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Oshawa Daily Times, 1 Mar 1930, p. 4

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5 i i E i | i | i | ' i ! i § | \ Cs 384 on / } i i } i: i i PAGE FOUR THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1930 Chr Oshawa Baily Times 4 Succeeding THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) An independent newspaper published avery afternoon except Sundays and legal ho days at Oshawa, Canada, by [lhe Fimes Printing Company, Limited. "Chas 'M. Mundy, President; A. R. oway, Sec- retary. . The Oshawa Daily Times is a member of the Canadian Press, the Canadian Daily News- papers: Association, the Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Bureau of Circulations SUBSCRIPTION RATES elivered by carrier, 15c a week. By mail in Canada (outside Oshawa carrier delivery limits) $4.00 a year; United States, $5 00 a year. i 5 } { ! i i | TORONTO OFFICE 407 Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street. Telephone Adelaide 0107. H. D. Tresidder, representative. REPRESENTATIVES IN US.' Powers and Stone Inc., New York and Chicago SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1930 A DISAPPOINTMENT -- AND A HOPE There will be much disappointment in Oshawa because of the fact that no allows ance has been made in the federal estimates for improvement work, other than dredging, at the Oshawa Harbor. The estimate of $50,000, as announced, looked encouraging, until it. was found that this included $34,000. of the amount voted last year, and not used, and that the only new amount included was $16,000 provided to complete the "work of dredging, for which the contract was let last fall, and on which a certain amount of work has already been done. This means, that, although the harbor and the channel will be dredged, there will be no allowance for the harbor works which are necessary to complete this development. As Mayor Mitchell pointed out in an inter- view yesterday, there are certain manufac- turing concerns which are anxious to locate in Oshawa, but cannot come unless the har- bor development is completed this year. That, of course, implies the completion of the docking and wharfage facilities which are essential to the proper use of a harbor, and there is no indication in the estimates that anything is to be done towards these. The fact that the main estimates do not include provision for this phase of the har- bor development, however, does not mean that nothing will be done. It will be re- called that last year there was no provision at all for Oshawa harbor in the main esti- mates, and that it was only after Mayor Mitchell had visited Ottawa and placed Osh- awa's case before the minister: of public works that the vote of $50,000 was placed in the main estimates. There is just a possibility, of course, that & similar line of action may be followed this year. It is certain, however, that it will not 'be done unless there is strong pressure from this end. It is essential, therefore, that the City Council and Chamber of Commerce get together in this matter, and take immediate steps to press the needs of Oshawa's harbor upon the government, so that the comple- tion of the harbor development may not be delayed unduly. \ EVERY MEMBER'S DUTY The annual general meeting of the Osh- awa Chamber of Commerce is being held on Tuesday evening of next week. Public an- nouncement has heen made of the arrange- ments for this highly important event, and this should be a clarion call for all citizens of the community who are interested in the work which the organization is doing for the city to rally round its officers and show that they have the support of a substantial body of citizens. The business of the Chaniber of Commerce the business of every citizen of Oshawa. can only function successfully in so far as it has the support of every member, not only in the payment of membership fees, 'but in attendance at this important meeting, at which the officers for the next year will 'be elected. This is an important year for , -- Oshawa, since it should, if all goes well, fur- 1 ' 3 : A "+ Church is to be congratulated on the attain- celebrated tomorrow and during next week. ¥ (4 "ther industrial expansion, and for fhat rea- son there should be an unusually large at- tendance at the meeting next Tuesday night. a . CONGRATULATIONS ° The congregation of the First Baptist ment of its diamond jubilee, which js being Sixty years is a long span in the life of a church of a community like Oshawa, and it reflects the perseverance and faith of those who have contributed to the life of the church, This congregation, it is true, has come fhiooph some trials, and 'it is to the 3 credit of t ose who hold firm to its faith .hat it is still making progress. , Churches are an important factor in. the i» of any community. They give it a qual- + oi'stability that adds much to its elal spiritual life; and in this work the : + crannh Baptist Church has played no small part during the sixty years of its existence. The -_ "Times joins in congratulating this congre- gation on celebrating its sixtieth anniver- .sary, and in wishing it continued blessings inthe future. ; ITS TIME NOT YET i I, ~The British government had a narrow es- cape from defeat.the other might. Only a majority: of éight 'separated Ramsay Mac- Donald's ministry from being turned out of ce. It was, of course, a narrow squeak. It may be that the other parties meant it to be just that. Certain it is that they had no intention of defeating the government and thus forcing a general election. For even in Great Britain political expediency must have a place in the machinations of parliamentary life. ~ The last thing the British opposition par ties desire at the present time is a general election. They know full well that a defeat for the government would be very unpopu- lar with the people throughout the country, and would not help their cause in an appeal to the electorate. The MacDonald govern- ment is about at the peak of its popularity, and with the Conservatives facing a split on Lord Beaverbrook's Empire Free Trade pol- icy, there is a decided tendency on the part of that party to leave well enough alone. Under all these circumstances, the Labor government appears to be quite safe from defeat for the time being, and it will re- "main so until the opposition parties think the time is ripe for another election. ~ A SYMPATHETIC HOUSE The discussions which have taken place in parliament so far indicate that the members of that body, irrespective of political affilia- tion, are sympathetic to the claims which have been put forward on behalf of the war veterans of Canada. This is as it should be, for it would be disastrous to the cause of the disabled ex-service men and their de- pendents were this matter to be made a po- litical issue, and to become the centre of a party squabble. \ There is every indication that something definite in the form of remedial legislation regarding pensions and other veterans' pro- blems is to be done at this session of par- liament. The people of Canada expect it, and many men and women who have been suffering because of war's ravages have been waiting for something to be done for them. The Canadian Legion program of legislation probably: be the basis for much that is e, and, since it is a reasonable program, without anything bordering on radicalism, the people of Canada can rest assured that if it is adopted matters will be adjusted on a satisfactory basis, both for the war vet- ns and for the country as a whole. TOO MUCH WASTE The people of Ontario are a wasteful peo- ple. Last year, they spent, in the govern- ment liquor stores and brewery warehouses, a sum of over $57,000,000--a tremendous amount to be spent in this manner. One can- not help but feel doubtful as to whether the people of Ontario can, in these days, really afford, to hand over more than one million dollars a week for the purpose of securing supplies of intoxicating liquors and bever- ages While during the election campaign last October Premier Ferguson tried to claim that the Liquor Control Act was controlling the sale of liquor, this is not true as to the amount sold. There is little sign of control in the figures announced for 1929, If the Liquor Control Act is to mean anything as a measure--and that is what it is to be--the government must, un- derstand that its functions include the tak- ing of measures to cut down liquor sales to a minimum, instead of having an increase recorded with every succeeding year. EDITORIAL NOTES ¥ Sir Esme Howard says that war talk is absurd. But so is war. It is by no means too early to be over- hauling that set of gardening tools. The latest excuse is that work was in- vented by people who were too nervous to sit still. 4 The price of wheat has been dropping fairly steadily, but it does not seem to have had any effect on the price of bread. Spring plowing has been delayed by the new fall of snow, but the good it will do will more than make up for the lost time, §), Many veterans and widows are pinning reir hopes for future comfort on this ses- sion of parliament. May they not be disap- pointed. ; ' St. Thomas has decided to reduce its coun- I to seven members. There is a commun- Wy which has the right idea in municipal government. ~ Ten thousand homesteads were taken up +in the Peace River district in the last two years, There is one part of Canada that has plenty of room for new settlers of the pio- | Regring type... : Other 'Edijtor's Comments NEWSPAPER PROBLEM (Border Cities Star) 'with it many complexities. One of these puzzles faces the publish. er of a Manitoba paper, who is be- ing\sued for damages, because his paper printed a ture of a wo- man- showing her in ap old-fash- ioned costume of the niheties. The woman claims that the use of the cut has held her up to ridicule and "humiliation. The decision will establish an theaonldrhschmcet SHR important precedent. ' Much de- pends, of course, on the object in publishing the picture. If the in- tent was to hold the woman to rid- icule, and this can be proven, then there would appear to be some basis for her complaint. If no such intent is discovered, however, fit seems that the court will be faced with the troublesome necessity of deciding just how recent a photo- graph must be to allow it to be used in the columns of the paper. FOLLY AT CROSSINGS (Kingston Whig-Standard) Would you believe it that an auto driver stopped on a ratlway crossing for seven minutes and re- fused to come off when the flag- man asked him to do so, saying he would stay on as leng as he liked. Yet that is what the report of the board of railway commissioners for Canada states one man did, but it does not state if he were drunk, or only a fool. But there were other fools, bringing about 163 acéidents dnr- ing the three months of last fall at protected crossings---note vnro- tected ones. These drivers {enor- ed the warning bell, dellheratelv passed stop sienal, disrerardad watehman's si#ngl. and failed to walt nnti] the rates were properly ralend. There should be drastic prnish- ments for those who canse these accidents--ithat® is, of course, if they be left alive. | Bits of Humor NOTHING TO BOAST ABOUT A merry party was going on in one of the rooms of a large Lon- don hotal when tho festivities were interrupted by an attendant who said: "Gentlemen, I've been sent to ask you to make less noise. The gentleman in the next room says he can't read." "Can't read," replied the host "Well, tell him ho ought to be ashamed of himself Why, I could read when I was five years old." NOT HIS FAULT Magistrate--*What have you to say for yourself?" Prisoner--"Well, your honor, it wasn't my fault if the lady drop- ped a dime in my hand when 1 was looking up to see If it was raining." HIS MOTHER'S SON It was the day of the school con cert, and the audience consistod mostly of proud parents, anxious to see their children perform, No. 8 on the program was Mas- ter William Adams, who was gO ing to recite. Striking a bold at- titude, this young gentleman be- gan as follows: "Friends, Romans, lend me your ears!' At this point a mother turned to the woman sitting beside her, who. as it happened, was a neighbor. "There, that's the Adams boy "for you," she said tartly. 'He wouidn't be his mother's son if he wasn't trying to borrow something. countryme: "1 gee that you've given up teaching your Joan to drive." "Yes; we had an accident." "Did you? What happened?" "I told her to release her clutch, and she took her hands off the steering wheel." Bits of Verse AN ENGLISH SPRING The flickering sun of an early spring Has kissed the wakening world from sleep, And down in a shelter beneath the pines The starry snowdrops begin 'to peep. Close held in a hellow of sun- warmed earth The white robed kneels in prayer, A roystering breeze through the garden blows, But dies away to thore. slsterhoou a whisper The gay yellow gorse on the wind- swept moor Is flaunting blossoms held brave- ly high, And fleecy wee clouds like a flock of lambs Are chasing each other across the sky. The bluebells are swaying in raven < wood, . The hedges drifted with haw- thorn snow, While celandiie flutters her golden skirts And greets the spring. with curtsey low, ' ' ~Nora, 1. Millen, 2 The Saint's Inheritance -- I com- mend' you to God, and to the world of His grace, which is able to build you up, and to give you an inherit- ance among all them which are sane tified. ~Acts 20:32, ; rayer: May grace, mercy and peace be 'our "portion forever; - Publishing a newspaper . brings. i turally causes a shudder, THAT two very important things for the success of a business is to thén let the public know about it fu the right way. is the mer- advertised throughout the year chandise that is throughout the year, Every concern should give thelr business a chance to grow, When reason and common sense prevail in business, progress is assured. Advertised goods are in the favor of the consumer because the consumer has become acquainted with them through persistent ad vertising. The use of them Has caused an appreciat of their high quality and. their splendid value, Buying advertised goods makes shopping mistake-proof, Tho business that has been built rirht has been based on the rock of high quality goods and per- sistent advertising, THE STORES OF ADVERTISED GOODS MAKE QUALITY THEIR FIRST AND LAST CONSIDERA TION. By James W Barton, M.D. PREVENTING DEATHS FROM CANCER When our statistics show 'that : the present rate 1 in every now living, will die of cancer, it na- And yet at the present rate of increase ~ cancer, the © namber | of deaths in of by 1940. Now wl to cope cancer when malaria, yellow fever, typhoid fever, tubercu- losis and other ailments, that form- erly swept away thousands of lives, are now under control? Simply because the cause of can- cer has not yet been discovered. We know that it may attack any tissue or: organ where _ there is a surface that is exposed to irritation such as the lining of the stomach, or intestine. That it occurs also where there are old sores, scars, or lumps of any kind. Because after 411 cancer is just an overgrowth of tissue, as if something from the glands of the body stimu- lated thie cells of certain parts to grow too much However, although, we don't know the cause of cancer, we do know ghdt if parts in which cancer has al- $hady started, are removed, that we might get rid of the cancer. That is if the growth is removed early. If it is Now how are you to know if can- cer is getting a start in your body? Dr. C. A. must know somthing about the symptoms of cancer. he earliest symptoms may be a loss of weight, loss of appetite, gra- dual loss of strength, when the sto- trouble Lumps in the breast, sores that are slow in healing or are gra- dually increasing in size, are forertin- ners of cancer. Now there are all sorts of "cures" on the market, but the only treat- meht of cancer is the complete re- moval of all the growth and the glands adjoining it by the use of the knife, X-ray, radium, or burning by cautery. Don't hesitate to go to your phy. sician if you have reached or are getting toward middle age, and get a complete examination. showing the terrible death toll are absolutely correct. * However the fig- ures showing that practically all cases of cancer can be cured by being treated carly, are also absolutely cor- rect. (Registere din accordance with the Copyright Act) Eye Care and Eye B Strain by C. H. TUCK, Opt.D. (Copyright 1923) Child" Part § When a well balanced machine gen- erates energy with all parts fune- tioning the mechanism is perfect, but function improperly the whole ma- chine is said to be wrong, So it is in. efficiency because of some weak- ness they take more than their share doing upset the balance of the per- son: physically. The trouble with the eyes may not be in the eye itself, but in the muscles and nerves con- nected with it, and so through nerve thways the trouble may be felt in [ more remote part than in the eye itself. When vision consists'in the mental interpretation of an image cast on the retina 'of the eyes it follows that unless the image be perfect the men- tal interpretation cannot be perfect, and so vision is by these elements controlled. If the proper precautions are not taken therefore much' harm may be done. Children's eyes. should not be exposed to the extreme suis have the right kind of, goods and |, The merchandise that sells best | PROF. E. J. PRATT Of Victoria College, Toronto, who is to be the guest of honor at a banquet tendered to him on Feb. 28, by Hugh J. Eayrs, president of the M illan Co. of Ci d to celebrate the launching of his new poem, "The Roosevelt and the Antinoe," a narrative in poetical form of the rescue by the American liper the President Roosevelt of the little British freighter, the Antinoe, some few years ago, onc of the most her. oic feats in sea history. light, or high candle power electric light, soft colors are restful and easy to look at, so why not have thém in evidence. It is easy to read the results we see of conditions that might have been avoided. A message to us from those who have gone the way they perhaps can go but once, and yet many of those conditions of long standing are known to respond late in life but how much easier it is when they are taken at an early date. HISTORIC FIRE OF FIFTY YEARS AGO Many Valuable Relics Saved adults will actually Le 1 in every 8 | is the profession unable! {building which for eighty years had | not removed early it spreads to distant parts and it then becomes impossible to remove all the growth. : Hedblom, Chicago, tells us that if a patient is to be saved he mach or intestine is the seat of the The figures "When I was a Child | saw as a when one small part once starts ta with the eyes when they are lacking of the total nerve energy and by-so When Flames Razed New Brunswick Legislature By C. W. CLARK, | (Canadizn Press Staff Writer) | Fredericton, N.B.,, Marchl.= Fifty years ago on February 25, 1880 the housed the legsilature of New Bruns- wick, was destroyed by fire. Erected in 1880, twelve years after the im- minent threat of attack from the sea had caused the removal of the pro- vincial administration from Parrtown --now Saint John--to Fredericton, eighty-five miles up the Saint John River, the one storey wooden build quare is graced by elms which can- not be matched for spread of branch- es in Canada. SLASHES PAL WITH RAZOR, GETS 7 YEARS South Porcupine, March 1.-On his back in a snowdrift, bela sti. by threat of a revolver pushed into his mouth, Martin Orock lay while John Korick slashed him over the face, head and neck with a razor. Sixty stitches were required to close the wounds. Today in the police court, the magistrate commented: "Some thing will have to be done to dis courage this sort of thing. Seven years in the penitentiary." John, cabin mate : Martin ir the northern bush, pleaded guilty to the charge of wounding with intent to maim. The fight, both men explained, had started with a dis pute over grease which was to be applied to a horse's leg. KNOWLEDGE Laden with twice-read books, discon- solate, You give no glance at what may be ahead. But fix your eyes upon the stones you tread And quite forget the hedgerows. 'Tis your fate Fo miss the partridge skimming with his mate: For you no furrows turn a hillside red, No generous haytsack strews a gold- en bed; All Shes are trifles. You must not be ate, What are you seeking, scholar, whi- ther lead These white-hot highways that you may not leave? You are dusty and worn and sick of travelling-- I scaled an orchard wall-I did deed-- And ate red apples--found a fairy ring, | And led you by a mile at fall of eve, --Dermot Spence, in The Bermond- say Book. in- Debating clubs might find a more lively issue to discuss than annexa tion of Canada to the United States. --Woodstock Sentinel-Review. we Most Heat for the Money. CONGER"S high grade fuels are each selected for low ash, long burn- ing and high heating efficiency. Conger Lehigh Coal Co. Ltd $2 King St. E. J. H, R, LUKE Phones: 871.921.687V Ohawa Manager. CALMON1 OILS, LIMITED ing housed many relics of great his- torical value. which rose to become the hdme of provincial government two years af- ter: the fire, are several of the old buildings traditional appointments, in cluding the portraits of George IIL Queen Charlotte, Lord Sheffield, and Lord Glenelg, which were snatched from the walls of the old Upper Chamber and carried to safety. The painted wall screen bearing the cyp- her of George IV, which stood be- hind the benches of the Judges of the Supreme Court, still serves in the present Supreme Court Chamb A survival of the government Wuil dings of the carly nineteenth century still stands to the East of the pre- sent House of Assembly. In the re maining stone building, one of which stood on cither side of the Old As- sembly chambers, the old time locks with keys a foot in length, the system of bellpulls connecting the various of- fices, the recessed fireplaces, and narrow stairways are all as they were when thé province was still in its infancy, and they still give service im Supreme Court offices. The building on the west was long ago torn down to make room for the pre- sent Department building. Both were of the plain Georgian type, built low for warmth in winter. Sketches of the old Parliament building in its early years show lit- tle pretence to architectural excell ence. A low wooden structure with two wings furnished sufficient room. The cornerstone was lain in May, 1800, by Governor the Hon. Thomas Carleton, For twelve years both chambers had held sessions in a wooden structure known as King's Provision Store at the intersection of Chancery Lane and Queen's street. For seven years previous, after the formation of New Brunswick as a province with the coming of the Loy- alists in 1783, the legislature had met at Saint John. The building which fell before the flames was devoted chiefly to the leg- islative branch of administration, De- partmental and executive offices were housed in the stone buildings to cast and west, The structure housed both chambers, until the Legislative council was abolished by legidlative enactment about ten ycars after. its construction, The blaze which destroyed the building broke out in the library. Steam fire engines with the Saint John River providing a nearby wa- ter supply put up a strenuous fight, but winter conditions proved too great a handicap. Two years were required for the erection of the succeeding structure of freestone on grey granite base which for forty-eight years had hou sed the New Brunswick Legislature and 'its 'officials. The first session .in ithe present building was opened on February 16th, 1882. During the carly history of Fred- ericton lots of the land reserved for legislative buildings were leased from time to time for other purposes. One of the earliest post offices was lo- cated in Saint John street on a site now covered by the Departmental Building and near it stood the little building in which clicked the first telegraph instrument ever operaf€d in this city. Top Fredericton prides herself upon" her trees, yet in the day en the old Parliament Building w®® in use its grounds presented a desolate appearance, Today .- Parlianient | In the stone and granite structure | The new casing required for Calmont No. 2 has arrived in Turner Valley and on February 19th this casing was being run into the hole. the casing reaches bottom it will be cemented in place and work will start As soon as Watch for an important announcement to registered Shareholders. in rigging up the new Diamond Drill. This well is 25 feet in the limestone and in less than two weeks active drill- ing to production will commence. Af- ter the new equipment has been in- stalled the crew will be transferred to No. 4, which is at a depth of 3731 feet. (uaker finance Corporation Ltd, 400 LANCASTER BLDG. AUTOMOBILE INSURAN AT Low Cost Protecting Your legal liability up to $10 regardless of persons 18000, or whether or number of damage is to Protecting You i * Ssmane ge. your car from either Private Passenger Cars £27 PER CAR Toted up wo $1,000 $30 PER CAR Care net exceeding §1,300 #38 PER CAR Cars not exceeding $2,300 $43 PER CAR Care not ezceeding $3,500 #57 PER CAR Care net exceeding $4,300 i ot THE PILOT Automobile & Accident Insurance Co. Ltd. Head Office: Waterloo « Toronto Office: '139 Bay St. AGENTS.3 Te AGENTS: F. S. Ebbs D. W. McNichel . 4 PIOpeEty $50,000 * T. H. McMurtry H. A. MacDonal/ WA

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