THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, rUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, published every afternoon i Lat i Sawa, ; Chas. President ; "Daily Times - a member of the Canadian p Sadian D i owsbapens Association, and the Audit Bureau | cartiet : 10c a week.' Ontario, Durham 5 elsewh: Canada, ir hase a loki 4 3 TORONTO OFFICE: hn win Wo 5 D Rea rons TUESDAY, OC OCTOBER 11, 1927 Tris "To wish the Liberal-Conservative Party of Canada, in convention assembled at Winnipeg, the fullest measure of suecess in the selection of a; Jeader is to wish success for Canada. For svhether the Conservative Party returns to power in the next general election or many years hence, the principles it upholds and the people who adhere to them play a vital part in the thought and life of this Dominion. +It is easy to sheer at politics, but man has al yet devised any other workable system by which government and democracy can be re- conciled. The highest possible ideals may not be en- throned at Winnipeg during the convention, but it is -worthy of note that Hon. Hugh Guthrie opened the convention with the Lord's Prayer in English, and that Senator Beaubien followed with the Lord's Prayer in French. The delegates sang the National Anthem and "O Canada." Thus, in the space of a few minutes, the resonant chords of religion, racial amity, loyal- ty and patriotism 'were reverently touched. The Conservative Party, moreover, is rich in leadership material as sections of the Liberal Press have been somewhat naively pointing out for the past few months. Its problem, appar- ently, rests not in finding a leader but in nam- ing the leader, the one man who can reconcile East and West, Ontarie and Quebec, and carry the Party, banner to an early triumph. B orm .00 a year hand, CONSERVATIV E CONVENTION | tie Wh AMERICA'S HEART SPEAKS One of the most splendid things said since the war was spoken at a banquet given in the House of Lords at London on October 7, to vidiiting members of the American Legion. Réplying to Premier Baldwin's message to the Utiited States war veterans, Howard P. Savage, retiring commander of the Legion, said: "In name of, the American Legion I desire to pay homage to the patriotism {and the integrity of the British nation, i which has tasted the bitter dregs of war i 4s the "terrible price of pledging British ! honor. { We in Canada who have not seen just how tesrible that price was can only half appreciate the force of Commander Savage' s 'tribute. Then, further on, the Legion's former chief said. : I raise my plass to you and say that but for your fidelity of purpose, your tenacity in the dark days of 1914-16, we: Americans might never have had the honor of playing a part in the battle to destroy, autocratic ~eonquest machines and the good. fight for the preservation of the principles of de- tiocracy. The 'Americans would have had the honor in due course, even if Britain had failed, but their national motto could well have been changed, in that event, to "One against many." British people are not the sort to advertise their own virtues, but this eloquent tribute from the head of those Americahs who were really "Over there" will warm hearts through. out the Empire wherever British eyes see this finely phrased encomium. i » Just a few years ago a community of Men- nonies left Canada in something of a huff to find a promised land in the South American républic of Paraguay. reported that as many as had survived the rigours of their adventure were returning and that the vanguard had reached that city. Oanada as a whole will 'regard these Prodi- gals somewhat askance. It is recalled, more or less accurately, that this community was actively opposed to Canad#d's participation in the late war. Other unwillingness to conform to the few conditions of Canadian citizenship might be cited against them. i Yet, the average man will admire their cour- age im returning "after seeing, however forced to ity the error of their ways. A great deal is said about Canadian success in the United States, Yet, when one examines 'WORSE PLACES THAN CANADA Yesterday Winnipeg p | the list, the same names are repeated over and over again. It is more than probable that there are not a few Canadians in the United States who would return home if they Had the nerve or, as with the Mennonite emigrants, if they found life hard enough. The future of these returning Mennonites is sly pledictable. They will dig in somewhere and work with a new inspiration. A few years from now Canadian magazines will be publish- ing feature articles, profusely illustrqated, about their success. Canada isn't the worst place in the world as the 'Mennonites have discovered. These sectar- ians, however, know something that a number of young Canadians don't, and that is how to work. The Beaver isn't the national emblem for nothing. A WORLD FOOD CENSUS 'In '1930 the International Institute of Agri- The immediate purpose of this world survey is to determine the exact agricultural output of the world, the amount of arable land under cultivation and not under cultivation, and the amount of land that could be made arable by irrigation and fertilization. The ultimate pur- pose is to ascertain how long the food produc# tion can keep pace with the growth in popula- tion. In the last quarter century only thirty-seven countries have taken an agricultural census, and they represent less than half of the land area of the world and only about thirty per cent. of the population. Never in history has there been a comprehensive survey covering the production of the most important agricul- tural products in all of the countries wherein facilities for such a census exist or can be created. : Few needs are of importance equal to that of food, yet the/world has no idea what its actual food supply is, or what its potential food re- sources may be. In the absence of a world 5,000,000,000 human beings and indulged in like speculations and conjectures were merely guessing. When the census total is arrived at, it can be multiplied~by two or more to allow for in- creased food supplies to come in the future from improved agricultural methods, synthetic foods, new foods and new sources of food. And then before the statisticians and birth control advocates begin guessing how soon overpopula- tion. will bring humanity face to face with starvation let them compute the quantity of food now wasted through over-eating and otherwise. 'Bit of Verse HE NEVER HAD READ IT AFORE I've brought back that Testament ye lent me; I never hed read it afore; I know "twas a good turn ye mean me, And now I'm hankering for more. I've read it all thro' an' I'm posted, One part in particler suits me: The place where the Son uv Man roasted Thet thur thunderin' Pharisee! This airth is as old as Methoosalum, An' still she's a wantin' a nurse; This town is as bad as Jeroosalum, Ef not jest a little bit worse. You see I'm among the beginners, And these purty near, air my views; Bf Jesus kem here He'd find sinners, An' most uv 'em wouldn't be Jews. By Him they'd not be a gainer, 1 mean by the temperance dodge; Cuz Christ ain't a total abstainer, An' couldn't get into a Lodge. Oh, how the Sanhedrin would volley Their charges till Heaven was dim Ef Jesus should ride on a trolley On the day that's named after Him! Last evenin' says I to my Missus, Ef Jesus was seen in a car On Sunday, the Pharisees' hisses , The pillars uv Heaven would jar. . The preachers would nag us and jab us, An' urge us to join in the cry; : That Pilate sHould give us Barabbas An' let the poor Nazarene die. I like thet there book of yours, Mister, Fer sense, it's on top uv. the pile. Thanks. T'll keep it an' use it to blister A hypocrite once in a while. { Saint Paul knew how to bamboozle 'em, Ef he to this city should stray "Twould rattle him worse'n Jerooslem An' thet's my opinion--Good day! --From the writings of The Khan, The Wig- wam, Rushdale Farm, Rockton, Ont, for export, ' Canada's position culture will take a world agricultural census. census in the past it is apparent that those who have said the world cannot feed more than 1927 WHAT OTHERS SAY | THR PEACE RIVER COUNTRY (From the Hamilton Herald) It is now certain that Western Canada will yield mearly 450,000, 000 bushels of wheat about three fourths of which will be available It is the second largest 3rop that has been grown in Can- ada, and the quantity to be export ed is the largest )pntifbution of wheat made by any country in the world to the world's food supply. This great crop is the product of a thinly settled region of more than 6,000,000 miles in ,area, As the unsettled spaces become sejtfed, pro- duction will of course ifi"rease; but not 80 rapidly as it has in recent years, for many of the older settlers are already turning to mixed farm- ing and stock-raising: However, as the greatest wheat-exporting country is sure to be maintained, for there is a region as yet almost untouched by cultiva- tion which is cap=ble of producing as much wheat as this year's total product of the whole Canadian wes!, That region is the Peace River country, several hundred miles north of Edmonton. It has an area of some 80,000 square miles; this s Canada's "last west." A Van- couver 'paper describes it as "'Can- ada's greatest hothouse," perhaps he most naturally fertile region uu the continent. It was up there that one of the settlers, Herman Trelle, grew the wheat which was award- ad first prize at the intermatiomal grain exhibition in Chicago. Ac sording to the Vancouver Sun, the 'onditions which make the Peace River country an ideal region for agricultural settlement are these. 1. Area of basin, 209 by 400 niles approximately half of which or 20,000,000 acres is highly adapi- ible for cereal crops. 2. The soil is rich; there are few stones, little muskeg and just 2nough timber for settlement pur- poses, 3. The entire area is low in al- titude--2,5600 feet and less. 4, The land has abundant pre- cipitation and great capacity for re- taining 'moisture, making the whole ountry one green garden, 5. Warm Japan current Pacific tempers the climate. 7. And most important of all, the Peace River summer is peerless --long sunny days, with only three or four hours' semi darkness. of the ~~ Only one thing is lacking wo ue rapid settlement of the region, and that is railway facilities. The pion- ger settlers who have gone in there are badly handicapped by the diffi- culty of getting their grain to mur- ket. Naturally, they are demand ing the construction of branch rau- ways. It may seem unfair to these men, who have djftextninedan" Mx nen, who have demonstrated productive capacity of the region, to delay railway" construction there; but that policy would seem to be in the interest of the whole Canadian west. Would it not be prudent to allow the Peace River cofintry to remain comparatively undeveloped intil the nearer wcit Was become filled up? Should it not be held in reserve? For when it is settled, Canada will have no other fertile region of virgin land to offer to 'mmigrants who seek to make a livihg "out of the soil. "HELLO AND SM WORKS ON HIGHWAY Los Angeles, Oct. 11.--The "hello and smile" tradition of college cam- puses is to be extended to boulevard and highway! A stranger stepping on university grounds for the first time is startled uy the 'friendliness *hat is extended him. meets says '"Hello" and accompanies the greeting with a smile. He does not know that this is a tradiion 'hat colleges cherish. one which the solder students start vgrinding into the lowly freshman the moment he first dons his green cap. Out at the University of Southern "alifornia, Eddie Oudermuelen, pro- minent senior, has come to the con- slusion that the courtesy idea has been confined to the campus too long. He believes that it should be axtended to the boulevard by stu- dent motorists, Oudermuelen is president of the Trojan Knits, tradition-preservi- ing onganization of his university. He iniends 'to ask that bedy to in- novate a new U.S.C. traditfon--that of greeting other college students on the road. "Practically everyone who attends a university and drives an automo- "ile proudly displays his or her col- lege"s sticker on the windshield," rays Oudermuelen. "In Los Ange- 'es here may be seen a veritable myriad of these stickers, U.S.C. nuthern Brahh, Occidental, Loy- ola, Whittier, Pomona, California, Stanford, Oregon, Oregon Aggies-- all of these colleges and universi- ties are represented on our city streets. Many times stickers of eastern universities are seen." "It is my idea that Muth can he accomplished in interdliegiate good will by a little courtesy on 'he road sudh as a cheery hello and a smile. College men are all muh alike--they are studying about the same things, no matter what uni- versity they may atiend and they all have the same problems. I know it makes me feel good to have a student from another university in- quire about miy school and our ac- tivities. I am sure it will react the same way with others, "Automobile drivers of today seem 'to maintain a spirit of ani- mosity against every other driver on the road. I beleive thay if the colleges start a spirit of friendif- ness among student motorists it will extend to other people on tie highways." At 40 a woman stops patting her- gelf on the back and begins under the chin.--Life. As long as she can fascinate men, no womah worries about her age. Kitchener Record, the ' Everyone he! RR Ke Police Chiefs Not Notified to En- force Law in All Centres The department of Highways has decided that sufficient time has al- ready been given for drivers of motor vehicles to have secured their licenses, so instructions have been fssued to the Chiefs of Police throughout Ontario to see that this section of the Act is now enforced. The circular, a copy of which has been received at the local police office, requests the officers to co- operate fully with the Department by the enforcement of the law in each municipality. A final warnin to operators of motor vehicles ap- peared in the préss a couple of days ago. : Attention is also called to the regulation which came into effect Oct. 1st, requiring all horse-drawn vehicles to carry lights. While prose- cutions may not be followed im- mediately under the act, it would be very inconvenient for a driver of a horse-drawn vehicle if he were in an_accident and did not have the lights required. by law. The light is to be carried on the left side of the vehicle and is to show white in front and red behind. A WINNING POLICY Great successes are rarely found- ed on luck. This is as true of 1iewspapers as individuals. The pol icy of The Family Herald and Week- iy» Star of Monireal, since ijts first issue, about 60 years ago, has been '0 go on improving each issue from week to week, and give its readers che best value that brains and money ould produce. That policy has cer- -ainly succeeded. Today The Fam- 'ly Herald and Weekly Star has wer one million readers, in Can- da. It stuck to its poliey and won he race on meril. Its readers stuck to it year after year, proving that a good thing is apprecioted. At cne dollar a year for that mg weekly of 72 pages no home in Can- sda can afford to be without it. NATIONS AGREED ON TANGIER 0 lteraational Sto Status of City Cannot Be Altered Paris, Oct. 11.--i"rance and Great Britain are agreed that the interna- tional status of Tangier cannot be altered and Spain is in accord with this decision, Sir Austen Chamber- lain, British Foreign Secretary, told newspapermen after a long talk with Foreign Minister Briand of France. This statement is taken in politi- 'al circles as meaning that Sir Aus. [ten told Premier Primo de Rivera | Auring their recent meeting in the | Mediterranean, that the Spanish claims to the exclusive administra- tion of the international city cannot be satisfied. The British Foreign Secretary said that he went over the "whole gamut »f international questions with M. Briand and found that they agreed on all subjects of current interest as well as upon all questions likely to ~ome up in the future. The Spanish desire exclusive con- trol in the international city on the grounds that it has been used as a rentre for hostile activities against Spanish Morocco. The city was in- ternationalized in 1925, the resident weneral at the present time being French. pl ais APPEAR IN COURT (By Staff Reporter) Whitby, Oct. 11.--The three persons taken into custody on Sunday night from a house on Dundas street east were brought before Magistrate Wil- lis yesterday morning in Whitby Po- lice Court. The man, charged with be- ing the proprietor of a disorderly house, pleaded not guilty and was re- leased on two sureties of $500 each. The two women were charged with vagrancy and pleaded not guilty. Bail was refused and they were remanded in custody until next Monday. Tender, Aching, Swollen Feet In Just Five Minutes Those Sore, Tender, Aching Feet Get Amazing Relief. Moone's Emi>rald Oil is Guaranteed. ' Go to Jury & Lovell, Ltd.,, W. H. Karn or ady other good druggist today and get an original bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil. 'The very first application will give you relief and a few short treatments will thoroughly con- vince you that by sticking faithfully to it for a short while your foot troubles will be a thing of the past. Don't expect a single bottle to do it all at once but one bottle we know will show you beyond question that you have at last discovered the way to solid foot comfort. Remember that Moone's Emerald Oil is a clean, powerful, penetrat- ing Antiseptic Ofl that does not stain or leave a greasy residue amd that the very first bottle must gi complete satisfaction or your A i cheerfully refunded, LLOYD GEO London, Oct. 11.--*Indiscretions" in the diary of the late Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, which has just been published, have drawn fire from David Lloyd George. He made public two letters and issued a cov- ering statement bearing on some of Wilson's utterances which the war. time premier considered '"'a public duty to correct." One passage in the Wilson diary says Lloyd George considered the League of Nations 'rubbish' and another that Lloyd George was bent on the capture of Jerusalem "because the Welsh peonle would like it." Wilson's Armistice day entry in- cludes "dined with Lloyd George at 10 Downing Street also Winston (Churchill) and F. E. (Birkenhead). Lloyd George wants to shoot the Kaiser, P. N. agrees, Winston does not." : DENIES UTTERANCES ATTRIBUTED \TO HIM IN WILSON DIARY re em Lloyd George in his rejoinder to the diary made public two extreme- ly complimentary letters that Wil- son wrote him. The first was when Lloyd George had moved in Parlia- ment that a money grant be award- ed several generals, including Wil- son, and the second when Wilson was about to quit the War Office and enter upon a career in Parlia. ment. Lloyd Ge; rge in a covering letter says: "I never uttered many of the observations, some of them extreme- ly foolish, attributed to me in these diaries. But that's the way of most diarists, words used in jest ave treated as if uttered in earnest. Words seriously used are torn from their context and therefore have a different meaning, essential qualify- ing phrases being invariably omit- ted." a a . oa ages 15 to 45. from natural causes. It pays $5000 for acci- dental death. 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