PAGE FOLR ee "THE (SHAWA DAILY TIMI: SATURDAY, DECEMBER '22, 1928 A persons 8 Who Spe. bundles "would al a= gous spend principal as cut a knot. Between the 'two the labour expended annually in tying and untying bundles would be sufficient to | build a broad highway from Montreal to To- | romto. One good bundle deserves another, it 'seems. At least it invariably happens that when one bundle must be carried away or brought to the house there are others to oc- cupy the attention of the other arm. By James W. Barton, M.D. THE WORK OF THE HEART Whether you lie down, sit, stand, for whom the marriage ceremony handsome Lieutenant Ian Lawrence Henderson Mac Killop, of the Roy- al Engineers. I Captain Valle-Pope had obtaine a license for marriage to Miss Sar. good a week ago, and even as late as yesterday the morning papers! carried an announcement = of his marriage, but Miss Sargood tolg re- porters that she had called at the church on Monday and told them that she was to be the bride in a wedding there on Wednesday, but that the groom would not be "the CHANGE I GROONS 22s we ATLAST MINUTE " Excited Over Brid:'s Sudden Alteration London, Dec, 22.--A bride who married, a man other than the one StoBie-ForLoNG 6G Head Office: Reford Bu Sham BAY AND WELLINGTON STS S. F. EVERSON, Local Manager Private Wire System 11 King Street East, Oshaws -- Above C.P.R. Office I Phones 143 and 144 --- i = LJ | walk, or run, the heart will keep |had been arranged caused great ex- [Same man." She then got another the blo hionable little |license to marry Lieutenant Mac V the Hood sumping i3 Ploperien to i RB onahle Killop, but there was mo time to |FPerhaps they would get more of progressive policies for their ran- Dr, H. W. Haggard tolls us that She was Miss Julia Sargood, a [Dotify her friends of a change in them if they adopted young and didates to advocate. : during exercise the volume of blood | Pretty New Zealander, and was tothe groom. a ee pumped my be three or more times | have married Captain Edward Lew- a STABILIZED BUSINESS . The old business cycle theory has been generally abandoned, for business during the Built on the confidence of its subscribers, Chas. M. Mund, Alloway, Secretary. "he Oshawa Daily Times is 'member of the Cana Press, the Canadian Daily Newspapers' Ae ih ) Dailies and the Delivered by carrier: ¥0c & week. By mail (out side Oshawa carrier delivery limits): in the Counties of Ontario, Durham and Northumber: land, $8.00 a year; elsewhere in Canadas, $4.00 8 year; United States, $5.00 a year, . TORONTO OFFICE w 607 Bond Building, 46 Temperance Street, Tele phone Adelaide 0107, H, D. Tresiddev, sentative. 4 REPRESENTATIVES IN 0.8. Powers and Stone, Inc., New York and Chicago, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1926 TT & CHRISTMAS CHEER Dr. Kaiser in a letter to The Times pub- lished yesterday rather severely criticized a statement in one of the articles relative to the Christmas Cheer Fund in this paper, The article said that "hundreds of children, half starved, half clothed," etc. ete., and Dr. Kaiser says if he believed this "yarn" ~ he would raise his ten dollar subscription to one thousand dollars, Now, we are not going to argue with the general member for South Ontario in the Federal House, not even with a thousand dollars as the prize, for no doubt, the doctor is right, at least technically, But the good doctor also knows that a lit- ©" tle exaggeration is privileged when one is "\ " presenting an appeal such as the Christmas Cheer Fund to a lot of busy and to some de- "gree at least, "hard boiled" citizens. . We have known Dr, Kaiser to wax very enthusiastic at times over some project which he believed worthy of public notice and' he certainly secured attention and ac- tion in a way that puts the rest of us in the shade, But we are not sure that our statement was so very far wrong anyway. It is only . a matter of degree, We are quite sure there © are hundreds of children in Oshawa who are -underfed and insufficiently clothed. If Dr. Kaiser will go around to make a few calls + with the investigators who are working on the Christmas Cheer Fund he will be con- ' vinced of this fact, Why should 'this condition exist in "the most prosperous city in the Dominion?" There are many reasons, but we are not 'thinking just now of the causes so much as , the undeniable fact. Many homes in Osh- 'awa are in real need at this Christmas time, True, Oshawa citizens have responded gen- crously to the appeal for money and goods, "but the needs are not yet fully met, If there should bc a surplus it will be kept intact for 'the same fund next year. Large gifts are not needed so much as a large number of small gifts. If your gift is 'only a dollar, send it in, It will help some "needy family have 2a happier Christmas and "incidentally you will be happier yourself. kor giving, like mercy, "is twice blessed: it { bleszes him who gives and him who re- weives," BUNDLES Bunaiies more bundles and still more bun- dies. Bundles, rather than people, are walk- "dag the sirects today, There is much truth Zin the eamtoon picturing the typical man ibringing up the rear like an overloaded clothes tree. Bundle time begins about six ixr2eks before Christmas and ends after the 'mitts that do not fit or suit have been ex- 'ghanged at the store, . A bundle is an indefinable mass done up ih brown paper and tied with string. It ex- jsts for the purpose of being carried. Bundles may be divided roughly into two classes, those that are forever coming un- done and those that seem utterly incapable © Bundles are such frequent incidents in life that mo well-directed household would think of going without a supply of brown paper ana string for doing them up. It is a curi- ous fact, however, that no matter how large and miscellaneous the supply, it is rarely ever possible to find just the right size sheet of paper, while the string is almost invar- fably tco short. A parcel is a bundle try~ ing to put on airs. © Persons who make up bundles hold the be- fief that the greater the number of knots hg stronger the bundle. On the other hand, | last two decades has demonstrated that the theory is either fallacious or can easily be made inoperative. There are a few persons who still believe that business must of neces- sity alternate seven years of a downward prosperity curve with seven years in which the trend is upward, but students of econo- mics have proved that the principal reason why business in the past behaved in this manner was because the public expected it to do so, and anticipated the trends, There is a new cycle theory governing business. Business displays numerous bright spots of prosperity, mixed through the entire range of shades down to the dark shadows of depression. It is a major cycle of stability, made up of many smaller cycles of good, bad and indifferent business which in the aggregate tend practically to offset each other, It is a cycle of frequent but moderate corrections in contrast with the old swings that occurred every seven years or 80 on an average and carried all business up and down together. If there must be a business cycle, it will be generally admitted, that the new model is much superior to that which was the buga- boo of business a generation ago. Obviously it is better to have a mixture of prosperity and depression than to have all business thrust into the depths of depression at one time, Under the new order of prosperity several industries preserve a measure of prosperity while other industries are de- pressed, EDITORIAL NOTES It isn't marriage that fails, but the scat- ter-wits who try it. Most of the stumbling blocks in the way of human progress are blockheads, A good executive is one who refrains from nagging while others do the work, If she pretends to believe the lies he tells, he knows that she loves him still, Familiarity is offensive or flattering, de- pending on the standing of the man who acts that way. ; Most of the people about the world who are fighting for freedom are fighting for the right to boss. Honest confession is probably good for the soul, but it has a habit of worrying confed- erates, Too many of these chaps who have "per- sonality" use it to borrow money. Making the nations one family won't help, Family rows are the worst kind, The trouble is that these fast drivers never are going anywhere, not even to jail. Lit of Verse w PIERS PLOWMAN'S PRAYER I'm an old fellow now, Past work, spade or forge, But I followed the plow In the year when King George Was crown'd--and I say, What I did on the day When we heard the bells ring-- "Here's to the King-- God bless him!" And I put up a prayer, That the King may come thro'; For this day he lies there, Hand and foot, so he do. "God save him,"--I say, As I did on the day When we heard the bells ring:-- "Here's tc the King-- God bless him!" For tis true--if a King, Or a man, is in dole, We mought feel the same thing That do hurt him, poor soul! "Heav'n keep him,"--we say. As we did on the day When we heard the bells ring:-- * "Here's to the King-- God bless him!" --Ernest Rhys in the London Times the blood pressure may rise 50 per cent or more, The work of the heart may thus be increased five fold. The method of testing the heart's ability to do a certain amount of work and then return to fits nor- mal number of beats within two minutes, - varies with the different physicians, One will have patient touch the floor with fingers five or ten times, with knees straight, doing the ex- ercise at a certain speed. Another will have the patient do a "stationary" run of 60 steps in thirty seconds, raising feet a cer- tain distance fromy the floor. Others will have him jump upon a chair four or five times. You can readily see that some of these exercises are much more severe than others and that some sta: should really be adopted. SiaBenedict and Parmenter have @Mggested that stair climbing be used as a standard test. They take the average man weighing 150 pounds, and climbing stairs the steps of which are 8 inches -in height, According to their tests it may he considered, for practical purposes. that the average persons expends the same amount of energy in walk- up one average flight of steps (fifteen steps 8 inches high) as he does in walking on a level fifteen time the distance represented by the height of such a staircase, or as he does in coming down three such fliehts of steps. You can readily see then that walking up stairs, or walking up hills or mountains means very much more work than walking on the level. So don't worry if when you hurry up stairs, sometimes a couple of steps at a time, you find you are slightly short of breath and heart beating strongly. You have really dome a lot of work in a short time. (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act.) HUNT BRIDEGROOM AS BRIDE-TO-BE WEEPS AT HALIFAX Little Dutch Girl Faces De- portation Until Hubby Can Be Located Woodstock, Dec. 22.--At Halifax a little Dutch girl waits for news' of Rene Kaston, who, she tearfully ex- plained to the immigration officials, lives in Woodstock, and who pro- mised to marry her on her arrival in this country, The officials got in touch with the Woodstock police and now Chief Moore and his men are employing all the resources at their command to find the missing bridegroom, but so far without success, Unless the missing bridegroom can be found it is probable that the dis- appointed bride will be deported re- luctantly, ! Not Reported to Ottawa Ottawa, Dec. 22.--The case of the Dutch girl at Halifax owing to the immigration officials being unable to locate her intended husband, has not been before the Immigration Depart- here, officials said, when their atten- tion was called' to the girl's deten- tion. It was quite probable, they said, that the immigration officials at Halifax communicated directly to the place where the intended hus- band was supposed to be, : It was pointed out by A, L. Joliffe, commissioner 'of immigration for Eastern Canada, that in the case of girls coming from Europe to - ada to marry, the officials at the port of landing Rn such until they are assured the wpsriage will take place and that the inte husband is of good character and has a position to maintain a wife. If the persons de- signated by such a girl is not located then the case is considered here, as to whether the girl will be returned to the country of origin or placed in a position and under the care of responsible people. : Mr. Joliffe also pointed out, it would not be possible to allow girls to enter Canada to be married, un- less the authorities were assured of the certainty of such ceremony be- ing performed. If this precaution was not taken this reason would be used to evade the immigration laws and also there would be an influx of girls, who would not have that care and supervision to safeguard them, so requisite in a strang coun- try. THE PLACE GOD DWELLETH ~For thus saith the high and lofty {One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy; I dwell in, the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to re- vive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones. --Isa. 57:15 PRAYER--"O make us worthy. as great as in the rest. is Valle-Pope, of the Royal Artill- resting state, and ery yesterday afternoon, but when the guests arrived at the chapel they were astounded to discover jat the head of the: list. treal, stands supreme toda: the Family Herald and Weekly Star, Mon- ds + among farm papers, while its Magazine Section 1s easily A.T.. 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