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Oshawa Daily Times, 27 Jan 1930, p. 4

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PAGE FOUR THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY; JANUARY 27, 1930 Che Oshawa Baily Times Soesseding : THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER yp independent sewspaper published every afternoon except Sundays and legs! bolidsys st Oshpwa Canads by Mundy Printing Company. Limited: Chas M Maundy, President; A R Alloway. Sec rotary. The Oshows Daily Times is s member of the Cass. disu Press. the Canadian Daily Newspagers Ase socstion. The Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Awdit Buresv or Tlreslations SUBSCPIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier. 15c » week By wail in Caneds (outside Oshawe carrier delivery timits). $4.00 vear; United States $5.00 » year ; _ TORONTO OFFICE $9? Bond Building. 66 Iemperance Street, Telephone Adelaide 0107 HD [residder, representative REPRESEN1ATIVES IN U 8. Povers and Stone, Inc. New York end Chicago . MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1930 THE WELFARE ASSOCIATION The Oshawa Associated Welfare Societies, organ~ jzed shortly before the clode of the year 1929 with. the aim of co-ordinating relick and welfare work mn the city, has already found a very useful place in . the community. Its work, even in the brief period of its existence, has morc than justified its forma- tion, for through its headquarters organization, and the societies affiliated with it, the Association has been able to alleviate a great deal of the distress which has been prevalent in tht city. While the worst is not yet over, the relict situation has become somewhat ea ier with the and there are hopes that within the conditiot i at opening up of industry, new month or ast be back lo normal, "Where will still, however, be much work - for Associated Welfare Socicties to du in Oshawa. An ny ramifications ii the organization of this kind has ma it truly performs its functions, The giving of relief ere are other directions g permanent betterment « city which arc in need is a temporary measure. Th in which it can work to bri to many of the hom of it. For instance, there is a wide field of work in the ction of helping in the solution of home prob- The investiga s oi the last month or two have disclosed the fact that food and fuel are the least of' the necessities in many homes. A sympa- thetic, guiding hand in home management is needed in scores of cascs, cases which, by this kind of as- sistance, would be kept off the lists for temporary relief 'by the kindly interest of a welfare workers There are many homes in which there are troubles that could be straightened out with the aspistance of the welfare association, so that home life could be made brighter, sweeter and better, And in accoms= plishing . that, the welfare societies would be doing work of a more lasting benchit than by simply pro- viding fuel, 100d and clothing. : There is the question of mursiilg service, too, which might well come within the scope of the welfare so- cieties. The city has, of course, ity 'public health service, with its public health nurses, That service lLiowever, is largely of a preventative and advisory nature, and does not include home nursing, such as is done, for imstances, by organizations such as the Victorian Order of Nurses, whose representatives go into the honves and give actual nursing service where there is sickness. This is a service which might very well come within the scope of the Asscoiated Welfare Societies as one branch of its 'activities. The Associated. Welfare 'Societies, too, prevent families from requiring reliei during periods of temporary unempioyment. this, of course; would entail the employment of a permanent welfare worker different from the city's social welfare worker, to go into fhe 'homes of families where assistance is re quired in providing proper living conditions and 'pro- | per management of the family finances. This might seem lke carrying the work of the organization a little t6o far; yet, in many cases, such help would be welcomed, 'for the memory of the hard months of this winter will linger fora long time if tlie minds of many sufferers who would not be averse to hav- ing their conditions improved. From these suggestions, it will be seen that there is much which the Asscciated Welfare Societies can do in. Oshawa besides providing food, fuel and clothing, THe needs oi-many familics go much deep- or than that, and 'if the organization caw help: to orovide bettes living standards and conditions for i y ill be accomplishing, muck' * lems. might , ~wedhose families, then it w for the good of the city, == WELCOMING AN INDUSTRY The plans which, are being awa Chamber of Commerce, opening of its factory here are highly commendable. The coming of such an industfy to Oshawa mans a great deal to thie city, particularly at a time when there has been a more or le the community. It is 'not often that a large, ready-made industry, capable of giving em- ployment to Jarge numbers of men, and the cvent is worthy of notice. ; Those who have been observing the progress of the factory building on the Skinner property on Simcoe Street South must have been impressed with the size and the nature of the building, Eyen to the unskilied eye, it gives promise of big things. Its size alone is sufficient to indicate that it will provide considerable employment, and will inake a substane tial contribution to the'city's welfare, It will, in time, 'be one of the importapt factors of the continued + growth of Oshawa, and will help in the development 'of that section of Oshava which lies ta the south 2 the railway tracks. And there is every reason to believe, too, that it will act as an impetus to other : a made, through the Osh- fo extend an official" welcome 'to 'the Skinner Companys Limited, on the epressed, feeling in. a city receives, | new industries' to locate on the city's industrial area adjoining the plant. - It is important, too, to note that there is ample room, on the Skinner property, for extensions of the plant should that become necessary. It is -the sin. cere hope and wish of the whole of the community of Oshawa that this new industry will prosper iu this city, that it will expand in business and in size until it takes ity place with the: big industries of: the city, There is every reason to believe thatiit will meet with success here, and with thad wish: and Hope in mind, the civic reception will doubtless be of such 2 nature as to leave no doubt in the minds of the principals of the company' that they are'indeed wel- come newcomers to Oshawa. . ) THE POPPY FUNDS Within the last week or two, Toronto Has been contributing thousands of dollars to replenish the Poppy Fund, a fund which was raised in the first week of November, and which is used to provide the necessities of life for Great War veterans who, by veason of broken down health and unemployment, are in great need. So great has been the demand on the fund in Toronto that it required an immediate sub- scription of $25,000 to enable those in charge of its distribution to carry on the work, and to the credit of the people of Toronto, theré is now little doubt that the required $25,000 wlil be forthcoming. Toronto, however, is not the only city in. which the Poppy Funds have been depleted by the demands 'of this winter. In Oshawa, the total of the fund raised in November was $200 greaer than it was in the previous year. Yet, so great has bgen the need for assistance of war veterans, largely through ifl- ness, that the fund is now practically gone. While in past years it has been possible to make the. fund last for the twelve months period from November to November, this year it has been practically exhausted in less than three months, This. is evidence of the growing need of many ex- service men for assistance in caring for their homes and families. Disabilities growing greater as years go by} men breaking down because of their powers of resistance to disease being impaired by war ser- vice can be considered as the chief reason why the {Pappy Funds are being so quickly exhausted. The Oshawa Branch of the Capadian Legion, which ad- minjsters' the fund in Oshawa, has good reason to know of this growing need, and it looks with tre- pidation to the next nine months, during, which it will have no funds with which to cate for the war veterans who are in need of its help. Well may its officers wish for a helping hand from the citizens of Oshawa, such as has been given to the Toronto Poppy Fund by the people of that city, WHY THE DIFFERENCE The sentence of fourteen years imprisonment, part of that time with hard labor, imposed on an Englisl» financier found guilty of fraud, brings into the lime- light the severity with which such offences are re- garded and punished in Great Britain, It serves to show a reflection, too, on' the comparatively light sentences which have been imposed in several sim- ilar cases in this country in which large sums of , money, not so large, perhaps, as in the English case, but large enough to make the offenct serious, have béen involved. . One can even make further comparison in deal- ing with this subject, Therc seems to be too keen a desire, on the part of prosecuting authorities in this coantry, to differentiate between the thief who breaks into a bank, for instance, and steals money, and the thief who steals it by deirauding his fellow- men. In cach case, theft has been committed, but while the one man is tried for robbery or theft, the other is tried for fraud or embezzlement. Under these circumstances, the man who robs a store or bank of $1,000 is liable to receive a much more sc- vere. punishment than the man who, by preying on the confidence of his fellow-men, steals hundreds of thousands. of dollars by fraud. Surely the latter of- femce is, at least, as serious as the former in its nature, and much more serioue because of the amount of money involved, and the amount of suffering caused to the victims, Thege have been some recent cases in Ontario svhich have emphasized this. For instance, two men were found guilty of fraud involving hundreds of thousands of dollars. They received terms of six years and two and a half years in. the penitentiary. Yet a man who stole $200 worth of goods from a small store at Beaverton, was sentenceg to three years in the penitentiary. And many other cascs could be cited of men who, By barc-faced. robbery, have been sentenced to terms of from ten to.twenty years imprisonment. In some respects, the man who defrauds trusting and unsuspecting people of all their savings is much worse a criminal than the man who breaks into a bank and steals a few thousand dollars. Yet, because the former's crime may be dignified by a name other than that of theft, he is allowed to escape with a much lighter punishment. There is something entirely wrong with laws which operate to make this possible, and it is time that cases of theit, fio matter by what methods the theft is committed, be treated as such, so that the financier who robs his fellow-citi by d tion may be treated with 14 just as much scverity as the man who robs openly. EDITORIAL NOTES G: A. MgQuibban has been appdinted. Liberal whip- in the Ontario Eegislature. He cannot, however, complain that he has been®given a heavy task. + + Thinking is the hardest work there is, says Henry : d. * Probably that is why so few people cngage in it. ' | One often hears of canned heat these, days, but 'no one has' yet discovered how to can the heat of 'summer' 0 that it can be used in winter, Alimony insurance has been established in Chicago. What that city needs is insurance against municipal bankruptey. The man wha is' really worthy of a place at the top of the ladder never forgets those who helped him to climb, There are many governments which would like to be able to treat its opposition in the same way as the Soviet government of Russia, which uses the execution method to silence dts critics, Faith, hope and parity seems to be the motto of 'the London naval conference, Other Editor's Comments . THE IN.BETWEENS (Dean Inge) Most of the tragedies in this world are caused by the actions of people who are neither wholly right nor wholly wrong, YR 1 OPTIMISM . (Ottawa Citizen) As a doh ge example of the tri- gmoh of hope over nce we raw your attention to the story from Atlantic City yesterday which told of an $18-a-week mill worker with 11 $ ges trying to find, a aoluti ol 1s domesti problems marrying a widow with 13 children, -- : WAR ON CIVILIANS (Port Arthur News-Chronicle) In discussing the "next war," Gen- eral Smuts said recently : "Our next war--i fact, all wars of the future, 'are going to be un- speakably: barbarous, It will not be between armies and navies, but will be waged upon civil populations, with gas bombs and bacteria. You won't go for your enemies, but for their women and children. Chivalrous war --~war of glamor and show and tests of 'metal--that's all gone." What General Smuts pictures is a relapse of civilization, inte 4 condi- tion of gross barbarism and savagery in -which all-decceney. and honor, all humane impulses, all consideration for the inoffensive and the weak will die, and man will sink into: a condition of depravity, and become a mere mon. ster. - Unquestionably man has been much like that in many parts of the world throughout a greater part of his history, and it. certainly is con- ceivable that hie may become ' like that again. But most of us will at least hope that the General is over pessimistic and that some bleams of is capable will continue to show through the murkiness, even the next world war arrives, Bits of Humor | QUICK TURNOVER Herbert--"Arthur hasn't been cut one night for three weeks." Flora--"Has he turned over a new leaf "No; he's turned oves --Answers, EDISONIAN EVOLUTION Hush, little golden rod Don't you cry~ You'll be a b'loon tire By and by. Buffalo Evening New SURE FIRE Success Expert -- "What's y name ? : Greek Client--"Gus Poppapopupo- pulos." Success Expert--"Get a job selling motoreyeles,"--Masonic Craftsman. WELL-EARNED FAME Bill Shakespeare, then of the graving department at the New York American, was accosted by one of the big shots of the outfit on a tour of inspection, "Let 'me see," let-me-see'd the exe cutive, "what is your name, again?" "William Shakespeare, sir," replied Bill. "Um, quite a well-known name, ch?" "Oughto be," said "I've been around here years "=The Mirror WHY GEOGRAPHERS LEAVE HOME a4 new car Jur Bill twenty-five Waiter--"Are you Hungary?" Broker--*"Yes, Siam." Waiter--"Den Russia tc and I'll Fiji." Broker-"All right, Sweden my coffee and Denmark my bill."--Ken- nebec Journal. the table Bits of Verse BITS OF VERSE Clad in glistening armour, Polished by the sun, You stood like mail-clad soldiers; Yet, ere the day was done, Mau, the old despoiler Had slain you, cvery one. You, on the field of battle, All white with winter's snow; Lie calm and still--defeated, Dear Lord, why let them go? No longer in the springtime Your verdure will appear To grace the place I love go well No longer will 1 hear The feathered choir leaves, Praising God in song; No more that hit of Heaven To cheer my life alone, Ethel A, Frame, . THF. WINDOW BOX (By Marion Isabel Angus) among your | T feared the long, grey winter days With my flower comrades fled I took a box and painted it A brilliant, scarlet red. Bulbs there I placed and watched them grow Into a lily bed, And joy was mina as gailv bloomed, Each white and dainty head. Like perfumed breeres from the south Their .vresence filled mv room, And in the dusk each white head shone Like brioht stars through the. gloom? Awed by that miracle of vrowth Life springing from earth's wbmb, I auite forrot tha vanished spring, Nor heeded winter's doom, CHRIST FOR MeimALL VOR SE hr RR + » Our ¥Friend--Greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down his life for bis friends. Ye | are my friends, if ye do wuutso- ever I command you.--~John 16: ' . "I've found Frond 0 suc nd a ¥riend, Friend! yeh 8 He loved me ere I knew Him.* the better impulses*of which the race! »| patient en- | brightly. | { { |" M.F. RIBLETT, ADYERTIS. ING SANAGER OF THE DEN. VER (COLORADO) ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS, SAYS: "THAT 1930 will reward far-sight- ed advertisers who have the courage fo cut out waste, Waste in mpiling lists; waste in circulation; waste in outdoor advertising and waste in ra- dio. . The = smart advertiser who cashes in will be the one who gives more study "to buying , adyertising where it has a real chance of doing a 'good. job, THE SUCCESSFUL ADVER- PEND. MORE BEGINNING OF THE SEASON- TO SELL MERCHANDISE WHEN IT 18 NEW AND WHEN, HE CAN 'SELL IT AT A PROFIT. HE WILL SELECT ADVERTISING MEDIUMS THAT CAN CARRY THIS MESSAGE WITH THE LEAST POSSIBLE WASTE CIRCULATION. HE WILL, MAKE HIS COPY "SELL -- -- NOT YELL. That Bovy of By James W Barton, M.D. ! AN X-RAY DURING PAIN | When & patient pain in the it is often diTi to understand the e | tho pain. A | sharp, jPreStasring | If in th complains of stomach intestine ilt for the doctor act nautre of pain can be dull or 'griping,' burning, crampy, and so forth. region of the heart, the the idea that he aliment, or mo*y ret { has some heart | 1 have | who thouzht 1 heart which | tually burst | this feeling hyn! poken bef ¢ about a chap he had an enlarged felt as if it would ac- through hig chest, A a8 not always present { his p! advized him that it | was Vy pressure, | By the use of the X-ray or fluor- | and « mirror the patient was able to see the beating of his heart, | and that it was of normal size, By simply bending from side tc | side he was able to dislodre the Bas and it came upwards out of month, The fact that able to see th very time that heart wrs fear of an enlarged Now it is rather that when attacks of pain occur the that the is not examined immediatley by the X-ray so that more learnen | of what is actually happening, Dr E. Unger, Vienna, points out that bit 18 generally difficult to find the patient's and what is found scope he was 4 18 ball at | he felt that heart unfortunate abdomen patient can he pain | cause the X-ray examination take | place after the patient ha been | without food for some time, and | everything is 'quiet.' It is now generally believed that most pain in stomach and intost- | Ines is due to the muscular action | of walls of stomach and intestines | He reports lis observations 'n | three cases in which an X-ray ex- | amination was made during attacke | o,4 inspection and most stringent en- | | of 'burning' pain, pain caused by | was pressure, and pain duc to gal | stones. . It you have an ulcer or cancer, | the X-ray examination will reveal the condition any time, but the method of getting an X ray during an attack of pain should help your physician in his c¢fforts to help Strain by C. H. TUCK, Opt.D. { (Copyright 1821) | NYSTAGMUS -- PART "1" | | | 3 There arc some who will be. quite familiar with what 1 have to say, {but 1 trust that the observations fol. {lowing may be of interest to all. It is not my intention to dispute thc accompanying statements, but I refer to them here and we should keep these things constantly'in mind yet not to such an cxtent as will over. rule the opportunity to improve 2a | condition when the opportunity of- 1s. fe "A special forin becurs in miners {and others who work in constrained attitudes and with defective Igiht. In the latter cases, change of occupa- tion may produce a cure, hut there is nothing to be done in the way of | treatment for the others." | "Other forms of Nystagmus are not | amenable to treatment, and the cor- rection of co-existing refractive er- rors will be found unsatisfactory." "The usual infantile 'cases are not amenable to treatment, though the ! condition sometimes (becomes less | marked with advancing yedrs; the | correction of errors of refraction may be of some benefit." Many eye conditoins are but sec- ondary to some more remote cause, but when we cain remove the cause the condition must change, and as-- "Every institutibn must justify its claim to existence year by year, by its fruits, it is so we arc judged." Bours | hia his | actually | the | his | larged removed all his | in| during the X ray cxamipation, be- | THERE IS NO SET RULE FOR INVESTING MONEY HERE are certain classes of securities which are always sound but, in most cases, the desirability of an investment depends upon the circumstances of the investor and existing money in any investment list: Province of Saskatchewan We recommend these as sound securities which ih be included 59, Bonds, due Dec. 2, 1959 Price: 100, yielding §% Beauharnois Power Corporation 6% Collateral Trust Bonds Price: 100, yielding 6%, T. Eaton Realty Co. Limited 59, First Mortgage Bonds Price: 95.21, yielding 5.40%, HE sensible course in money matters, as in legal matters, is to obtain careful judgment, based on study and experience. T is part of our business to submit advice and opinion regarding the selection of investments, and our readi- ness to do so is not influenced by the smallness or largzness of the sum involved. MONTREAL WINNIPEG VANCOUVER F. J. REDDIN, Representative Telephone: 2800 DoMINIoN SECURITIES (ORPORATION LIMITED. ESTABLISHED 1001 Head Office: TORONTO, 26 King Street E. TORONTO NEW YORK LONDON, ENG. 23 Simcoe Street North Oshawa, Ontarie ALBERTA FARMERS AGAINST TAVFRY | Pleb'scite Asking For Abol- tion of Beer Parlor Recommended IMMIGRATION AIRED | Farm Body Declares Policy | Of Ass'sting Settlers | Futile . 27. Calgary, Alta, Jan. 27.--Disappro- val of the beer parlor was given ex- pression at the annual convention of the United Farmers of Alberta, Af- ter a lengthy discussion involving a wide range of opinion, the farm body recommended to the provincial gov- ernment "that a plebiscite be subnut- | ted to the electorate. asking for abo- lition of the beer parlor." addition the meeting « ing immigration into reaffirmed its belief in ti.. prin- ciple of the rural school act intro- duced by Hon. Perren Baker, Alberta ister of Education, and urged that in the interests of education it | be put into operation just as soon as | practicable, | * Fostered by proponents of the pre- sent beer parlor system, a substitute | resolution for the original plebiscite | request was rejected by a vote of 174 | to 212. Under the substitute resolu- | tion the Government would have been | asked to exact more rigid supervision nosed nda } | forcement of laws governing beer par- | lors. V/ Henry Wise Wood, president of the | U.F.A, took the floor in opposition to | an amendment to the request for a { plebiscite which would have specified | that the referendum should be held { at the next provincial clection, "I think such a move would, be a tre- { mendous mistake," he said. "Don't | mix a question ol morality with a | question of politics." Asks Amendment "A minor resolution, touching on the present system of local option for beer parlors, asked an amendment of the provincial act. Approved, the resolution suggested legislation to make it illegal for any person' out- side the local option area to be pre | sent on the poll premises, take part or otherwise influence the result on | the day the vote 1s taken, In opposing assisted immigration, the Alberta body supported the stand taken by the United Farmers of Manitoba at their annual convention two weeks ago, The resolution passed without" debate by the F.A, was identical with that approved recently by the women's section of the orga- nization. It held that all immigration shoidd co-operate with the provinces with a view to bringing in only such immigrants as could be uscfully as- similated; and that all immigration should be strictly selective, based on racial possibilities of assimilation. The. preamble of the resolution con- tended that the policy of assisted im- migration has proved futile and has not resulted in the anticipated in- crease in population. v : The serious unemployment situa- 'tion now faced by Alberta and its municipalities was brought on by the immigration policy at present In operation, according to a committee report read before passage of the re- solution. It was pointed out that at present 2,000 destitute men are regis- tered with. Alberta police, of whom about one-half are eligible for depor- tation. These men are being kept from starving, the report said, by pro- vision of work for the single men by the province, and for married men at. the expense of the cities of Ed- wonton and Calgary. Support necessary Popular support is necessary for the success of the proposed new Rural School Act, stated Hon, Per- ren Baker, its originator. He men- tioned that the plan was simply a piece of educational machinery which must be operated by the people them selves, and he dadded that there must | be evidence of popular support be- | fore the Alberta Government is con- | vinced it could be given a fair trial Under the Boker Act, hiring and | paying of teachers, would, be placed {mn the hands of a larger area than | the present school district, though though the school district would con- | tinue to operate the physical machin- | ery as at present . Referring to intention, under the | proposed act, to spread the school ta burden more even and bearably over) the province, Mr, Baker labelled the | act 2s a nearer approach to eqfiality | of cost burden as well as to equality | of opoortunity for the child, | suver $ed,u) damages: against the VERDUN IS NAMED IN $25,000 ACTION {Former Paymaster Claim: | Damages For Alleged Libel Montreal, Jan. 27.--An' action ta GETS GREETINGS FROM CANADA'S PRIME MINISTER Smith's Falls, Ont, Jan. 27.--~The thrill of receiving personal birthday grectings from Canada's Prime Min: ister has been experienced 'by 10- vear-old Stewart Jones. The birth- days of Hon. William Lyon MacKeu: zie King and little Stewart fell on the same day--December 17 -- and there by hanks a tale. . When Stewart fearned, in the course of his school lessons, that the premier too had first seen the light on Dec. 17, he wrote.a letter to Mr, King pointing out their common bond and expressing best birthday wishes. A return letter soon came to Master Jones, in the Premier's own hand writing, congratulating him on his initiative and conveying personal | An attempt to substitute. a resolu- |Lity of Verdun was started yester- the vote on division was rather even- recent shakeup of the aoministration plan, but opposed its enactment until | claim against the bonding company | suggested alterations were increased | securing another position of trust, records and supervisors' reports, and | ing misappropriation on his pars cessary, and imposition of the burden | pany. In this letter the city alleged payable to city employees and him: | It was claimed by the plaintiff is i | UNEMPLOYMENT Verdun from June 15, 1929 until De. | Effects of Street |¢ ompany had guaranteed his honest; Says 1 } Leader I notice received by him, from Mayor missed. The plaintiff claimed this the next two or three. months in| Further, Mr. Wilson contended ternational Brotherhood of Book [teux to write a letter to the bonding left Monday for Washington, the company would be held responsible street, ho said, there has been. a | insisted that the facts were known by hit and of course luxuries to an |auditors was approved by the coun ar scattered throughout all parts of borhood of 1,600,000. He added and Germany to check up aceur Tho biggest problem for justment of the {nmovations caused tions are such that many men are It will rot be until tho latter any marked improvement, Thea place all round. ference in London is a success Aas greetings for m many happy birthdays, | tion for that favoring early enact- [day by Walter Wilson, former pag- ment of the Baker bill failed, though | master who was discharged during'a ly divided. The substitute motion ap- | Hc entered suit for libel on the proved the principle of the Baker |grounds tha® by making an illegal cffect had been tested of several al-|waich had bonded him as paymaster terations in the present system, The |tac city had damaged his chances of supervision; establishment of a cen-| Wilson filed suit after his demand tral bureau for indexing of teachers'|that the city retract a letter claim: increase of equalization grants to {which was written to the United weaker districts where considered ne- | states Fidelity and Guarantee Com: | of both urban and rural districts. that Wilson while acting as paymas- | jie for Verdun, had signed cheques | | selt without authority, totalling $30, | his deposition filed yesterday, that he was in the employ of the City of { |cember 3, 1929, as paymaster. The ! | United States Fidelity & Guarantes Wall | y {in the discharge of his duties. Os | Crash Not Fully Reached, |Dccember 3, he was suspended by | Allen and two days later, by resolu tion of the City Council, he was dis Montreal, Jan, 27.-~Unemploy-|action to be based on allegations ment will be more pronounced in|which are false in fact. the Unitea States is the opinion of | hut on December 24, the city in- John B. Haggarty, president of the | structed its solicitor, Francis Faw Binders. Mr. Haggarty, who has|company claiming that Wilson had "een in. Montreal for several days, | misused the civic funds and that the headquarters of the union. for the amount, These statement: Ever since the crash In Wall | were false, the plaint'fi stated an¢ ~eneral recession of business. [the council, and moreover, the book: Heavy industries have been hard were audited and the report of the even greater degree he remarked |i' He asked for trial by jury and The unemployed, he estimated wel, be represented by R. L. Calder 7, Bi the United States and he believed that the total must be ia the neigh- htat there is a great nced of & system such as exists i Britam | ately the numbers of unemployed at any given time. the workers of the North American continent, is for an equitable ad- by the introduction of labor saving devices. At present ,he said, condl- being laid off when they reach the age of 45 or 60. part of the year, according to Mr. Haggart), that business will show he expects to see the stock mar ket pick up and a recovery take Good should come, however, ho asserted if the disarmament con- it will rolease millions of dollars for rational work. StopiE-ForLoNGe @. STOCKS BUNDS GRAIN ry S. F. EVERSON, Local Manager Private Wire System 17 KING STREET EAST OSHAWA Phones 143 and 144

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