| Delivered . i PAGE FOUR The Oshawa Daily Times Suscedding I THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) a voll n, by The Times Prk ' Prampiny, Jimjed, M, Chas, Alloway, Bee The Ohawa Dally T is & member of the . or a ie oti DY, ot allies and the Audit Dor of Clreulations, iu nited States, in Canada (outside limite) $4.00 a yotr) TORONTO OFFICE REPRESENTATIVES IN U8, Powers and Stone Inc; New York and Chicago FRIDAY, JULY 265, 1930 IRRESPONSIBLE JOURNALISM In view of the independent stand whieh this newspaper has taken for the last thir. teen years; and particularly throughout the present election camphign, It eame as quite A Jolt to find it referred to in the Toronto Telegram the other night as being a Lib: oral paper meeking to make political capital out of conditions at the Williams Piano Co, plant, The charge, of couths, Was abso. lutely without foundation, and the further accusation, that The Times han claimed that conditions of expansion In the radio branch of the Industry were due to the Dunning budget, is equally false, for nowhere in the article which The Times published on the subject, either directly or by inference, was there any suggestions of that kind, neither was there one word in the article which could be construed In a political sense, Fortunately, Mr, Donald Hall, superinten- dént of the Williams Plano Co., whose name appeared as the source of the Telegram Article, was able to exonerate The Times, and to atate that he had heen absolutely misquoted in The Telegram. The truth of the matter was that The Times was being blamed for the sins of the Toronto Globe, This may not seem an Incldent of much importance, but it illustrates the length to which rabidly partisan papers will go in the time of dn election campaign, So far as The Times was concerned, the story was made out of whole eloth, without & shadow of truth in it, But apparently newspiipers like The Telegram care little for the truth so long an they car serve thelr own politica énds. The Globe, of course, c..n answer for its own sins, but The Times, in reporting futts, has no intention of departing from ith stated principles in remaining non-parti- sah and Independent In political affairs, and there was no departure from these prin. olples in the article In question, SOON OVER NOW It Ia & good thing that the election cam- paign is nearly over. There are signs that tempers are becoming badly frayed by the long-drawn out campaign, and that even the loading speakers on both aides are saying things whieh they would never have dream. #d of saying a month ago, That Is natural in a campaign which lasth so long, and Which develops ao many site Issues as has bod done in the present campaign, The original issues, those of the record of the govérnmont and the arguments for and against its polley an expressed in the Dun. ning budget, have long since been forgot. ten, and the electors have béen led through the mazes of a varlety of issues far rémov. 6d from the matters of major importance, That in why the speakers are now reduc od to saying Hard things about their oppon. onts, and are using language which can hardly be considered atrictly parliamentary, These speakers, however, do not==for we hope they do hot---medn half of what thoy are saying, They may think they do in the heat of the moment on the platform, but maturer reflection, and particularly after the campaign In over, must make them feel that they have sald many things that would have been better left, unsaid, That, how. over, soems to bo tA® way in long-drawn out election campaigns; because speakers have to try to dig up material to vary their speoches from night to night, and it Is quite usual to find that, when their other ro. sources are exhausted, the easiest way out in to Abuse their opponents, MEDITATION LIKELY TO WIN The troubles In India seem to have pet ordd out; as it waa anticipated by close ob. servers of the situation that they would, It ia now reported that conferences are un. def way to placate Mahatma Gandhi, who in atl in Jail a8 a result of his leadership of the disdbedience campaign, and to put into offodt steps leading towards mediation of the matters under dispute, Polictes of medintion are slways profitable in matters of this kind, and when his moye- ment represented so small a proportion of the 400,000,000 people In India, he will be wise if he listens 10 the counsel of his friends, and adopts entirely new tactics, Whethér he does or not, however, it can be suid that the backbone of the Indian trouble has been broken, and that the poli. cles adopted by the Inflian Authorities have béen justified, THE DEVELOPMENT OF AVIATION Two Important announcements with ref. erence to the future of aviation in Canada have been made in the last few days, Bpeak- ing at Ottaws, Premier King foreshadowed the possibility of the creation of a new alr ministry in the federal cabinet, and, a day or so later, it was announced that the devel. ment of aviation as 8 commercial proposi- tion had been turned over to the two great Canadian transportation systems, the Can- adian Pacific Railway and the Canadian Na. tional Railways, Leaving Premier King's statement to one pide as one made In the heat of an election campaign, there is still considerable impor. tance in the announcement made by 1, W, Beatty and Sir Henry Thornton, the two rallway presidents, The fact that aviation in being taken under thelr wing should en. sure Its successful development, The two railways have given leadership to the world in thelr field of transportation, and they have the man-power und the resources to make n success of thelr new venture, Un der thelr guidance, Canada, which already han taken a leading place in some of the im. portant fields of civil aviation, should go even farther ahead, and should soon he us well served by alr as it now Is by its rail WAYS, COMMUNISTS IN CANADA A Communist candidate in Winnipeg hay made the assertion that the party has now enrolled 75,000 members in Canada, This figure, of courne, ean hardly be credited, but that the claim should be made is an indi. cation that the Communist menace Is he coming serious, Communism always seems to flourish best in times of unemployment, because it feeds on dissatisfaction and dis content, and' conditions are ripe for a growth of Communism unless firm steps are taken to put a stop to It. If the claim of 75,000 members Is anything like . neir correct, then the authorities have been full. ing asleep at the switch in allowing the movement to reach such proportions, and it is time that there were wholesale depor- tion of thowe who are responsible for the propagation of Communist doctrines In thin country, EDITORIAL NOTES Vote an you like, but vote, is the right slos gan for July 28, One of the normal things about the elec. tion Is that both parties are predicting vie. tory. An advertisement in a newspaper is worth two on the fence~cows don't read adn, Kitehener Récord, ' Beauty In merely a matier of opinion to some men, but it Is a matter of expense to others ==Datrolt News, With Atlantie City in mind, our recollec tion in that It features a bored walk par ade. Buffalo Courler-Expross, It in difffeult to tell these days whether Mr, Sinclair or Mr, Tweed In the leader of the Ontario Liberals.--Peterboro Examiner, A Yale dean says, "The return of the old hoor gardens would be a fine thing." Par tleularly for the college hops,==Ciuelph Mor. oury, Society women are paying #10 an hour for bridge lessons, Men have paid much more for lessons in poker==8an Francisco Chronicle, Poot-Nownpaperman leaves §1,880,835, rules a Headline, Thera certinly jn more money in posting than we suspected, Ham. ilton Spectator, Of course, a girl should be the pursued, not the pursuer, but if she Is bright she'll atop now and then to gel her breath. Brandon Bun, Ono of life's little ironies ts found in the fact that a Afty-dollar telephone pole can so completely demolish a $3,000 motor car Roaton Transcript, When you observe the methads of par onts and ses how well the kids turn out, How can you keép from belloving In Provi. dence 2 Milwaukee Journal, Booth Tarkington says man will cease wearing shirts before 1080, It will come before that if he don't keep oul of the stock The W! H. Moore For Employment A daily department in support of the candi dature of W. H, Moore, Liberal candidate in South Ontarlo, EMERGENCY TARIFFS iw LR] The sixth principle of the William H, Moore Program for Employment, deals with a policy designed to take care of Can- ndinn industry and labor in times when emergency action seems advisable, 14 is an follows: "Granting power to the government to raise tariffs hy order-in-couneil, after public investigation, to give pro. tection to Industries which might be able to provide greater employment by its netlon, hut only as an emer- gency netlon, the rates so effected to remain In force only until 60 days after the opening of the following session of putlinment." Thin is n new principle for Canada but one designed to be dur-veiching in Its effects, and swift In Ith remedial ac. tion, IL In particularly applicable to a country of ten million people lying next door to a nation of 120,000,000, In the United Mintos thera are often such things as trade wars and price ware, in which the prices for manufactured articles drop to levels far below true competitive prices. At such periods, there Is n grave danger of these low-priced articles being nent Into the Canadian market to disorganize industry in this coun: | try, und throw men out of employment, A situation of {hat | Kind might well he ealled an emergency situation, Mr, Moore has. had the courage to suggest that prompt and courngeoun nection he tuken by thé Canadian Government | to moet thal emergency and protect the jobs of the Canadian | workers, His solution Is a simple one, He suggests that par lament grant to the government the authority, when such | nn emergency arises, to ineremne the tariffs on articles affect. od by order In counell, The government already has power to lower tariffs in that way, so the only new principle is that if shall also have the power to make emergency Increases, This would be done, of course, only after a full and public investi giution had heen made to ensure that the emergency really ex. insted, The effect of this can be seen at once, The Canadian market of the Industry would be protected, The cheap goods from tho United States would be kept out, and the workmen [ would he enabled to keen thelr jobs, That, in our opinion, is | sound Canadian policy, one which is worthy of the most rudd lous consideration, But Mr, Moore goes farther than that. He is jealous of | the rights of the Canadian people, He believes that the Plople must control taxation through their elected representatives, 80 he suggests that, In order to safeguard the people's rights, | these emergency rates shall remain In effect only until sixty | duys after the opening of the session of parliament following thelr enactment by order<in-couneil, Thin leaves with parlia- ment the right to say whether these rates shall remain in the tariff schedule or be removed, It provides that the government must, within 60 days after parliament opens, submit its order. in-councll to. the representatives of the people, to be approved or rejected; otherwise it automatically lapres, and the sched. ules are reverted to their former levels, "Thin suggestion places on the government of Canada' the direct responsibility of safeguarding the jobs of the Canadian workers In cause of emergency, but it leaves with the represen. tatives of the people the right to condemn or approve the Ac. tion taken by the government, ' Thin 16, probably, the most radical suggestion made by Mr, Moore, but wae believe it to be sound in principle, and to be directed: towards, ope of the main avenues through which unemployment In Canada can be prevented, It is a principle which should have the entre endorsation and support of the workers of Oshawa and the rest of Ontario Riding and we are confident they will expross their approval of it by electing William H, Moore to represent them in parliament, where he can work to have this principle put into practice. Inapried by Ontarle Riding Liberal Association "Bye 4 Care and Eye Strai by C. N. TUCK, Opt.D (Gobyrient 108K) I YOUR CHILD AND THE KEYES Part "ge" 1 should not he hard for an ins telligont publio to readily grasp the neoonpity of training and connervs ing for the success of ts own fas ture of ita ohidren an asset of no great an Importance an ita eyesight, I repeat it shoud not be hard to ranlize tn Importance when a lit tia thought shows that It has des pendant upon Ha proper funetion me, Auch things an education of ourselves and our ehildren, the onening of our dally bread, the 1angth of lite, the enjoyment of fe the comfort of life, None oan say that they, having once had vision oan enjoy life In the same way when once It {a lost to them, I have many times befora em: phaniged the necensily of keéping your vision corrected an a neces sity to good health, Wyestrain and headaches may ba pelleved and cured hy using the proper corre tian, You should vead another mean Ing from thess articles, that it 1a possible to gel a conmervation of viRlon that In correoting that reflex opndition, conserves hath the eye Sight and the Health, and the years Gf hoth the dyealght and the Heal are noreansd, TH be continued, a Mint ed i THAT WAS THAT i) TRI (8a price Wek town all vight," growled the man who was compalled to thy over far the night, Paul's Pleasure Theratore, | take pleasure in infirmities, in ros That of Pours Mo. The Most frequent Canse of Heart Dense During the warm weather your 'rheumaties' may not bs bothering you vary much, hut you Know that with the ceo! ar damp weather the pains will be aggravated, Now we have all hecome so ae customed {o rheumatism that Ht dosn't. seam vary serious and yet As a matter of fact It 18 now re cognized that rheumatic fever (netunl swelling of joints with In. cronsnd temperature and pulss) is responsible for al lebss Ally par cont, of the deaths from heart disease, A British research worker C, F, Coombs states his convietion that children noquire rheumatism he- cnins of inherited defects and hs cause of damp or wel surroundings, which combine to permit organisms to enter the system hy way of the tonsils in at least one-third of the cnnen, 14 is possible he says, that the Infection takes placa through the tonsils in the vamainder of tha onnon, but without any swelling, or any soreness in the tonsils them wolyen The infecting materials gots Into the Mood stream and Is carried to the heart whare it Inflames the 1in ing of the haart, the valves, and oven the heart muscle Now If tha tanslin ara not sore or swollen rhbumatism may come a along quietly and hake hold of a youngster without warning The ndvice therefors is that when A youngster complaing of growing pain,' slight rise in temperature At night, In pale, tired, with poor appetite, "is hronthless on slight axeritlon, rheumatism may be Lhe cause, Thess early signs of a rheumatic condition with hestl, Involvement must not be overlooked, and yel it Is estimated that for every early cane discovered, an least two canes are never discoversd until the heart Involvamant 1s serious, Further, after an uciaek of rheu- matiam with or without heart In- volvement, It 1x well to remember that once rheumatism starts 11 in Habla to return, with Intervaly of weeks, months, or even years ho tween alintke, #0 remember that half the cases that die of heart disease first had rheumatism, Remember also, (hat infoeted tonsils cause one third, ANA may cause many mors cakes he cause thers Is an absence of wore throat, or the soreness is slight, It in overlooked, Dampness of the home, and un dsrnourishment. have heen found t6 ho factors In causing rheumn tiem, and therefors an indirect CAUNS of heart disease All over tha world there 18 a determined ef fort on the part of fhe profession to try anl prevent heart disease, and if the ahove points ars care fully consldarad hy all of us, a de cided decresns may reasonably be oxpocied (Registered In nceordance with the Copyright Act), "And what Ol wre mn Immigration Inspector do you expect to do now this country Immigrant: "Anything to earn an honest living." Immigration "Well, there Isn't much competition in that Hine of busine Inspector CANADIAN WAR ACE CHARGED AS THIEF Los Adgeles, Cn), July 4h==A shuhbily dressed man who police elim hus heen identified us Capt, (leorge RN, Clifford, noted British wir nes of the Great War, 18 unde arrest here on a charge af purse wnatehing, The man is undefstood Lo he a Canadian, having apparen'| onlisted from Bonitreal with the British Alr Fores, a ---------- EXPENSIVE JEWELS BROADCAST IN AIR Landon, July 26-The' Dally Vixpross says that jowels valued af $425,000 wears wenttersd over the ground near Meopham, Kent, wl the times of Monday's alrplgne ais antar, In which six parsons, includ ing three of the nobility, perished I'he Jewels in question belonged to the late Viseauntoss Bdnam ani the late Mra, Imoffler, both of whom wers wearing pearl necklace and dinmond brooches, Those of the Viscountess Kdnam were vali od nt $125,000 and those of Mrs Looser nt $200,000, i sa---- " A CHANCE At last the disgraceful rumor had hee ( ource and Mir racer Turpin, the daily help, cd hh fnoinfuriated mistre of bowing her head, however, she dr fended herself with vigor "I was only repeatin', mum, what 1 'eard from your own lips she as serted YOaod heavens!" shrleked the mi tress, "do you mean to say 1 told you my husband was in jail?" "Not in so many words," concede] Mes, Turpin, "but 1 drew my ov conclusions, You sald vou was gr ing to give a coming-out party in th autumn" ane lo eT the connection Is com holds the line, Long Distaice=*quick, cheap depeiidable VV HETHER you afe abdétt on Businéss or pleasure you may keep in hourly touch with the office. It is a good plan to set a certain hour each day for calling the office. Then all matters requiring your attention will await your call. You make immediate decisions, get prompt action. Such a practice makes it unnecessary for those at the office to spend needless time and expense trying to locate you by telephone in emergencies, The new Long Distance rate reductions make such calls cheaper than ever before. You will, of course, give the number, and tell the operator "anyone there will do," in which case the tates are lower still, If desired, these station-to-station calls can be charged to the office telephone. : Long Distance now gives you quicker and better com. munication than ever before, In eight calls out of ten pleted while the calling party I HM, BLACK Ey market. ~sBrandon Sun, rh ---------------- According to Dorothy Dix, a- scienteat says that each kiss shortens the life of the kisaoo, Ih many canes it shortens the single Ifo. wvChathhm Nowa, «= sens mang That is the beat news that has come out : of India for some time. Gandhi must rea. [live by thin. time that his methods of fight. 8 ing the British authorities were illadvised, | that no headway towards Indian inde. Ee proaches; in necansition, in peraseus tions, In distress for Cutlets nk for when I am weak, then am alrong.~<2 Cor, 10110, ihrer: a X name, our Ged, : LU} 1ove, and light, tox ae and UMabbe, Mister," said the hotel kpeper, "but we got something your hig bury ain't got and would give a lot to have" : ) "Yeah! See; youl And what's all that!" demanded the bored one, "Parking space, Qodles of it," te] ha NY, vip Managem | | gigs could be made by open defiance,