| THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1930 | © PAGE FOUR Fara Reo Ars Co ps A Som aig on the board may ov enn THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) As independent newspaper putlished every afternsos : except Sundays and tega) holidays st Oshawa * Canada by Mundy Printing Company. Limited: Chas M Maundy, President; A R. Alloway, Sec: retary. & The Oshsws Daily Times is a member of the Cass: diss Press. the Canadian Daily Newspapers' As: sociation. The Ontario Provincia) Dailies and Audit Bureav of Clreulations. 2 ' SUBSCPIPTION RATES: Delivered by carrier. 15c a week By mail in Canade (outside Oshawe carrier delivery limits), $4.00 ® vear; United States. $5.00 » year TORONTO OFFICE 7 Bond Building, 65 Temperance Street, Telephone Adelaide 0107 D Tresidder. representative 7 REPRESEN1ATIVES IN U. 8. Bosers and Stone, Inc. New York and Chicago. SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1930 EVERYONE SHOULD VOTE On Monday the people of Oshawa have thé oppor- tunity to vote for the election of those who will carry on the'business of the city, through its three important bodies, the city council, the public utilities commission and the board of cducation, for the year 1930. There is a contest for cvery elective municipal office with the exception of mayor, and, in addition, there is an im- portant bylaw, for the erection {f a new police station, end the question of salaries for aldermen, on which a decision is sought. So far, there has been a keen interest in the elec tion, on account of the large number of splendid can didates in the field. The most important part, how- ever, now remains in the hands of the electors and rate-payers of the city. The important thing now is for every person who has a vote to cast it. There can be no valid excuse for not voting. There is plenty of good material from which to select an excellent council for 1930, and from which to place in office a strong public mission and an efficient board of education. As a rule, those who arc the greatest fault-finders with municipal bodies are those who refuse to accept their responsibility .of voting on election day, That responsibility is a solemn duty which every person upon whom it rests should realize, and The Times would urge upon all who are entitled to vote at the election on Monday to take advantage of the oppor- tunity, and to vote, no matter how they vote, utilities com SURE THAN SORRY BETTER BE "The Times has opposed the police station bylaw bee Zause 'it is convinced that the best move that could be mpde for the future of the City of Oshawa is the concentration of all the. civic departments in a build. ing or buildings on the Bagot-Mctcalfe Street gio: perty adjoining the Memorial Park. . One thing is certain, and that is that the question ought to receive more careful consideration before a decision is made to crect yew police building at the corner of Prince and Richmond Strects, six or seven blocks distance from the site of the proposed city hall, for once that' decision is made and the buildings erected, it will be useless to have second thoughts on the matter, of to revise one's opinion as to its, wisdom. "There are many people in Oshawa today who be- 'lieve that a grave mistake was made when the first unit of Oshawa's Collegiate, Institute was erected on Simcoe Street North. Many the resent site on Su citizens feel it would have been much, better had a But the decision more central location been chosen. which was then made must stand, and the citizens must put up with whatever inc onvenience has resulted Arom it. i ; The ratepayers should profit from the mistake, and avoid the possibility of sanctioning the erection of a new police station on a site which might later on prove to be ill-advised, There is a grave danger of being rushed into the selection of sites and the erec- tion of public buildings to overcome a condition such as that cxisting in the police department gt present, It is easy to make such decisions, but difficult, in fact impossible, to undo them for many years thereafter. As The Tunes has already puinted out, there is a way of giving a satisfactory measure of relic to the police' department, at a small cost, and without sacri- ficing the ideal plan of centralization of all of Osh- awa's civic departments in a building or buildings ad- joining Memorial Park: as soon as the time is oppor- tune for this larger and more comprehensive plan, TIMES' CHOICE FOR BOARD OF. Te EDUCATION It is highly gratifying that there is so large a list of desirable candidates offering themselves for election to the Oshawa board of education for the next two years, The Times has no serious fault to find with any of the candidates, but has made a choice of the four mien who, in our opinion, ane best qualified to our positions. i enoiée logically is 'Allin ¥. Annis, one of the retiring members of the 1929 board. Mr. Annis has been chairman of the advisory vocational conmmit- . tee of the board; and in that capacity, had a great deal to do with the erection and cquipping of the new ool. ose 4 A of education have earned for him the highest esteem of his fellow-members of the board, and we/suggest that the electors make sure of re-electing Allin F. Annis for a second term, C: N. Henry is another moll who is seeking re-election, and whom we believe should 'be 'returned, Mr. Henry is a former 'chairman " "gf the 'board, and he has been for many years one of "its most valued members. During the past year he has been unable 10 attend the meetings as regularly as in former years, but we presume his desire to re- be taken as an indication that a His good judgment and - faithful . er of the 1929 board he.is again.in a position to give the time neccssary to the position, E. A. Lovell, a former member of the board, is again offering his services in the interests of educa- tion in Oshawa. During his previous terms as a mem- ber of the board, hé served as 'chairman of several ° important committees, and displayed a marked ability and interest in kducational affairs. ence marks him as a man who will be a valuable asset to the board of education during the next two years. Several new-men are seeking election to the board, of education, and we believe one of these should be sgiven the opportunity: to serve, We respectfully sug- "gest the name of D. B. Carlyle, an outstanding young business man who appears to possess the necessary qualifications to' give valuable service on the board of education. This is the first time he has offered him- self for public office, and we believe the electors might well give him an opportunity to make a contribution to the public life of Oshawa, , The selection: of /thege four candidates, as in the selection of candidates for othér positions, does: not indicate that this: newspaper thinks the others arc unworthy 'of recognition. It merely indicates those , who, in the opinion of this newspaper, have the best - claim to the support of the clectors, having regard to all the circumstances. A GREAT EMPIRE STATESMAN It was a great privilege we had yesterday of hear- ing--and seeing--General Jan Christiaan Smuts, former Prime Minister of South Africa, great cu pire statesman and ddvocate of world peace, Here is a man against whom Canadians, with Great Britain, fought less than thirty years ago and today he is welcomed and acclaimed as a friend of the truest worth, What brought the change? . Certainly not that the forces led by General Smuts went down to defeat and were forced to make terms of peace. No one having seen and heard the doughty General would think of him as a cringing foe conquered by the might of a strong nation. Rather the impression is one converted to British ideals through personal experience of British benevolence and goodwill, And that explanation was made abundantly clear in the General's address before the Empire and Canadian Clubs in Toronto yesterday. To quote only one of many remarks clearly establishing this point: "I, with you, have lived through the most testing times of history. We have seen the carth shaken to its very Youndations. We have seen the great king- doms and the great empires of the world go down, one after the other, One structure has survived: the most complex of all, the most far-reaching, most widespread; the most coherent, the one least bound, tied up by external ties. We have seen that as the only survivor in that great holocaust. And why it survived? It has survived because it was bound, not by political ties, not by the ties of force, not by the bonds which the other empires utilized, but this was bound together by humah feeling, by ideals, by friendships, and by those things which touched us deepest in our human nature. And that is why I talk Empite--not because | am an Imperialist, but because I believe that in our group we have solved problems, we have solved a problem: which humanity has been after for thousands of years, but which is beginning to be realized in our group, and which, from pur group and by the example of our group, will gradual. ly spread and permeate until it dominates mankind, That is my faith) Believing, that the British Empire furnishes the highest example to other nations General Smuts places it first among important factors for world peace. Next he places cordial understanding and co-operation with United States, which with Cane ada, occupies the "dominant continent" Yof the world, and third he mentioned the League of Nations, model- led upon and striving for the same ideals that char- acterize the British Empire. A brief reference to the Empire's problem in In- dia, with its three hundred nyfioms of people, and 14s himself might be just the statesman who could rend- er signal service to India and the Empire in the pre- sent crisis, His background of experience as foe and as friend, as Boer and as Dritisher, and his great appreciation and understanding of the British ideals of humanity, justice and development would seem to make him an ideal representative to assist in finding a peaceful and lasting solution for India's problems, Canadians owe a great debt of gratitude to General Smuts for his visit to this Dominion and it is to be hoped that ere long he may be able to come again and establish an even closer contact with this great country, the heart of which shares with him the de- vout longing for the day when "nation shall not rise against nation, neither shall they make more." war any A BLACK EYE FOR THE LAW On this page of today's issue. of The Times there appears an editorial reprinted from the Toronto Globe, containing extensive quotations from an article pubs lished in the Kingston Whig-Standard, under the heading, "Can Mr. Price Answer?" This article has reference to the case of a motorist who, having been proven guilty of driving a car while drunk, and of criminal negligence, as the result of a serious apcident in which three prominent Oshawa citizens, iy and Mrs. F. J. Maxwell and their son, Frank, narrowly escaped with their lives, was sentenced to a term of three months in the Ontario Reformatory, The sentence in itself seemed all too light for the offence, but as if that were not enough, the informa- tion given out by the Whig-Standard is that the man was released from the reformatory after serving only about one month of his sentence, He was, according to the report, back in Kingston, a free man, before Christmas, One wonders if this is the manner in which the pro= vincial government proposes to inflict more serious penalties on motorists who endanger the lives of others by driving recklessly while in un intoxicated condition. It is claimed that the attorney-general of Ontario is urging all magistrates to impose more se- vere penalties on drunken car drivers, but what is the use of the magistrates doing anything of the kind if someone higher up is to nullify the sentences by re- leasing the convicted parties before they have served more than one third of the term imposed on them? Surely this is giving a black eye to the law which our people are asked to obey and respect. In fact, cases of this kind help a great deal to create a dis: respect for the law, and fo encourage those who care nothing for the safety and rights of their fellow-men to do just as they please, regardless of the conse- quences to others, His past expeti=. {and asked: |... Other -Editor's: Comments NAILED (Manitoba 'Free Prees) The cold fact is that in the short 'Ways 'have "Seen thelr net earnings reduced by almost fen millions. The loss of that profit has been du fo the reduction in the amount of gain: Juried, The time-worn leg- end that the Crows Nest Pass freight rates are unprofitable has been nailed Into its coffin once and for all, BRITAIN'S. WHEAT SUPPLY (Brig.-Gen, Sir Henry Page Croft in the Empire Review) (Though harvesting the finest wheat crop for man yyears in 1929 the British farmer found himself deprived of all profit by the dump- ing of hounty-fod wheat from Ger. many). The British farmer does not need a high artificial price; what he needs is a stable price which gives him an economic re- turn, The hard wheat such as comes from hte Dominions will al- ways be required in Britain but wheat which comes from Germany and other Europaen countries, or from th Aergentine, directly dis- places British grown wheat, and, if our contention is right that we can grow what we require in the British Empire, it is clear that a reasonable duty on foreign cereals | need not raise the price of bread | to the British consumer, but would | make it possible to continue to produce wheat in Britain. space of two months in the rail- | Barrie is not the only commumty 16" be" arotised over the remarkable course of justice in relation to cers tain drunken drivers. Kingston. is now the scene of an episode of which more is destined to be heard. In 4 two-column article appacrntly reflecting deep local perturbation, the Kingston Whig-Standard bluntly asks the Attorney-General to explain what appears to it to be "a flagrant miscarriage of justice," After chron. cling details 2 a particularly serious automobile crash, and the resultant trial of the drunken driver of the car responsible the Kingston paper proceeds: "On Nov. 13 he was sentenced to three months on each charge, the sentences to run concurrently, An appeal was entered but later with- drawn. . The accused spent about a week in the county jail at Napanee, and was then moved away, it 1s said to Guelph, In any event, he was back in Kingston before Christ- mas, and apparently served less than one-third of his sentence. "The. Whig-Standard would like to know why. Was this man entitled to special treatment? Further, can oth- ers convicted on similar charges in the future confidently look forward "to having their sentences remitted? If not, why not? Are we establish- ing in Ontario a law that makes fish of one lawbreaker and flesh of an- other?" The Whig-Standird cannot be de- | Bits of Humor | like school, my little man? The Little Man---I like ft closed, | lady.-- Passing: Show. FEEBLE Friendly like rain." | Collegiate----'"Yes, like KICK Bootlegger ~~ "Looks but it tastes "--~Rice | faintly yeast Owl, WHEN TO NECK "Yes, Dad, I have a chance to embrace an opportunity." "Fine, son, Give it a good hug." | --Loulsville Courier-Journal. BEGINNING OF THE END | Barbara (whose first tooth just | dropped out) --"Mummy, mummy quick! I'm coming' to pleces!'-- | Passing Show (London). | KNOWS HER CATALOGUE "Yo ucan get anything at a mall- order houge," remarked the lady next door. 'Everything, alack! but a male," sigher the old maid.--Cincinnati Enquirer, | NO REST FOR THE WICKED Disappointed Convict (back on the rock pile alter several years) -- 'Tain't altered a bit, 'as it% 1 thought after ull these years they'd have introduced somo labor-saving devices--London Opinion, 'WHEN HISTORY WAS YOUNG Teacher--Willie, do you mean to say that you can't name all the Presidents we have had? When I was your age I could name them all. Willie--Yes, but there were only thrée or four then.--Boston Globe. GHT UNSEEN Johnnic--Say,. papa, can you ® your name with your eyes closed? I'ather--Yes, my son, I can. Johnnie--Well, shut your eyes and sign your name to my report | card, THE BIGGER THEY ARE THE KINDER WE FEEL Lions are friendly if you treat | them well.--Sunday Dispatch head- ing. Personally, we have always re- sisted. ip a humane manner, our impulse to enter their cages and kick them around.---Dublin Opin- fon A QUALIFIED SON-IN-LAW Mr, Isancs---You want to mar- riage mine daughter, eh? --- vell, could you lend me trhee thousan poun's for twelve veeks mitout sec- urity? . Mr. Jacobs (readily)--Vhy, most certainly I could, Mr, Isaacs. But I vouldn't, Mr. Jsaacs--Take ber, mine son. | =Sydney ecord. y SYMPATHY | Aunt Detty was recovering from | hte flu and she was annoyed 10 | have well meaning hut tactless vis- | ftors * tell her bhadly she looked. | Sympathetic little Freddy was try- fug to comfort her. . "Don't let them make you. ftel | sorry. Aunt," he sad. "I don't think liyou look one single hit worse than you always do.' { HE WAS USED TO JOLTS There was"a head-on collision on a certain railway, and many people were Mmjured, When the wrecker arrived, says the Argonaut, the crew began to search for bodies before attempting to move any of the ears and found an old negro Pullman porter fast asleep in the wreck. The rescuers roused him "Didn't you kncyz that you were (in a eerlous wieck?" | *'No, suh, boss," be replied, "I dig ; feel sumpin' kind of jelty. 1} thought dey. was puttin'. on de | dinah." i The Secret of Happiness--Verily, verily, 1 say unto vou, The servant 1s not greater than his lord; neither he that is sent.greater than he that sent him. If ye know. these things, happy are ye if ye do them. John 13:16, 17. rayer: j - P "0 in Thy light be mine to go." | survey of the situation as follows: TO HIS TASTE | Dear Old Lady -- How do you | | | 1 | | | dications of | would be partly sone and you thus scribed as unfriendly to the Fergu- son Government. After the election on Oct, 30 it summed up its own during the "Premier Ferguson stringent campaign promised more regulation in regard to the liquor traffic and severer sentences on jn ken drivers, These pronuses, we Jeel sure, had a considerable cffect upon the votes of the temperance people of this Province, of which ne undoubtedly got the larger share. The drunken driver on the highways is the greatest meance which Ontario faces today, and the people of the Provinge expect that when men are convicted on such charges they will be sentenced to jail, and, further more, that their sentences will he carried out. There must be no in- nite proof of the sincerity of the Fe:- guson Government in its desire to improve conditions under the Liquor Old Mose Parker was pretty sici and the darky doctor promptly put him to bde and laid down all s of rules and regulations as to ¢ and diet. turned to his wife and complained' | minutes is quite another question. "Mandy, how does dat dere fool | HARD TO DO { doctor recken ah's gwine to- eat : | breast of chicken ebery day if ah ha t got mah ebenin's free?" ris | "People will do anything now: p ito save a few minutes, though w After he had gone, Mose | what they mean to do with those few by ~Cyril No wood. Control Act, and we commend it to those other temperance people who heretofore have been inclined merely to find fault with the Act and to do nothing constructive in the way of help."" : What obyiously arouses the indig- nation of the Kingston paper is the | fact that the letter of the Attorney General, referred to above, and the serious offense in gmestion were nearly simultaneous. "The concluding paragraph of the Whig-Standard's editorial article is too pointed to be overlooked either by the Attorney-General or the peo- pl at larg. It says: "What the people of Ontario have a right to expect from the Attorney General's Department of the Pro. vince of Ontario is even-handed jus- tice. In Canadian courts the hum- blest immigrant, without friends or influence, has a right confidently to expect exactly. the same treatment as a wealthy millionaire or a political boss. And this same even-handed justice should also obtain after sen. tence has been passed. That is the British system of which we are all so proud, and that is the only sys- tem that will retainrespect for jus- tice in this Province. The interfer- ence by the Attorney-General with sentences pronounced by the Judges of the land; the moving of prisoners from county jails to which they are sentenced to places where others can shorten their sentences; the allowing of people sentenced to jail to b take mg the proper carrying out of the jaws of the land, will simply make of 1 ul to hospitals, and other ways of evad- | J hE i byword. If the Attorney-General is sincere in his desire to rid this Pro- vince of its deadlicst menacc--the drunken driver--then let him see that | Magistrates and Judges are given a free 'hand, and that their sentences | are carried out without interference | from any In this way, 1 in this way only, can be built up confidence in our courts, and in tins way onyl can the Attorney-General iessen accidents on our high : the faith of the public in the hor ty and fearlessness of every bran | justice in Ontario a hissing and :| | source, favoritism or political} in such matters, or the will be rude | mterference confidence of the public ly shattered." Recalling the above remarks, the| journal concerned points out that on Nov. 8 it commended the Attorney-| General in the following terms: "In addition, Attorney-General Price has already written to. all Ma- | gistrates bringing forcibly to their) attention the severity of penalties | that.can be inflicted upon drunken | drivers, while at the same time there | is' forecast stiffer penalties in this connection "Here, then, is tangible and defi- of the Attorney-General's ment must not be weakened, un we want to breed in this Provinec| a race of "scofflaws" and gangsters." | Mr, Price rgfused to make planation of the recent rer procedure in a case concerting an al- legedly drunken driver at Jarric The Attorney-General chose to ig- nore public disquiet at that time as| deliberately as he ignored during the | last clection his own astounding mis- | takes regarding the numbers of | drunken drivers, He cannot, how- ever, well ignore the Kingston "i er's questions in a casc so serious as | that concerned. | | | I 1 | | ~ That | Body | of. Pours | By James W. Barton, M.D. | DON'T EAT WHEN THE MIND 18 DISTURBED YT have spoktn before about the | caso of Birchall ti» murd rer, who | ate three full meals during his | trial, continued to eat them after | he was sentenced to be hanged, and even on the morning of his execu- tion ate a hearty meal, And when the autopsy was made, | a little over an hour after he was | banged, it was found that the food | liad been digested in the stomach | and had entered the small intes- | tine, | Why was this man able to eat| reguiarly and Heartily up to the | very 'hour of his death? { Siniply because he was absolute- | ly free from emotion. He had plan- | ucd this murder in England, went out to Canada with his victim, and put his plan into action in a cool methodical manner. Now you and I are not buflt like that, We have oir periods of joy. gorrow, anger and distress, As a youngster you were advised that when you werz mad you were not t~ say or 7 anything "until you had counted up to one hundred slowly. By this time your 'madness' avoided doing something for which you would likely have been sorry. It would be a wise proceeding if when you are mad. angry or wor ried, or under any emotional strain if you would simply let the meal hour pass without eating than to take food into the stomach. Over thirty vearg ago Dr. W. I. | Cannon discovered in his experi- | ments with animals that the slight- | est uneasiness, discomfort or ang- er, oxperienced by the animals, | would immediately stop all move- ments of the stomach and Intes- tines. And that is Just what: occurs with us when we are disturbed in our minds, The natural jmpulses sent by the brain wich ¢ .rin3 regula* movements to the stomach, thus churning up the food, and other impulses to the intestine, moving food downward, simply do not come, This means t:at the food you take in the stomacl remains there and. ferments because it does not get stirred and mixed with the di gestive juice of the stomach, ! Aud similarly with food in small' intestine undergoing digestion and absorption into the blood. It res mains. stationary and causes Sas distension. Further ,the waste in the large intestine with no movements be- hind it, permits the blood to absorb. these polsonois wastes nto itself. You can readi'y sea then that you should. be like the boy who is mad; walt awhile, Walt until you are calm before you eat even if you have to miss a meal, | And then with a sickening frown, Bits of Verse || "WHEN SHE WON'T START" Of all the things aggravatin' 'The worst of the vorst ones by far-- | I know you'll agree completely with | me=- Is when you can't start the old car. You start out the day with a whistle, A lilt of a song in your hcart--- But I'm here to say, it ruins day v When the motor refuses to start, your You climb in and step on the starter, A good-natured look on your mug then give 'er the gas--but shucks and alas 25 Albert Street Why Burn More Money | Than Neccesary ?- You Are Saving it by Buying Fuel at the F. ollowing Prices Terms -- Net Cash $ 8.75 per : 12.00 per ton Genuine 15.00 per ton Scranton 15.00 per ton Anthrac'te 15.50 per ton LONEST 12.50 per ton WEIGHT $4.00 per 'Ys; Cord $4.00 per Load $3.75 per load BUCKWHEAT ton PEA .. NUT .. STOVE OTTO COKE ... No. 1 Body Hardwood, dry Hardwood Factory Cuttings, dry Hardwood Slabs, dry CL TTT TTT T YAR PETE TN PRICE -- QUALITY -- QUANTITY -- SERVICE W. J. TRICK COMP NY LIMITED Phone 230, 231 Travel The King's Highway Daily Coach Service OSHAWA ~ TORONTO FARE~-85¢ LEAVE OSHAWA LEAVE TORONTO (Standard Time) P.M. AM. 3.30 d7.30 4.30 8.30 5.30 9.30 25 10.30 . 11.20 8.30 P.M. 9.30 10.30 12.30 1.30 c11.15 2.30 c~Sunday P.M. 3.30 4.30 5.30 6.30 7.30 8.30 9.30 10.30 11.30 AM. d7.00 d7.30 '8.30 9.30 10.30 11.30 P.M. 12.30 1.30 2.30 d--Daily except Sunday. only. Coach connections at Toronto for Barrie, Orillia, Midland, Schomberg, Orangeville, Brantford, Ham- ilton, Niagara Falls, Buffalo and intermediate points. Coach connections at Buffalo for a!l U.S.A. points. Tickets and intormation at GRAY COACH LINES Hotel Oshawa OSHAWA Phone 2825 You don't get so much as a chug. And then you get just*a bit anxious, As well as a little bit sore-- .. ..| You choke 'er, and then step on 'er gam, And still she's as dead as before. And so you keep grindin' the starter, And sore as a bear, you're sadly aware You're running the battery down. By now, you are rantin' and ravin'-- And soon, with a blankery-blank, You rise to your feet, and liftin' the cat, You snarlingly haul out the crank. And this is the start of the picnic-- You crank and you snort and you wheeze, And turn cr until you're pale at the gill, And trembly and weak at the knees. Well, that 1s the end of the story-- For now I am' pantin' for breath, But had [ the cuss who sold me this bus, By golly, I'd do him to Death. --Charles S. Kinnison, "» 4 J djd not expoet to cash in on dividends ¢r ' 1 a year, or two years or even ten years. It was a case of constantly keeping at it, taking a lot of pleasure and enjoyment out of my work, and in tho eafly days of my "business va- cation was net in my vocabulary. Each day brought something new ang it was a perpetual pleasure. Naturally, under these circum- stances, my business had grown un. til it has become one of the largest of its kind in the world. In the formula to bring this about, how: ever, there has been no magic, but plenty of lutk, The luck, however, consists in hard work and fairly well directed efforts. ; ANY YOUNG MAN. WITH AVER. GE INIELLIG INCE AND PLEN- TY OF® "STICK-TO-ITIVENESS" CAN DO LIKEWISE. ' "The recognition of a danger 1s the first step towards escape from it." - ==Erich Maria Remarque, StoBiE-FORLONG 8 STOCKS BONDS GRAIN Office: Reford Buil AND WELLINGTON STS S. F. EVERSON, Local Manager Private Wire System 17 KING STREET EAST, OSHAWA Phones 143 and 144 TTI, as a NO COMI ROMISE WITH QUALITY "Tr'fles make perfection, but perfection is no trifle." To Michelangelo -- four cen- turies ago -- goes credit for this famous observation. Yet his words are as true today, And how well they apply to quality in building materials. ; Often the little things are the final guarantee of better materials and lasting qualities. Whatever your requirements -- whatever your ideals -- you'll find the qual'ty here, at reasonable cost. Oshawa Lumber COMPANY LIMITED 25 Ritson Road North TELEPHONE 2821.2820 EN i, i a aa A