PAGE FOUR ' THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1930 The Ushuwa Daily Times " THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) A . re Fh bi Vy aye. ot "Sh Cs " A Lo: , Chas. M. Mundy, Premio: ™ Overs Daly Time Is renter of The Cans e Oshawa Dai 8 member di the Cs wibangrs cial py nara: Prove Dal and the Audit Bureau of s _ sv, | RA Delivered by carrier, I Os snd suburbs, 12 » week, By mail in Canada (outside Oshawa F134 delivery limits) $3.00 a year; United States, $400 a ar. dt TORONTO OFFICE 518 Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street. Telephones Adelaide 0107. H, D. Tresidder, representative. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14th, 1980 USING ONTARIO PRODUCTS According to the weekly bulletin of the Oshawa Rotary Club, the luncheon fo be served on Monday next will consist entirely of products of the farms of Ontario. This is a commendable gesture which is being made by the club directors in conjunction with the effort to the provincial department of agriculture to popularize the use in Ontar- io of the farm products of this province, The value of an effort of this kind should be self-evident. The farmers of Ontario have harvested excellent crops, they are pro- ducing cattle, and are raising fine line stock in other lines. But, unfortunately, the mare ket is poor, and the prices they are receiv- ing are not commensurate with the actual costs of production, Thus the situation is not exactly a favorable one for the men on the farms, The greatest need of the Ontario farmer today is a profitable market for his produce, and he should be able to find that market in his own providence, The people of Ontar- io, hy concentrating on the use of foodstuffs produced on the farms of Ontario, can pro- vide that market, can enable the farmer to sell his produce on more favorable terms, and the benefits will be spread over the whole province. The farmers of Ontario are good custom- ers of the factories of Ontario. They are good customers of the stores in the cities near their farms. And, if the Ontario farm. er can sell his produce at favorable prices, +then he can afford to buy, Increased buying power among the farmers will result from the stimulation of the Ontario market for their products, aand this increased buying power will, logically, be followed by better business for the merchants and dealers, and more orders for Ontario's factories, Thus the people in the cities, by using Ontario products to the limit of their pos- sibilities, will not only be helping the farm- ers. They will be helping themselves as well, 'and, what is perhaps more important, they will be doing something in a practical way to create better relationship between the farmers and themselves.' PROVIDING WORK A group of citizens living on the same street in Toronto have struck a novel note in the matter of providing employment for men out of work. They have decided to con- tribute each week the sum of fifty cents, paid in advance into a fund, to pay & man to visit each house daily and clean out the furnace, carry out the ashes, shovel snow and do such odd jobs as are essentifil during the winter. For the fee of fifty cents a week, each householder in the group of about forty will receive this service daily, and the man, in return, will receive the pro- ceeds of the fund. We feel that this is an idea that is worth passing on to the people of Oshawa, It should be possible for groups of citizens living eaclr other in the residential sections of the city to come to a similar arrange- ment. The average man who is earning a steady salary would be glad to have his chores done for him at a cost of fifty cents a week. And there are many men who would be eager to do this work with the as. surance of a steady job from now until next spring. It would be decidedly interesting to have a few public-spirited citizens take hold of the idea in districts in which they live, and to organisze their neighbours into a little club of the kind suggested, as a prac- tical measure of providing at least one man, not with casual labor, but with a steady job for. the winter months, BROKERS GOING TO JAIL Headlines in yesterday's newspapers told of eight Toronto brokers being sentenced by Mr, Justice Jeffery to terms of impris- onment totalling 22 years, after being found guilty on various charges of conspiracy. To the average man on the streets, these sen- tences will not be considered a bit too heavy. In fact, the general impression is likely to be that the guilty parties' involved escaped very lightly. Many a man found guilty of petty theft has been sent to prison for long- er periods than those men found guilty' of conspiracy to defraud on a scale, on offences involving hundreds of thousands of dollars, so that, by comparison, the sentences could Hardly be termed as severe ones. Even although they have escaped lightly, however, there will be some satisfaction in the fact that these brokers have not been allowed their freedom by merely paying a fine. Public opinion has been aroused to a high bikeh by the exposures of illegal traf- in stocks, and Mr, Justice Jeffery acted wigely in imposing prison sentences on those who were convicted. These prison terms will show the people of Ontario that those responsible for the administration of justice ave in earnest in their desire to sefe- guard the investing and speculating public and they will also act as a warning to stock- brokers that their dealings must be fair and shove-hosrd if they desire to escape public condemnation, TWO GENERALS TO MEET SOON A little over a year ago General Business was speeding along with his head up in the sir, and never noticed the break in the road ahead, Suddenly, he toppled into the open- ing, and began to slide down. He kept on sliding, with an occasional short stop as he grasped at various roots and stumps, These however, were only temporary stops, and he had to keep on until he reached the bottom. We were left on top, looking down and won- dering what to do without our leader, Now, after resting a bit, he has started to climb out of the hole. The going is diffi- cult, as he finds very few places near the bottom where he can get a foothold. He climbs a bit and slips back a little, but he is determined to get back. He sees that a little farther up the going will be much better, and he can reach the top again. It is still difficult, but every foot he gains brings him closer to the path which will enable him to reach the crest and proceed on his way, In other words, eGneral Business is on the way up. He is such a good friend of ours that we were anxious about him, and now that he seems be progressing up- wavds, we can all brea! little easier, We have to go slowly and pick our steps around the hole, but we are on our way, and will meet General Business on the other side, and proceed on our march to connect up with that other army led by Gen. eral' Prosperity.~From Mussen's Bulletin, Toronto. MOVING AHEAD The ratepayers' association movement is going ahead in Oshawa, Starting with isol- ated ward associations, it is now reachling towards its logical development in the or- ganization of a Central Ratepayers' Associa- tion, embracing the whole city, and acting as it were, as a central executive for the associations which already exist in the wards, The Times as already commented on the value of ratepayers' associations to the community. These bodies help to focus at- tention on the problems of municipal govern. ment. They help to create an enlightened body of public opinion, so that when the time comes for the exercise of the municipal franchise, there is an intelligent and well- considered expression of the public will, A central association, co-ordinating the efforts of the ward associations, seeing things through the eyes of the whole eity, rather than thrrough the eyes of section alism, can perform even more useful func tions than the smaller bodies, and The Tim- es wishes to commend those public-spirited men who are giving this movement their leadership, not because there is any person al gain for them in it, but because they are imbued with a desire to serve the commun- ity in which they live, EDITORIAL NOTES Spending money makes most people poor- er, but the act of spending provides a won- derful sensation of affluence. What Ontario needs is an automatic traf- fic policeman who will pop up at railway crossings as trains are approaching. Waiters are very fond of tips, except when they come from the stockbrokers' clerk. A writer has discovered that the ancient Egyptians had no such thing as money. And things haven't changed very much for many of the folks of the present age. The Chatsworth sage predicts that the real winter will start on November 28, Nev. er mind, the garden is all dug and the coal bin is full, Razor blades are selling for 75 cents each in Russia. This should provide the edi- tor of the Stratford Beacon-Herald with an- other idea for getting rid of his old ones, Lite is but a dream, says the poet. But then there are all kinds a ky i The latest one is about the Scotsman who borrowed a magazine for his wife, and would not let her have stamps to send for all the free samples offered in the ads. " "Liberty can never be obtained by force; it is only by means of education that it can be secured."Sir Rabindranath Tagore, "Any views are unimportant, if th oe A ov} women by a man past 40." Ben echt, "If the quality of design and workman« ship {s right there is no such thing as over. production." --Henry Ford. by €, the mel ing. rain quality b; ade ¢hip the above, (Copyright, 1928) OPTICAL LENSES , , , OLASS Part "gr in Bras hose A bo # prac y impossible (0 Tee I'first two weeks »! trom bubbles but correct materials and methods will eliminate their occurence because they occur in the making and are chiefly due to some foreign matter in the Birise is caused ch per mixin cision of the lens, : orfect surface as to polish Is of Eye the weerer, Care and Eye Strain sion of portant as fous, ~| eet, finished produc The superior surface wality its # higher transmis : Vent po 1 is almost os Im~ All the shove mentioned are im- portant factors baving & bearing upon the sceursey of the strength and are all the more certain where methods of precision follow every Even every detall in the work contributes to the meeursey of the t, (To be continued) H, Tues, Opt. D. Bits of Humour ters home "Jessica," farmer. He wrote: Inss itself, "Dear Jessica: y hire; and may oceur Materia) 4nd tbe 600 | new friend Semics has » definite effect op making the lens brittle subject to breakage ana ping. It may, like any of , affect gone to Mississippics, Dadics,"" MEALY I received welcome letter, Mamgica and omfea has » new friend Ssemica Jonesics, Aunt Maryica and Uncle Geor, +SET AN EXAMPLE Jenie had been sent to a fashioy- able boarding sehpol, and after the eo signed her let- Presently she received a letter from her father, 8 plain prosperous our om- lca have our loving the power and pre-I* A lawyer was questioning a Scot- tish witness, meal?" he said, "let us be quite certain on this point, because it is a very important one, Be good enough to tell me what mes) it was you were going home to," "You would like tae ken what meal 1 was ganging home tae?" asked the Beot, "Yep, I should like 40 know," re- plied the lawyer impressively, "Weel, then,' replied the wit ness, the mesl I was ganging' tae was juist ontmes)!" YES, HOW? An Irish motor truck driver was charged with reckless driving in having stopped his truck so sudden~ ly that a car behind smashed into him, The judge asked him why he had not held out his hand, Pat indig- pantly answered; "If the por fool couldn't see me truck, how in hiv. en's name could he see me hand?" THE GIUVTTON gammy (aged seven) --Mammas can 1 have some more puddin'?" Mother---'"No, Bammy, you've hed epough." gammy--"But mother, 1 don't want enopgh. | want too much," SHOOT! Wite (as they return from party) --'"Do you realize what you did?" HON, A. BR. ¥. WEBBER, EDIT. OR OF THY GEORGETOWN (BRI TIN GUIANA) DAILY CHBON. CLE, BAYS: That in a world more or less . ted with overproguetion of Kup every eommodity, ov, as Arthur J, Cook, the noted English soefaligt and labour leader, puts it, under-consum ption, rather than over-production, it Is a comfort to urn to one country which produces two commodities in which there is neither over-produe tion nor under consumption, British Guiana is one of the world's great producers of bauxite, the native ore of alluminum, and its vast forests provide a great veservolmfor the pro duetion of wood pulp to keep the paper machines of the world busy, no less than the wonderful new in. dustry for the making of artificial silk, variously known as rayon, British Guiana is situated on the north east shoulder of the continent south, At present it produces sbent 50,000 tons of aluminum per or about 200,000 tons of raw Sousits ore, This quentity doss Bot econ from over the 3 the Opera IOnS of Bh AA however, spread all over he A and other corporations have but (9 come, see and conquer, The try is possibly capable of 500,000 tons of aluminum, rether than 50,000 tons, and thet would stil) leave the world's consumption 9 disturbed, In the centuries that bsve gone before, iron and sicel, copper and brass were the grest indusiris! met als on which commerce was raised, IN THY, 20TH CENTURY AND AVTER, IV 15 ALUMINUM WHIVE 1% GOING TO PLAY THAT P, IN AIRSHIPS NO LESS TRAN STEAMSHIPS; IN RAILROADS NO LEAR THAN IN AUTOMOBIL- KH; AND FROM PISH HOOKS T0 GREAT FBLEVATOR CRANPS, THE WORLD REJUIRES MORE NOT LEsh ALUMINUM, AND THEN IT WILL STILL . WANT MORE WHEN THE FAR CORN. ERS OF THY FARTH HAVE TO BE RCOURED FOR IT TO KRUPLY THE CONSTANTLY GROWING DEMANDS, tion in one distriet, "You affirm that when this hap- great value to the clearer vision to pened you were going home to a Hubby--""No, but I'll admit that it was wrong, What was it?" of Bouth America, between Venezue la on the north and Brazil on the there will he 2 woman in ft. Just ae long es there is 8 esse WHEN WINTER SWEEPS DowN FROM THE NORTH Extra demands of cold-weather driving emphasize the reliability of the new Ford THROUGHOUT this country == in the United States and in Europe «== the new Ford has made an unusual record for en. durance and reliability, Cold weather emphasizes the value of its simplicity of design and dependable performance. The 1930 Automobile Winter Race, arranged by the Royal Automobile Club of Sweden, resulted in a sweeping victory for the Ford cars. This run was made over slippery mountainous roads. At times, the cars were half hidden by snow. During the night the temperature was twenty degrees below zero. At Fernan Lake, just over the border in Idaho, a Ford car went through the ice and was submerged in fifteen feet of water, It was finally raised after twelve days and found to be in good cone dition. After a new battery and carbue retor bowl were installed it was driven away under its own power. Even the exterior finish showed no serious harm. Here in Canada there have heen count. less examples of the way the Ford stands up under the added strain of winter driving, Through swirling sleet and drifting snow it has fought ite way on missions of business and of urgent need. Lives have been saved by its ability to "get through." Materials have been moved with greater speed and with less interruption for a longer period each year. Thousands of Ford owners have found that it is no longer necessary to lay up the car when winter sweeps down from the north. Because of its good performance in all weather, the new Ford is outselling every other car in Canada by a large and in. creasing margin, In many sections, be tween 509% and 709% of all cars sold are Model A Fords. \ FORD MOTOR COMPANY <D am TAC "RAN, RL Te Br: rid ~v bo &) eo ie] ARN | : | 3 waar, 5% ---- yy ¥ Tue New Foro Tunos Sspan Winter-time Features of the New Ford STARTING = The Ford starts easily in cold weather, The heavy duty starting motor is unusually reliable, exerting a torque of 15 pounds, Its extra power equips it to meet the added strain of zero temperatures, RELIABILITY = All working parts in the Ford that might be affected by snow or water are fully enclosed. This includes the engine, transmission, clutch, propeller shaft, and all rear-end parts, SAFETY = The brakes on the new Ford are also enclosed to insure reliable performance. Combined with the balance of the car and the low center of gravity, they lessen the dangers of skidding on slippery roads, The liberal road clearance enables the car to negotiate deeply rutted roads impassable to many cars, Other safety features are the shatterless glass windshield which reduces the dangers of fly ing glass in collisions and the sturdy steel construction of the car, IGNITION «== The Ford distributor is waters proof and there are no wives from the dis. tributor to the spark plugs. These connec. tions are made by thin bronze strips which will not short-circuit or cause trouble in cold, wet weather, i "Tur Canavian Can™ CARBURETOR == The choke on the dash of the new Ford is a convenient carburetor adjusts ment control, It enables you to adjust the mixture for different temperatures and differs ent road conditions, The hot-spot manifold warms incoming gases quickly by using heat from the exhaust, FUEL SYSTEM == Here again you see the value of Ford simplicity of design, The fuel line is only 18 inches long, There is no pump or vacuum tank to condense moisture and freese. LUBRICATION = The Ford lubrication system is designed to work efficiently at all temperas tures. All oil passages are ample in else, There are no amall pipes through which congealed oil must be forced, Just select the right kind of oil, have it changed regularly, and you will have no lubrication troubles with a Ford, FINISH~All Ford cars are finished in pyroxye lin lacquer == the finest and most enduring finish for automobile bodies, It is not affected by cold or heat and will retain its original shimmering luster for a long period. A furs ther assurance of permanent beauty is the Rustless Steel on the new Ford, It is used for the radiator shell, head lamps, hub caps and other bright exterior metal parts, . ~ OF CANADA, LIMITED -- EE anne tS LER EERE ERIN EE 11 | FETDERERRETE EEE ETFET FFE FER TE Perabo Suna