PAGE FOUR The Oshawa Daily Times Sueceeedin gz THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) ind d s lished every after. An of egal holidays at Osh- noon except Sunda s and } ; a Lanafis bx The Times Publishing Company of O imited Chas. M Mundy, President: A. R Al , Managing Director. The Oshawa Daily Times is a member of The Cana- dian Press, the Canadian Daily Netvspapers Asso- ciation, the Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier, in Oshawa and suburbs, 12¢c a week. By mail in Canada (outside Oshawa carrier delivery limits) $3.00 a year; United States, $4.00 a year. TORONTO OFFICE 518 Bond Building, 66 Tempe Street. Teleph Adelaide 0107. fi . Tresidder, representative. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8th, 1980 LET US GIVE THANKS Let us give thanks. That ought to be the keynote of the thoughts of every Canadian as we approach the Thanksgiving season. Tomorrow, in the churches, choirs will offer up their songs of praise and thanksgiving, preachers will raise their voices in their prayers of thanks to Almighty God for the blessings which he has bestowed on the people of this country. From coast to coast, over this wide Dominion, the Thanksgiving theme will be paramount, sub- ordinating all other thoughts and purposes in the messages from the pulpits. cL But that is not enough, It is not suffici- ent that the church sexyices should sound the note of Thanksgiving. The spirit of the festival must go deeper than that. There must be, in the hearts and minds of men and women, that fervent and whole-souled desire to give tribute to the giver of all good gifts, to the Supreme Being whose almighty hands provides all the bountiful blessings of nature as they are to be found in this glori- ous Dominion. 1t may be that many people may feel that this year they have little cause for Thanks- giving. Times have been hard with them. Depression and unemployment have caused them hardship and distress. And when there are heavy hearts, it is not easy to be kful. : thankfs in spite of the conditions which have prevailed, the people of Canada have cause to be thankful. They are Bving in a SogHe try which has the assurance of a greate if ils glorious future than the past has ever been. They are living in a country which has potentialities that ensure a speedy recovery from the depression which has ex- isted. They are living in a land in which, while there has been depression and unem- ployment, there are wealth and resources to enable its government to take steps to re- lieve the situation compared with the peo- ple of Great Britain, of many European countries, even of the United States, Cana- dians are living in a pleasant land, a land which has suffered much less than many others from the world-wide depression, and a land which is once again turning its face osperity. owards an hard to be thankful when there are empty mouths to be filled, and little with which to fill them, but, in spite of that, we know that better days are surely on the way, that Canada is coming back stronger than ever; and all have v. least reason to be thankful that honest ef- forts are being made to make times better for those who have suffered from unemploy- ment. This is a season for thankfulness, There i of us who cannot, by deep and earn- 35 PODG SH. find something for which to be thankful, something that will justify ys all joining in the prayers of Thanksgiving which should well up in the heart of every Canadian at this season. MERITED WORDS OF PRAISE "The home in Oshawa is not only a credit to the city but to the whole pro- vince, and is exemplary of what should pe striven for in children's work t Ontario." ... ooo ceo see sen ugh spoken in tribute to the Children's Shelter of Oshawa by the Hon. W. G. Martin, minister of public welfare, in King Street United Church on Thursday evening, must have awakened feelings o satisfaction in the minds of the officers and members of the Children's Aid Society who have for so long carried on their labors on behalf of the unfortunate children of t : community. The people of Oshawa are wel aware, of course, that the new Children : Shelter is a building of which they can wel be proud. They know, too, that an institu, tion of this nature does not consist slope § the bricks and mortar of which it is bui : It consists, rather, of the heart and soul 0 those who make it their labor of love id es that it is operated as an institution imbue with the ideals of community service, of ger vice for those unfortunates who need their guiding care to give them a proper chance in life. . of the Children's Aid Society Rn po is a work the value of which not be computed in dollars and cents, for os can estimate the value of human life po riched and blessed by the guidance given or) érything seems to be hope- ev } gta He of good citizenship out of i hich has come close to being mar- wisi) 3 hands of the potter is a wonder- 4 Oshawa has equipment within fu base a Mr, Martin has suggested, might "oe - HE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1930 well be taken as a model for the province of Ontario. This is a worth-while work, Mr. Martin in his address, expressed this in words which are being repeated here, when he said: "The chief glory of Canada is net in her lakes, her teeming rivers, or her vast prairies, but rather in building within its borders a temple of human- ity founded on faith, love, bretherhood and the happiness of little children. Every child has a right to be happy." This is the principle on which the work of the Children's Aid Society is founded, and in doing this work, the Society has well mer- ited the words of approbation that have come from the minister of public welfare. SEEKERS AFTER PEACE The inspiring plea to the war veterans of Oshawa to do their part in laying a firm and sure foundation for lasting world peace was the high light of the magnificent ad- dress given by Lt.-Col, J. Keillor McKay, D. 8.0., V.D., at the Armistice Dinner of the Canadian Legion the other night. There are few Canadians with a more brilliant career than has Col. McKay, who not only won dis- tinction as the commander of the McKay brigade of artillery in the world war, but came home broken and shattered by serious wounds to continue in service for his coun- try and his comrades. He knew war in all its horrors, and in his address in Oshawa he touched on some of those scenes which have made him an ardent advocate of world peace. It has sometimes been charged that the Canadian Legion is an organization which perpetuates a spirit of militarism, that by its continuing the spirit which guided the troops of the Empire in the war, it is re- taining an element which has in it the fun- damentals of war. That theory, of course, is not based on fact, as was proven by the. address of Col. McKay. It is very noticeable that the men who are the most zealous advocates of world peace today are the men who know war as it is, men who, by serving through the greatest and most bloody war in all history, have become inspired by the determination that, so far as they are concerned, their whole effort shall be to see that the genera- tion to come shall not witness another such catastrophe. It is no sickly sentimentality, no mealy- mouthed pacifism, which inspires these men in their advocacy of lasting peace. It is a full realization of the tremendous losses which humanity suffers from war, of the tragedy of the lost generation, that impels them to raise their voices and bend their energies towards the creation of a public mind which will have no place for war in its philosophy of life. And these men, the men who know war, are, perhaps best fitted to educate the rest of the world away from it. Should occasion demand it, should the na- tional dignity and honor of the nation and the Empire be again assailed, should the ne- cessity for defence of homes and loved ones again present itself, they would not shirk from again facing their duty. But knowing what that entails, knowing all about war as an actuality, they are serving their country and humanity well by seeking to create, with all the force at their command, a world atmosphere which will ensure that never again will the dogs of war be unleashed on a peaceful world. EDITORIAL NOTES Buy a poppy--today. . The Thanksgiving season is one for giving thanks to God for blessings received. And every citizen of Oshawa should be found in church tomorrow, taking part in that act of thanksgiving. We know of a great many housewives who will disagree with Mary Garden when she says that women marry because they don't want to.work. For many of them, work only begins then. With the fad for miniature golf and oth- er miniature things so popular, it would be quite appropriate to have a miniature win- ter. Mr. Maxton, British M.P., says, "I write articles as infrequently as possible. . . and always regret having done it when I read them in print." We would suggest that he follow the example of some newspaper edit- ors, and refrain from reading his own artic- les in print. The man capable of growing rich in a year should be hanged 12 months before hand.--Premier Mussolini. It is not sufficient to produce the best goods in the world: we must also have the best methods of selling them.--~The Lord Mayor of London. Marriage laws and divorces, even more than economic and belligerent patriotism, remind me of the irrational ruthlessness of mankind. --H, G, Wells. ; I cannot understand why psychologists assert that the maximum period of intellig- ence is reached at 14, I was more intelligent at 6 months than I have shown signs of be- ing since,~Dr. E. P. Farrow, Other Editor's Comments A STEADY GAME (From the Nation's Business) The bysi visitor responded to the usual question of "How's busi- ness?" with this parable. "I play golf and enjoy it. My nor- mal game is somewhere around the middle 90's. The other day every- thing was just right, my temper and digestion and the weather and the greens and all the things that help or hinder the game. The result was that I made a 79. "Now, suppose when I'm asked what sort of a game I play, I should ! feel that everything was wrong every time 1 don't land in the 70's. What kind of time would I have #s rn golfer? ""And that's been one of the trou- bles with business. Many com- panies 'broke 80' in the first half of 1929 and because they failed to do it in the first half of 1930 thev think they are completely ruined when, the truth is, they are playing a good steady game and improving a litle bit every day." THINK WITH THEIR STOMACHS (E. 8. Martin, in Life) When times are bad, people think--if not with their minds with their stomachs. Thinking with their stomachs is favorable to rev- olutions, of which a good many are now in progress, especially in South America, and doubtless more under way, 'In this country there are no revolutienary symptoms and think- ing continues to be more or less a mental process, It has not yet got Aown into the stomach and it is not likely to, for however faulty our R.A. TR-C's ended his RHEUMATISM "I have since had no return'ef my malady," says Mr. H. C, Benedict of Thedford, Ontario. Here are the actual facts: Pains in his elbows and knees Zor 3 years. Dull ache winter and sum- mer. Had to lift one arm up with other. felt as if it were going to break. old by a friend about TRC's. "I got a $1 box," Mr. Benedict writes, "and felt beter, so bought a $5 box. Before | used more than half of it the pain snd stiffness had gone entirely.' Pain and Stiffness! Aren't they what you want to get rid of? Use "-R~C's. Tet them help yourbody cast out the poisons of Rheuma- tism, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Neuritis, Lumbago--gquickly and safely. No harmful drugs. 60c and $1 st your dealer's. 146 [F-R-C* Wi |W Strain schemes of distribution {s, starva- | tion is not likely hasdwav have, eeneclallv whila Mr, Hoover is President. ideas may taste, as sald, of lifting | oneself by { meself by the boot strans but he is | THE RELATION OF DEFECTIVE | a good hand at distribution. | Bits of Humour | A PLEA Judge--Have you anything to say before the court passes sentence up- on you? Prisoner -- Only that I hope the court will take into consideration the youth of my lawyer and lighten the sentence. : AN AGREEMENT Walter (to casual visitor at sea- side resort)--"I'm afraid we sha'n't be able to cash this check, sir, Y'see, | sir, we 'ave a little mutual agree ment with the banks, sir, that we cash no checks' an' they sell no soup!" DIDN'T CATCH IT Angry Guest: Are you the mana ger of this infernal place?" Hotel Manager: Yes, sir. to make much | Some of his | | by €. H, Tuc, Opt. D. (Copyright, 1928) EYES TO HEALTH Part "19" The retinoscope also is an instru- ment of examinat.on which should be used in every examination. With its ise the correction may be accurately { discovered without any question or | discussion with the patient. This is | especially iry in testing illjt- s, foreigners, ete Lhe Opthalmometer is also of great value in discovering the power and |. the 1X1 f« cal Astigmatism. [ts | measurements may also be relied up- | measurc slow increases in the | curvature of the eyeball spherically, id In somesserious cases this cyrva- ture is particularly noted Any examiner who understands the instruments and their use is them as best suited to the not bound to rely upon | the patient's answer to his questions {eciding factor in the correction neces | erate on t ab we able to use 1 case and so 1s las a « of the cas Continued) "I have a very serious complaint." | "Heavens! Don't come near me-- it might be catching!" QUITE A JOB . (Detroit News) Little sister is held up by maid to hear her father's voice over 'phone. | "Boo-hoo," she eries. The. Mald: What are you erving about? Little Sister--How can we ever get daddy out of that little hole? PAINLESS WORKER - (Juggler) I am sorry," said the dentist, "but you can not have an appoint- ment with me this afternoon. I have eighteen cavities to fill." And he picked up his golf-bag and went out A LA POIRET A man who had been waiting pa- tiently in the post office could not attract the attention of either of the girls behind the counter "The evening cloak," .explained one of the girls to her companions. "was a redingote desbrn in gorge- ous lame hroeade with fox fur and wide pagoda sleeves," At this point the long-suffering ~ustamer broke in with: "I wonder it you could provide me with a neat red stamp with a dinky per- forated hem, the tout ensemble delicately treated on the reverse side with gum arabje. Something about two cents." PUTTING IT TO WORK Mrs. Newlywed--"I'm going out to buy a book." Her friend--*A book!" CITIES ARE AT THEY HAVE THERE SOMETHING STUMBLING THEIR THAT SOME A STAND-STILL; STOMPED GROWING. SEEMS TO BE LACKING -- SOME BLOCK RETARDING GROWTH, Some -of them seem to be living in hopes that outside help will come, and they slumber on-~walit- ing for it, Help never comes to a city that | will not help itself! Cities must not expect outsiders to do those things that they will not do for themselves, Citles that are. up and doing, realizing that men-- not natural re- sources--bhuild cities, realizing that they must hustle in order to get anything in this world today, are the cities that are far ahead in the March of Progress. Many clties are taking on new life, they are pepping up, they are beginning to realize that one suc* cessful industry for a city means that more will come if properly in- vited. : More industries mean more pay- rolls. More payrolls mean better business. Better business means prosperity for all. Mrs. Newlywed--"Yes, mv hus- hand bought me the most adorable' veading-lamp yesterday." | "Why do you nlay golf so much?" "It keeps me fit." | "What for?" "Golf." | -- | "Do vou mean to say," asked the | magistrate, "that: such a physical | wreck as your husband gave you that black eye?" The woman smiled proudly. " 'E wasn't a physical wreck. vour worshin," she said, "till 'e| wave me that black eye." ! Bits of Verse | SOMETIMES I WISH 1 am oppressed with this great sense of loving My tall, straight, rather distant young son; °° It's like incense, a subtle and un- failing * Reminder of the glorious thing I have done, The perfect knowledge that he is mine : Is like a song on the strings of my heart, But though he's my son, to continue my line, I stand in awe! worlds apart We are whole When he stoops to allow me to kiss m Smilingly intent on his busy day's plan, He Yoes Woy see that my eyes grow Mee How I wish, sometimes, he were less of a man --By Jean Steele Marlatt. BIG THINGS CAN ACCOMPLISHED ny THOSE CITIES WHOSE CITIZENS ARE WORKING TOGETHER, SEEK T0 DEPORT CHINESE WOMAN ONLY BE Claimed She Entered Can-| ada Illegally at Age of 13 Vancouver, B.C., Nov. 8.--(ee Shu Moy, 19-year-old wife of a Ca- nadian-born Chinese, the mother of a flve-months-old son, alse born in Canada, and herself a resident of this country for six years, anxious- ly awaits word from Ottawa which will decide whether or not she shall he deported. While sympathy was expressed for her by Mr. Justice I, B, Greg- ory in Supreme Court when he or- dered deportation of Gee Shu Moy, vet he said, he could not find she had acquired a Canadian domicile because she originally entered the country illegally. His Lordship elicited a promise from counsel for the immigration department that the girl wonld not be deported until further representations had been made on her behalf to Ottawa. It is this final word that is now being awaited. When 13 years of age, Gee Shu Moy was purchased for $100 in China and brought to Canada by Wong Chung ong, who passed her off as his own daughter, stating she had been born in British Columbia, She was landed at Vancouver, B. C., in October, 1924, She lived with her foster father in Vancouver, where she worked in a restaurant, and Wong Chung Fong kept all her sarnings. The marriage of the girllin July, 1929, to Lim Fat Chung, was op- posed hy the fester parent, who charged her husband with abduc- 'ion. The charge was dismissed in nolice court, but the case reached the ears of immigration officials, who brought about the present de- ortation proceedings. PRISONER GOES : INSANE IN COUNTY JAIL AT PETERBORO Peterboro, Nov. 8.--A prisoner, 'Teikki Punnankko, a Finn, became insane yesterday in the county gaol. Other prisoners were awakened by the man's unearthly shrieks and their clamour soon brought Colonel Dalton Johnston, the jajlor, {nto the cells, Punnankko tore up the covering on his bed and again and again but- ted his head against the bars in his { mad frenzy. Struggling he was re- moved to a smaller cell. Separate from other prisoners he was hand- cuffed so that he could not injure himself. 3 The big Finn acted strangely last { Monday when he appeared before | Magistrate Langle on a charge of house-hreaking to which he pleaded guilty, He cannot speak English and has heen in Canada only a few months. MUSSO!INI JAILS ANTIFASEISTS | Twenty Men, Including Not. ed Scholars and Officials, Under Arrest Rome, Nov. 8,~--Twenty men, many of them prominent scholars. professors and former officials, are in jail in Italy and adjacent exile islands as a result of a round- up of persons suspected of partici- pating in an international ' plot against the Fascist Government, The men arrested included Bor- tolo Bellotti, former - Minister of Commerce in the Bonomi ad- ministration prior to the advent of the "Black Shirts," and Prof. Giuseppe Rensi, of Geno Univer- ity. Bellotti already has been exiled to an island amonz the groups devoted to imprisoning political enemies of Fascism. Professor Rensi, 't was learned, was held in a jail at Genoa, where he will be kept for trial before a special military tribunal for the defenco of the state--the highest tribuna of its sort, and often the most rigorous, The * 20 men were arrested charged with "criminal actions acaipst the state." The United Press learned that Mussolini, con- versing informally with severa! Fascist secretaries, told them Bel- lotti had teen exiled 10 days ago as an "'unrepenetant anti-Faselst." POSTMEN TO H'VE CHRISTMAS DAY No Mail Deliveries on Holi- day, Postmaster-General Decrees Ottawa, Nov. 8.--There will be no mail deliveries on Christmas Day. In order that letter carriers may spend the holliday with their families, Hon, Arthur Sauve, Post- master-General, has directed that no deliverios shall be made. Accompanying the departmental announcement is a request that Christmas mail be posted earlier than usual so that grectings and presents wlll reach the recipients before the holiday. "Heretofore," the announcement says, 'letter carriers have been required to give delivery sorvice to postal patrons on Christmas Day, with the result that instead of enjoying the holiday with his family, the letter carrier is trudg- ing through tho streets with heavy loads of belated mail, "No efforts will be spared to maintain the usual efficient and satisfactory service and all that is required on the part of the patrons is to mail matter which has here tofore been delivered on Christmas Day one day earlier so that de livery can be made on Christmas ve. DRINK AND BET ON DOLE IN BRITAIN London.--That money given for | food was being spent in public houses by the unemployed was the Cullis, Profegsor of Physiology University of London, at the cone ference of the British Instttute of Adult Education at Cambridge re- cently, She wae a teacher in a medical school, she added, and some of her students were now medical practitioners in districts where there was a great deal of unem- ployment. One of the them, her niece, was terribly impressed with what was going on there, "The public houses there are absolutely full all the time they are open, Betting Is taking place freely up and down the streets Women, even at eleven in the morning, go into public houses. Children are getting perceptibly dirtier and thinnor, "Now that, 1 think, shows there is something seriously wrong with the education we have given tu those people. Perhaps we ourselves might not have stood up any bot: statement made by Dr, Winnifrea || ter to the test, but if we have not trained them so that they can afety Depos't Boxes For the sum of $3.00 and up per annum vou can rent a box in ow modem Safety Deposit Vault and place therein vour Bonds Stocks, Mortgages Deeds Insurance Policies, Jewellery and other val iables where they will be protected against fire, theft and misplacement. We invite you to cal! and persona!ly inspect our sate-keeping lacilities: CENT! CANADA WVINGS COMPANY £3 Simcoe Strgst North Estabrished 1884 QSHA XA Heada Office TORONTO ASSETS OVER ELEVEN MILLIONS tand up to this hard test, we must dry to help them now." | BRITAIN ADOPTS HIGHER SCHOOL AGE London, Nov. 8.--Premjer Ram- say MacDonald's Labor Govern. 1ent won its second victory within a week, carrying, by a majority of 67 votes, the second reading of its :ducation bill. The bill which raises the school- leaving age from 14 years to 15, was carried by 94 votes to 227, UPRISING RUMORED IN URUGUAY SOON Buenos Aires, Nov. 8,--Press re- ports from Montevideo said that ru. mors were plentiful concerning an Impending revolution in Uruguay, centering in the vieinity of the frontier town of Rivera. The Rivera correspondent of the Montevideo newspaper El Dia re- ports that an outbreak is scheduled for Nov, 10, SHIPPING LINES WILL CO-OPERATE Six Large Firms Arrange Plan of Alternate. Sailings London, Nov, 8.--With a view to >liminating unprofitable competi- tion during the Winter months, six of the largest British steamship 'ines operating in the North Atlan- 'ic have worked out a system of co- anerative operation which is being made effective immediately, The Cunard, White Star, Red tar, Canadian Pacific, Anchor and Atlantic Transport Lines are the companies affected by the arrange- ment, which is somewhat similar to that worked out several months ago by the Hamburg-American and North German Lloyd Lines of Ger- many. The principal feature of the ~cheme {s an alternate running ar rangement whereby sometimes there will be only four ships sail- ing weekly to New York from Liver. nool, London, and Southampton. Equally drastic reductions over Ca- nadian routes will be effected. Advertisements listing sailings of the six companies together have ap- pef&red in London newspapers. DISCOURAGED THUGS PHONE FOR POLICE cracker is that he is too easily dis- couraged. The constable here was amazed to receive a telephone call from the Palace Motion Picture Theatre from a man who identified nimself as 2 robber, "We've been trying to blow this safe for five hours," the voice said, 'and we're sick of it. You might as well come and get us." The constable did. two of them. INDICT TWO FOR SLAYING ATHLETE Hull, Que., Nov. 8--Joint indict- ments for the slaying here in Oeto- ber of Willlam Bert Marshall, young Ottawa athlete, were return- ed by the grand jurv yesterday against Austin Cassidy and John Chernetzky, Ottawa pair with long prison records. Trey will be tried separately by jury, Cas:idy on Nov 25 and Chernetzky, possibly Nov. 27 There were Marshall was shot throug' the heart in an argument which jrew out of a trifling automobile : ash. "The ancient Egyptiang had no such thing as money," says a wri- ter. This proves that the ancient Egyptians were really very much like ourselves.--London Sunday Pictorial. $ man may be dowm, but isn't out until he can sponge on those who feel sorry for him.--Los An- geles Times. tlantic City is always {'in season' mn One of rhe Finest Holels In Atlantic City Por a week ot » week-end en'oy the tu ° 5, oe regimes beet Series EDT a SE SE HSE eee Ll 890 ROOMS ~ OVERLOONING YNE OCEAN _ || SRA WATER BATHS P Aucliter, Mgr AL, Andrews, Pres. We Fa "s, Petersborough, Eng., Nov, §.-- The trouble with the British safe- THE winter. THE DYNAMITER The Dynamiter is a woodbilt gar. age designed for our climate to pro- tect your car both summer and It is warm, solid and good looking. The price is $58.65 for the 10 x 16 size and terms are easy. Oshawa Lumber COMPANY, LIMITED Telephone 2821.2820 Ritson Rd. North