t al ess; ttend Failed "to Affair at the Games and ide Much for Young )RMANCE FEATURE rogram: Ap- Large Audi- Items on ughs failed to mar ich character- iment's Carni- he Armouries. d to make the irgest and best ce in the city, t that it was it would cer- 1ccessful street i rmouries took osperous town every descrip- ndants in full over the large ie clashing or: zg of pots and ith the loud as they urged ize their par- 1 to give the h "gusto" y the fun, and That a large pieces as well hands is not on. started about was not long got into full 3 in all each [ferent line of gaily colored atterned blan- ks and proved nan who came a pocket full o the kiddies sport. Many ken away hy Bingo game, pular at Fairs te. Excitement little white with the corn leone shouted ame and walk ot or carving- alarm clocks. locks and big rasols, smok- ina trays, and trays. There and it didnt a box. The ilar operation urs. entertainment second which than is seen ir. Tight rope sducated hor- were all pres- n hour's real ened with the Billy Boy, the hat that pony )e worth men- ures and sub- elected flags. ns, and the the audience 1 the act was companion of ich did tricks rly and walk- Il as read a f of course), lved. tainers, two one of whom 2d an accord- played about ent one might 2 by this duo use. ct featuring gers was the ced program. e luxe by the as superb and rve credit for unts and ecol- feature the put on under )ntario Regi- Legion, the for the bene- Benefit Fund. nicht and to- which times tion will be ms. CES ON | ARKETS AIN farm reserve of- heat expected to met y today, Buying sibilities regard- at lower at 56 7-8. oy the great eisure, vouth Whig-Stan- PALL 1 WELVE : The Oshawa Baily Times 5 . § Succeeding THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER Oshawa Daily Times 1s a member of the Cans: A anata Dally Newiphpers' As. Audit Bureau of Circulations, ' sUBSCRIPTION BATES " Delivered by carrier: 30c a week. Hy mail (out- side Oshawe carrier delivery limits): in the Counties of Ontario, Durham and Northamber- land, $8.00 a year; elsewhere in Canada, $4.00 a year; United States, $5.00 s year. TORONTO OFFICE 407 Bond Building, 86 Temperance Street, Tele phone Adelaido 0107.. H. D. Tresidder, repre- sentative. REPRESENTATIVES IN 0.8. Powers and Stone, Inc., New York and Chicago. --_--~ FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1929 FIVE YEARS OLD The City of Oshawa is today celebrating the fifth anniversary of its birth as a full-fledged city. Five years old today, Oshawa is in every way a healthy child, still far from its full growth, but showng a virility and progress which promise to carry it far as it grows in age. Anniversary occasions are fitting times for taking a retrospect view of the years that have past, and, looking back over the five years since Oshawa attained the status of cityhood, theve are varied emotions. There is a feeling of pride In the achievements of the city, That it has made phenomenal progress, at a time when most On- tario cities were standing still, is a matter for much gratification. There is a feeling of grati- tude for the many blessings which Divine Provi- dence has showered on the community, not only in material things, but in the development of these things which go to build up a healthy com- munity life. There have been disappointments and sorrows as well as successes and joys. But, through all these experiences, the people of Oshawa have seen their city go forward steadily, and they have re- Joiced together in the good things, and have sorrowed together when that emotion was called for. And in their relationships in joy and in sorrow, they have been able to build up a com- munity spirit which has meant much to the city. But the past is past. The first five years of eityhood are over, and the future remains ahead, dt is for the people of today and. for those yet to come to benefit by the mistakes of the past, and to guide their course so that the progress of Oshawa may not be retarded, but that it may, in the years to come, enjoy a continuance of that growth and prosperity which have characterized it since it took upon itself the status of a city. To those who made that consummation of their hopes possible five years ago, the present genera- tion of citizens owes a debt of gratitude, and that gratitude can hest be expressed by a full and sincere determination to hand on to the next gen. eration and even greater and bigger and better Oshawa than that which exists today. ANOTHER BANK FOR OSHAWA The announcement that the Bank of Toronto proposes to open a branch in this city in the near future is an evidence of the high standing which Oshawa enjoys in the eyes of the financial world. No bank would enter a community already served by four other banks without making a thorough survey of the field, so as to come to a decision as to whether the community could properly sup- port another bank. And the fact that the Bank of Toronto is coming here is proof that its officials have sufficient confidence in the future of the city to warrant this step. There is no question, of course, of the service which is being given by the other banks being less than it should be for a community like Osha- wa. The entry of the Bank of Toronto into the fleld is merely one more recognition of the im- portance with which this city is regarded by the outside world. In other words, it is a tribute to Oshawa's prosperity and progress that it should be considered a good field for the opening of an- other bank branch. SENATOR DANDURAND'S PROPOSALS Far away as the average Canadian is from the scene . of its activities there is ever growing in- terest in the work of the League of Nations at Geneva. Canadians take a special pride in the fact that Senator Raoul Dandurand, a brilliant son of the Dominion, has held the chief executive office of this great world court, and that hig latest proposals on minorities has raised a storm of favorable and unfavorable comment in the Euro- pean. press. Dealing with such a tremendous agenda and with so many subjects, it is perhaps difficult for the busy Canadian to grasp in full a great deal of the matter dealt with by the League. But in the latest issue which has arisen through the in. tiative and love of fair play of the dynamic French-Canadian there is a simple and clear cut issue. Senator Dandurand would in the submis- sion of proposals by minorities see that they get the fullest and fairest treatment and that their submissions are not handled entirely and com- pletely dismissed by those nations under whom the minorities operate, It is well to remember exactly what is meant by "minorities". 'To put it briefly they comprise the 30,000,000 European people who by the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles are now compelled to live under foreign domination as a result of the re-grouping ofthe old states of Hurope. The whole subject is full of gun-powder and goes to the very basis of present European complications, and in putting in a special plea for the rights of minorities, Senator Dandurand has shown a cour- age and broad-mindedness of which his fellow countrymen should be proud. Senator Dandurand, and jin his stand he will have the unqualified support of all far-seeing Can- adians, has always contended that if the League of Nations is to be a real agent for world peace, fair and peaceful consideration should be given to all mations and that no war-born hate or jealousy should prevent the weakest country or the most insignificant minority from receiving as génerous treatment as the most powerful states in Christendom. He evidently sees in the handling of minorities the seeds of continued trouble and difficulties which would jeopardise the very existénce of the League and the future péace vf the world. In a direct and simple way characteristic of the Can- adian executive he has gone right to the root of the trouble and his proposals it put into force would do much to ~ut out the cancer of inter- national hate or at len' partialy heal the long- abiding sores of the Treaty of Versailles. France, the land of his forefathers, bitterly opposes his proposals as well as other nationals, but it is hoped that when this subject is again discussed by the League Council at Geneva common sense and fair-play as expressed in his submission will tri- umph over jealousy, suspicion and mutual distrust. THE CURSE OF LIQUOR The tragedy at Trout Creek, Ontario, in which a thirteen-year-old boy shot and klled his father, while the latter was beating his wife, teaches a tragic lesson of the evil effects of liquor, The man, apparently, was a good husband while sober, but, deprived of his proper senses by liquor, he became almost a monsier in human form, and attacked the one person in the world whom he should have done his utmost to protect, The dying words of the man, when he realized he cculd not recover from the wound, are poignant in their significance. After forgiving his son for what he had done, he said: -- "It was all my fault and I deserved just ° what I got, It was drink did it. I never would have hit your ma if it had not been for the whiskey." How many other tragedies can be traced to the same source, Whiskey is the cause of much of the misery and suffering in this world, and much of the crime, Is it any wonder that those people 'who are trying to elevate living standards for the human race, have set their faces solidly ' against the liquor evil, and have for decades bent their strongest energies towards its complete abol- ition, . In this case, a home is deprived of a father, and a young lad is branded as a slayer, just be- cause whiskey entered into the home and made a beast out of a man. It is only ome case, of course, and perhaps it is an extreme case of the results of liquor drink- ing, but at the same time it should consti ute a terrible warning to those who are inclined towards indulgence in liquor. EDITORIAL NOTES Dr. T. E. Kaiser, M.P., deserves every support in his plan for caring for the too-long neglected wayside cemeteries of Ontario, says the Toronto Globe, The Canadian National Railways branch line program has passed the railways committee of the house of commons. That, however, is an easy hurdle compared with passing the Senate, Hon. George S. Henry suggests that a third highway is needed from Hamilton to Toronto. If he ever drove east from the Queen City he would find a second one is needed between Toronto and Oshawa. Lloyd George is offering odds of five to one that neither the Conservatives nor the Liberals will have a majority in the next British election. It is easy guessing that he is a Welshman and not a Scotsman, The Toronto Globe, in its eighty-fifth year, is to be congratulated on the passing of another milestone in its long and homerec career. It has seen many changes in Canadian life since it was first published, but seems to be going ahead as strongly as ever. = Other Editors' Comment ~ BY WAY OF PROOF (Minneapolis Journal) Henry Ford says machinery will soon do all the Lousewerk. See what the can-opener has already one, WHY THEY APPEAR GREATER (San Diego Union) The heroes of the past appear greater than those of the present, perhaps because they never indorsed any brand of cigarettes. THERE IS A LIMIT . (Toronto Globe) : The Communists want freedom to talk as they like, and the Doukhobors in British Columbia want freedom to dress as they like. But the law in both cases says there is a limit that must not be passed in this country. ---- MUCH TOO MECHANICAL (St. Thomas Times-Journal) Thomas A. Edison is said to be perfecting a me- chanical stenographer. A lot of business men .would prefer to put up with the imperfect but good-looking ones they have got, than to have an infailable ma- chine that they couldn't take out to lunch. - '» Bits of 1 Verse TO ERR IS HUMAN It doesn't pay to be positive, For humans ave quite prone to err, And oft when 2 man is sure he is right That's the time his opinion won't "wear." To have faith in one's self is a virtue Providing it's not over-strong, For you will feel cheap if you solemnly sweat You are fight. and then find you are wrong. THE OSHAWA DAILY TY TIMES, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1929 Snowy weather, what? * & % Aw, let's not talk about the weather! 5%. "We are mow," amnounced Latest Mode of Advertising Wanted--Organist; also boy to blow same. * g "Police Court" -- Headline, Why shouldn't they? * * » Dear Renrut: Gimme « sentence using the word "ferry."'--The man sald he was not in favor of a new street, ferry he lived there. ~Ether Waves. » * * LJ Policeman in ' Vancouver had his revolver stolen by two bandits. Now that's just something for the Sewing Circle tp discuss, LJ . Content You filled a cup of jade With a magic wine, And in the midst of hope, Pledged your love divine. I drained the cup you filled, Under the autumn skies, And found a heavenly peace, In your ardent eyes. . -M. M, Eskind. » Life is a myriad of broken dreams, a wicker of air cas. tles. The serious side of life is not realized until it is too . late. Life is no respector of persons, [It is filled with hap- piness and sadness and it is up to us to take only the hap. piness from it if we would be successful, Forget the past and you will live to enjoy the futu:e>, LJ » * LJ Mother (proudly)--I wish, my son, that your father would stay at home one evening to see how well you behave when he is out, * * * * The toughest part about . these cold snells is mmawing out the anti-f.«:cze, n'est-ce pas? LJ LJ] . "Father," said Little Billy, "when a hen sits on an egg for three weeks and it doesn't hatch, is the egg spoiled?" '"As an article o' diet, my son, it is henceforth a failure, but for political purposes it has its uses." Ld L LJ Too true, too true. | Ta Towser has a cold this morning from trying to drown out the storm yesterday. * 5 0 The office feline came into work this morning with half its tail bobbed. It is believ. ed it got run over last might about twelve o'clock by a street car that was not expect ed to pass that spot cn sched ule. ® LJ LJ The wind howls, --Renrut. | - Bits of Humor - THE CONSOMME OF FACTS.. Lawyer--Don't you think you are straining. a point in your explana- tion ? Witness--Maybe I am, but you of- ten have to strain things to make them clear.--~Boston Transcript, ° FUNNY STORIES Mother--"How did you like going to the store with Aunt Mabel?" Daughter--"Oh, it was so funny, mamma. We went into a little house and the upstairs came downl" BETTER SO Hostess--I've asked Miss Howles several times to sing, and she has re- fused each time. x Host--If I were hg I'd let it go at that. Some of the strangers may go away thinking they've missed something.--The Hostess, SAW HIM PASS A placid old lady who took life philosophically sat Lnitting in the drawing-room. To her there came rushing her 15-year-old granddaugh- ter. "Oh, Granny, Granny," cried the girl, "Father's just fallen off the roof!" "I know, my child," replied the old lady, without even raising her eyes. "I saw him pass the window."--Hali- fax Chronicle, PERFECTLY EXCUSABLE It was her first attendance at a football game. Turning to her es- cort, she asked: "Why did they stop that man and knock him down as soon 3s he picked up the ball?" "Because he was trying to score." to score?" "But isn't the object of the game "Yes; but he's on the wrong side. He was going the wrong way--that is, towards the wro id "Well," said the girl, "I don't see why they should knock him down for that. Everybody makes mistakes." -- Tit- Bits, : GOD'S DISCIPLINE DELIVERS --Thou hast chastised me, and I was chastised, as 2 bullock unaccustomed to the yoke: turn thou me, and 1 shall be turned; for thou are 'the Lord my God.--Jeremiah 31:18. PRAVER--O d, no chastening for the present is pleasant, but after- ds it prod h the p ruits. of righteousness. That Body of Pours By James W. Barton, M.D. By Jas. W. Barton, M.D, DANGER OF TONSIL STUMPS (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act), | When you read of the record of 48,000 school children, 20,000 of whom had their tonsils remov. natur- ally want to learn of the improve- ment or lack of improvement in come paring the two groups. At first you, will be greatly dis- appointed because from the stand- point of rheumatic fever, joint pains, or growing pain there was 8 per cent in those whose tonsils were re- moved, and 10 per cent in those with tonsils, Not a great difference, However Dr. A. D. Kaiser found that heart ailments developed less often in those with tonsils removed. However there is a factor that has been overlooked in this matter. Drs, Paul S. Rhoads and Geo. F. Dick, Chicago, say "our experience with patients who have had their tonsils remoyed has led us to the be- lief that the disappointing results that often follow the removal of ton- sils may often be duc to the fact that the tonsils were not completely removed. We had several patients who were not benefitted by the re- moval of their tonsils, but who did improve strikingly after the removal of infected pieces of tonsil left from the first operation. In the routine examination of nurses entering two of our hospitals we have found fair- ly large pieces of tomsilar tissue re- maining in 290 of 403 (73 per cent) of those whose tonsils had been re- moved." That these "tonsil stumps" cause trouble was proven by 23 cases fol- lowed in less than a year, in every one of which it was thought neces- sary to remove the stump, and in which improvement resulted in all whom we were able to follow." In fact the infective organisms were found to be more numerous in stumps than in whole tonsils, What is the point? That where tonsils have been re- moved and symptoms persist you should have the throat examined to | see if a part of a tonsil is still pres- ent, . When 73 per cent of nurses were found to have tonsil years after tonsils were removed, it is likely that stumps are present in a goodly number of other people whose tonsils have been removed. HAS SOME SENSE An old lady, visiting an insane as- ylum, observed the lunatics at work. One man was standing in a corner idle, "My good man," inquired the old lady, "why don't you work? Aren't you crazy?" a "Yes, mum, but not that crazy, the man replied. 11 flag Peet Beet, Oubaws Srosie-ForLone +@ Private Wire System «= Above CPR. Office Topic "LENT AND MY CHURCH" Memory Verse for Friday "A friend of publicans and sin- ners" (Matthew 11:19). Read: Luke 15:11 to 32.) MEDITATION: I find most plea- sant the society of those who are likeminded with myself. For that I love my church and its fellow- ship. But I must not be a pharisee. There are those outside my church and all the churches who need my friendship. By my coldness or in- difference I may shut the gates of hope against them. By officious and condescending efforts to do them rood I may repel them, Perhaps the best thing I can do to be friend- ly and that without any air of pat- ronage. So Jesus won the very out- casts of his day. Nobody was be- neath him, no one was outside the pale of his friendshap. PRAYER: Most merciful God, who are the Father of all men; de- liver me from all self-righteousness and hardness of heart. In humility and in kindness lead me in the way of him who was the Brother of all. Amen. TODAY. UST OF | AUT! ACCIDENTS BRANTFORD CYCLIST KILLED Brantford, March 7. ¢. BRB. Wright, well-known awning manu- stumps some ! o | WorIAN INJURED BY MOTOR facturer here, died in the . .. .ial tonight, followng an accident in which he was knocked from his wheel by a following motorist who was not aware of the bicyclist un. til the impact. A young lad was the driver of the sedan that hit Wright from the rear rausing a fracture of the sku'l which phvai- cians diagnosed as dangerous, the vieti™ passing away later in the evening, Mrs. Edith Harris 443 Bathurst street, received slight injuries ahout the body when she was knocked down by an automobile late last night. She was taken to Western hospital. ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL Butler--"Your wife has run away with the chauffeur." ; Husband--"Oh, well, IT was going to fire him anyway."--Life, FAMOUS CASTLES WILL BE SOLD Estates of Old Established Families Will Soon Be Placed in Market London, March 8--Two famous Northumberland estates, The Ches- ters, in the Chollerford district, and Haggerston Castle, in the northern part of the county, are to come into the market in the near future, The Chesters has a great anti- quarian interest. It is situated on the line of Hadrian's Wall, and some miles of the Wall, together with the excavated fort of Borcovicus, will be included in the sale. It is under- | stood that J. N. Clayton, the owner, does not intend to dispose of the mansion and the very fine museum of Roman antiquities which contains the remains of the military city of Cilurhum., The Chesters has been the object of many pilgrimages by antiquarians, and there will be satis- | faction that this part of the estate, at any rate, is to remain in the hands of the Clayton family, The estate has an areca of about 20,000 acres, with grouse moors of about 10,000 acres, and the total rent roll | 15 staled to be over $100,000, Haggerston Castle was a Border stronghold, and tradition states that Haggerston was constituted in the Norman conquest, and that it was conferred on the De Haggerstines, a family which came over from Nor- ! mandy. In recent years the Castle | ae been the venue of the Northum- berland liunt Bail and the present owner is Capt, C, D. Leyland. PSYCHO-ANALYSIS IN VIENNA REGARDED Wi H SUSPICION Vienna, Austr.., March 8.--~In some | circles in Vienna psycho-analysis is regarded with suspicion. Recently a complaint of the Vienna Psycho- Analytical Union under Prof. Sig- mund Freud, the originator of the system, that the authorities had re- fused to permit the estabilshment of a private school of psycho-analysis was aired in court. The reason giv- en was that such instruction might be connected with dangerous experi- , ments, i ARREST IHNNENT IN DYNAMITE CASE Detective Claims Guilty Party Will be Held in Few Days Quebec, Mar, 8, -- If he is not lodged in a cell in the Quebec jail by other agencies working on the case, the man who placed the stick of dynamite in Premier Tascher- eau's office last Tuesday night will be behind the bars at the Central police station here within the nekt three days, it was stated by munic- ipal detectives. "An arrest will be made with- in the next three days. To say more would destroy all the work that has been done in tracking the man down. It is one thing to make an arrest, but it is another proposition to prove the charge against a prisoner well founded," added the detectitve, wno asked that his name be not mentioned. SEEKING INDUSTRIES LEON FRASER Secretary of The Oshawa Chamber of Commerce and' Industrial Commissioner for Oshawa. LEON and Industrial Secretary Chamber of MARCH 8th, 192° OSHAWA IS PROUD of this The Fifth Anniversary of It's Incorporation As A City SEVENTH CITY IN ONTARIO IN POPULATION FIRST IN PROPORTIONAL INCREASE IN POPU- LATION IN ONTARIO IN 1927 AND 1928 FIRST IN ONTARIO IN PROPORTION OF INDUSTRIAL EMPLOYEES TO TOTAL POPULATION THIRD CITY IN ONTARIO IN VALUE OF PRODUCTION FIRST CITY IN ONTARIO IN PROPORTIONAL VALUE OF EXPORTS TO TOTAL VALUE OF PRODUCTS SECOND AND FIFTH CITY FOR 1927 AND 1928 RESPECTIVELY IN ONTARIO IN VALUE OF BUILDING PERMITS Oshawa Is SECOND HIGHEST IN ONTARIO IN SUPPORT OF CHAMBER OF COMMERCE OR BOARD OF TRADE Known As The City of Successful Industries The Chamber of Commerce is operating lo saintaly in and devilep Ostawn's position suet the, in the Banner Commerce Commissioner the Dominion. G. W. McLAUGHLI, 1 eesident Chamber of Commerce