves, Its dvertising columns may intrigue or annoy, de- ending upon the reader's mood or the char- ctpr of the matter presented, but, first and st, the newspaper is the world's best sales- T UNIVERSITY EXTENSION COURSES n editorial in the Toronto Star, dealing TUniversity Extension courses, leaves the sion that, in Saskatchewan, farmers p more and better opportunities for taking antage of short courses than have those of Province. He comments as follows :-- "The work Saskatchewan is doing in making provision for extension courses and short courses at the university should receive atten- tiog*in the other provinces. ! "A bulletin issued by the dominion bureau iof statistics shows than more than one-half of {the number of persons taking extension and | short courses in the universities of Canada re- {ceived their instruction in Saskatchewan. No ifewér than 7,670 men in that province took jhe gpee ial course for farmers, and 6,130 woinen Yooks the homemakers' course. Saskatchewan frig the hon good showing in all the short "The University of Toronto is a provincial linstifution and as such should be adapted to a Bie every large eiass in the community. ra ion work already i= hand is valuable fs growing in importance. But doubtless : might be done to increase the usefulness { the university and to make the people feel Pat xis to sve hm" With, no doubt, the best intentions in the word, The Star misses the point. In Saskatche- an, the University has control of all agricul- education. But this is not the case in io. Here the Department of Agriculture and the Ontario Agricultural College at Guelph Jutee the TESpoMsIAY. Tor Slicption ns seri gulture. Each winter the Department of Agri- conducts short courses throughout the for young men and young women. courses in agricultural subjects and in economics are largely attended. What figures are we don't know, but they would, doubt, compare very favourably with those Saskatchewan. These figures are not, of included in the statistics to which The at Guelph has an extension department The Ontario Agricultural College is affiliated Ee Ontario Agtisuliuva) ologe ke éiinteld ion means only that the students of that iP peceive their degrees from the Prov- the two institutions. Provincial University of Ontario carries Witites | Sovsana adit stud report, reaches three And then when other folks get ahead He puts nothing in--except his time, i thousand adult students in, short courses and evening classes and carries university lectures to some fourteen thousand persons throughout Ontario. In its announcements, the University of Toronto offers extension courses to all who care to make use of them. These announce- ments always stress the fact that the Univer- sity exists to serve the public. Omitting altogether the circumstance that Saskatchewan and Ontario, being very different in many respects, naturally stress different sorts of ext service, it should not be for- " gotten that the two vinces are quite dif- ferently organized, If, as The Star suggests, the University of Toronto were to undertake extension work in agriculture, it would be en- croaching on the jurisdiction of the Depart- ment of Agriculture and the Ontario Agricul- tural College, and would be Quplicating work that js already well dane, AN INSTITUTION PASSES Some of the old popular airs are becoming obsolete. Sung to-day many of them would he J~meaningless to one hearing them for the first time. Once Popular because of their homely realism, both themselves and that of which nthey sang are now forgotten, One such song now passing into oblivion is that which sang of the rustic "all dressed up iin his Sunday clothes," It is going the way of ithe "Sunday suit" and if its primitive lines may still be heard anywhere it is in the fast receding outposts of our old rural civilization where the "Sunday suit" is still an institution. Those old enough to hearken back to the time when the largest cities were rural com- munities and those who knew the farmer and the farm prior to a decade ago, can remember " "Sunday suit" which often survived its «awner after twenty years of wear because it was worn only to church and on such festive oceasions as funerals, weddings, and the coun- ty fair, It was usually donned just before starting time and doffed immediately upon the home-coming, The "Sunday suit", was an institution of that period of history when the good fathers and mothers of the farm and their spiritual ad 'vosers depicted Satan as immaculately attired THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1927 SI TT ATER Meanest Form of Headache One of the meanest forms of head- ache is that known as migraine. It comes on one side of the head over nausea, often vomit- depression, It comes sometuness every for- ing. and so forth. For years these attacks were thought to be due to some liver disturbance, hence the nausea and vomiting. Latterly however it has been thought that fatigue, cyestrain, or some dis- turbance of the ductless glands causes migraine. : However in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Drs. McClpre and Huntsinger tell us that in a series of twenty-one patients with migraine and asual intestinal symptoms, that there was poisoning due to liver disturbance And from the British Lancet we learn that Dr. 11 C. Rook of London, believes that a great many of these migraine cases are due 10 a poisoning from some liver disturbance, which is produced hy_overaction or insufficient action of the liver. He finds that migraine occurs chiefly in people with a highly sensitive ner- vous system, and poisons often pick out and attack certain portions of the nervous system, You'll find that these individuals are often hard workers, and frequently great worriers also, This hard work and emotional dis turhances really interfere with the na- tural functions of liver and intestine; in fact seem to almost paralyze them for the time being, and thus permits the formation of poisons, that the liver would ordinarily prevent. 'These poi sons in the blood stream cause the headache and other symptoms, Dr. Rook reports brilliant results ir the treatment of these cases, by the use of our old friend epsom salts, Two to four teaspoonfuls of a 5 percent. solution of epsom salts (mag nesinm sulphate) is given one hour be fore rising, and following this the pa tient is structed to die on the right side. At the end of the hour a large tmnblerful of hot water or weak tea is taken. 'This treatment is taken about nee every two weeks, or at least once a month. The day or half day before the salts are taken is a starvation day Certam foods must be limited, that is egus, chocolates, cocoa, coffee, and al cohol. To the thousands of sufferers from and dressed themselves and their progeny in accordance with this conviction. The origin of the epithet, "dude," can be traced to that era. 4 No doubt the movies, the automobile, and 'the newspaper have been factors in the transi- tion from the "Sunday suit" age to the present era of daily changes from work to pleasure |-#tire, of sevekal suits to the man and of more " Beneral respectability in dress. There is great- er need to dress well to-day and the average individual is better able to meet that need. EDITORIAL NOTES A sound argument does not require as much sound as a weak one. The man who is cultivating a savings account is usually too husy to be ornery. Some persons call it luck, but the wise man adds another letter and it is pluck, 'Remember when they used to think news- papers were made to fit the pantry shelves? Texas cattle ranges are being planted to cot- ton, which may indicate a belief people would rather be clad than fed. Bit of Verse THE CLOCK WORKER The man who works with his eyes on the clock, Just gets to the end of the day-- But he doesn't get far on the Road to Success For he isn't headed that way. He basn't an ounce of genuine * "push" -- Except to "push the clock" migrains the above information should i be helo) If they will continue 1 work hard, and perhaps worry some {then starvation day and epsom salt: ober ho pe, MIND AND MATTER CONTAIN SECRET | Sir Oliver Lodge Says Mech- anism = of Interaction Not Explored London, daly 22. That the me- chapisim whereby mind and matter 'interact has not even begun to be | explored, and that so long as their 'mutual yejation to the ether of spac, is iznored their interaction will wever ¢ fundamentally under- stoed, was the contention of Sir Oliver Lodge, the noted scientist, in an address before the International Homeopathic Congress in London Tuesday evening. Sir Oliver. declared his belief that the action in mind and the action of matier are indirect and conduct- ed 1o a concealed medium which wakes no appeal to the semses. The medium he believed to be the ether. "Ether it is which welds the ma- terial universe into whole," he said, "and unites what otherwise would be discontinuous and disconnected nasst® of matter. Our bodies are not composed of matter alone, but the mental and the material are uni- ted y a mechanism which we might call an etheric body. This etheric body is what jis truly animated, and it is throngh this that we act upon and arrange The material particles. "Mind, «ther and matter all in teract, and the methods and details of their interaction must be under- stood TTore any science of human- ity is complete." MINER'S BRAVERY He loves to sneer and "knock." He gives just so many hours a day, And he draws no joy from his work; The only thing he draws is his pay, And it's all that he doesn't shirk. SAVES FOUR LIVES Nederland, Colo., July 22.-- Two So gets nothing out at the end Besides some paltry dollars and cents, Which he straightway proceeds to spend. It's the chap who renders service plus, Not just by the hour or the day, But by all that's in him, and gives his best, For love of his work--not for pay-- Who's going to sit in the leader's chair, TB. And get to the very top; For he's headed straight to be truly great, And nothing can make him stop! its own which does a great deal of valuable by the Department of Agriculture. Af- miversity. 'There is no other connection # widespread cxtension service which, ac- young wouples who plunged 75 feet over an ewbankment into deep water jin Nederland Lake are alive due to the coolness and bravery of Earl aPedo, 2a f204Mear-old miner of Tungsten. Rounding a dangerous curve om the lake road Pedro saw the lights of a submerged automobile glowing beneath the water. He crawled 10 the edge of the lake to investigate. He saw Francis Yeager, 19, of Omaha, Neb., reach the shore and faint. Pedro plunged into the water, swam to the car and extri- cated Philip Conrad, 20, also of Omaha; Anua Andersen, 16, and Olga Rudin, 19. both of Nederland. All were unconscious. He suc- ceeded in bringing them to shore and putting them im his automobile --Strathmorean. and drove to a physician's office. the right eve, rn a by ureat | three years, clambered nonchalant- ang night, every month, every three months | @ journey that will take them from TINY TWINS START "OCEAN JOURNEY Three-Year-Old Pair Un- perturbed by Future Prospects Montreal, July 21.--"Nonc¢hal- "ance, thy name is Barsony." Or s0 it seemed when the Barsony twins, Jelanka and Maryska, aged ly aboard the boat special at Wind- sor station to start the first lap of Montreal to Prague, in Ozecho- Slovakia. The fact that they were to take the long journey alone did not bother the twins in the least. They will board the Canadian Pacific vessel Bmpress of Scotland at Que- bee, which will take them to Cher- hourg. Krom Cherbourg they will travel overland, through several foreign countries before they reach their destination in the heart of Central Europe. When interviewed just hefore the train was due to steam out of the station, they indicated that they had little to say for publication. Jelanka was much occupied with a bag of luscious fruit, and showed little desire to be disturbed, even by a newspaper representative. Maryska, of a more curious turn of mind, was hent on a tour of in- apection of the train and required some little persuasion on the part of kindly railway officials to return to her seat. Then, peering under the little white poke bonnet she was wearing, which matched her fluffy white frock, a look of recog- nition came over her chubby face. She had mistaken a particularly fatherly-looking official for her daddy, And even Jelanka, dressed and looking exactly like Maryska, } munis fruit to gaze reflectively at this official. But it wasn't their father and the two little children have no ink- ling of the family drama going on around them. Father Left Them Not so long ago they came Canada with their parents from distant Czecho-Slowikia. To the mother it seemed. as though they were coming to the Land of Prom- ise. But before they had been here to TE long the father deserted the moth- er, leaving her to look after the twins. He went to the United" States. There, immigration authorities. de- cided he was not wanted and he ! has since been deported to the land from whence he came.dq Can- ada. pi There is no rest for the man who does everything his wife tells him to do.--Chicago News. Registered Unexcelled Quality | Conger Lehigh Coal Co. Ltd. 52 King St, East Phone 871 J. H. paused in her serious task of | won | Accurate Weight Yard--Athol St. East Phone 931 wie RB. LKR Oshawa Manager ------ -- BIG MID-SUMMER FIXTURE SALE We Lave nurchased a big stock of House Lighting Fixtures at a great reduction, which we are passing on to th> purchasers of new homes in Oshawa. a 2 Light Fixtures ...... 3 Pi, 4 7 Lai 5 7 nae, And many others in all finishes, including brass body types-- Cast fixtures and strap fixtures in candle and ball drop patterns, $4.50. Brown Tone 575, n 780, " 9.00, " " See oud big value in 6-Room House Sets at $24.75. REMEMBER Phone 7071 We install and pay inspection charges on all fixtures we sell, This saves you money, Buy a Daylite Kitchen Upit--$2.00 Installed. BOWRA ELECTRIC SHOP 70 Simco:> Street North This is your chance to save money. Oshawa -- _ we ---- ---- -- i. Do You Own Your Own Secures a mew five room bun- galow in good section of city. Balance like reat. 29 King St. E. Phone 1550 W. J. SULLEY SULLEY Aad MAW Auctioneers New York woman was npecently arrested for throwing a dozen eggs | at her husband. By this time the poo rfellow ought to be trained to mow beneath the yolk.--Ottawa Journal. The man who susisted that there | | | | | would be no summer at all this summer, and consequently no crops, should not, under any eir- cumstances, be invited to attend a harvest festival. --Detroit Free Press. 0 Your Real Estate and Insurance Broker AUCTIONEER 25 King St. E.--Corney Celina Phone 295 ~ REAL ESTATE Homes built to suit purchasers. R. M. KELLY Cv i EE FOR SALE Gnooms Apenue, .... SH00.00 Frederick St. ...... $330.00 Water and Sewer Houses for sale, $4000 to $5, AN on Frederick streot. Kasy tors if desired. These prop- erties ave only five aminates walk from the business dis- Amiot. - LOTS 5 King St. East Phone 1380 Res., 1823W --ih | College Woodwork | Oshawa Missionary College, | Kingston Road East, now under mew M Wh | our past record may have been we can mow guarantee satisfac- tion and are prepared to give you service on Sash, Frames, SEE i Screens, Combination ; Williams Piano Co. Storm Sash, Garage no Doh em" general Millwork. NATHAN J. Phone 762, or MH. P. Bull, Phone 626 WAGAR, Superintendent. phone | If 20530. i -------- werm--

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