PAGE FOUR THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1930 The Oshawa Daily Times ucceeding THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) An independ paper published every after- noon except Svndans and legal holidays at Osh- awa, Canada, by The Times Publishing Company. of Oshawa, Limited. Chas. M. Mundy, Presidents A. R. Alloway, Managing Director, The Oshawa Daily Times is a member of The Cana- dian Press, the Canadian Daily Newspapers Asso- ciation, the Ontario Pr 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 §tates, $4.00 2 ear, / y TORONTO OFFICE $18 Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street. Telephone Adelaide 0107, H. D. Tresidder, representative. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27th, 1930 CHAMPIONS OF ONTARIO It was an inspired rugby team that car- ried the colors of the Oshawa Blue Devils to victory over the Sarnia wanderers and to the intermediate championship of the Ontar- io Rugby Football Union at the Motor City Stadium yesterday afternoon. Going into the game with a six point deficit to overcome, they faced a task that might have made less dauntless hearts grow faint. With charac- teristic spirt, however, the leeway which they had to make up made them fight all the harder, and with the game over, they had caught up with the visitors, and were on even terms on the round. Then came that desperate last half battle, with two evenly matched teams battling for the points which would mean viteory, It fell to the lot of the Oshawa team to win that honor and it did so in a clean-cut manner. There was no mistake this superiority. In every department of the game the Oshawa players were masters of thier opponents, and only the desperate last period defence of the Wanderers kept the score down. It was a glorious victory, witnessed by a great crowd of spectators, w to the echo. : : It has been a hard trail to the champion- ship for the Blue Devils, and The Times ex- tends the heartiest congratulations to that gplendid band of sportsmen. The name of Oshawa has been carried honorably and well by the team, and every player has typified the best traditions of Canadian sport. So, for the second time in three years, the On- tario championship comes to Oshaw i, an honor worthily held and nobly won in 4 game which calls for th the best in manliness, outage and sportsmanship toat a team can io 2 oh lies the 'final test for the Dominion title. It will be the greatest test of the season, for the boys from the Royal Military College have built vp a wonderful reputation for clean, hard and skilful play- ing, May the best team win, and, if our good wishes count for anything, may that team be the Blue Devils. VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE TOR GIRLS The vocational guidance project for girls which has been instituted in Oshawa, by the local Girls' Work Board, is a splendid move- ment, one which has a high practical value in the guidance of teen-age girls along the road to successful vocations. It used to be thought that this 'sort of thing was an ex- clusive privilege of boys, but that has all been changed in modern days, and today we find that the girls are demanding, and receiv- ing, just as much attention in this direction as their brothers. It is a decided privilege which the girls of Oshawa are to enjoy in listening to the speakers who are to conduct this vocational guidance course, and in having the advice and cousel of women, who, by experience, have the knowledge to pass on to them. In these days, new avenues of activity are op- ening up for girls, and it will be of decided value to the girls of this community to have the approaches to these avenues made clear to them. And the additional help which can be given by a vocational guidance committee will have a great and good influence on the lives of many young girls, and will lead them into vocations for which they are admirably adapted, but which they might otherwise miss. It is to be hoped that the girls of Oshawa will take full advantage of this opportunity And, if it can be made possible, we might add that it would do a great many of the mothers good to attend these monthly meet- ings and hear the addresses which are to be given. It might lead them to have a better understanding of the problems of girl life of today, and of their own girls. HELP THE ROY SCOUTS ) This seems to be a season of appeals, but the appeal which has been sent out by the Boy Scouts of Oshawa is one 'which should be heard with a sympathetic ear. Thesé boys are not asking for money. They are appealing, simply, to the children and the mothers and fathers of Oshawa to hand over to them old and. disused toys, articles that once delighted the heart of a child, but which now lie, broken and forgotten, in the .attic or cellar. The scouts can make use of these. They are busy at work in their toy shop, repairing and renovating such toys, so that, on Christmas Eve, they can be distribu. ed to hundreds of homes where the children would otherwise have to go without those things which make Christmas really like Christmas. ho cheered their champions | Perhaps the appeal has not been sufficiently stressed. So The Times is again appealiing to the homes of Oshawa, and asking that every toy that can possibly be made available for this purpose be sent to the toy shop, un- derneath the Fire Hall, as an addition to the store which the scouts are preparing for their annual Christmas distribution. WAR HATREDS DYING Newspaper headlines the other day her- alded the fact that a young 'German army officer had won first and second places in a jumping competition at thé Royal Winter Fair in Toronto, often called the most in- tensely loyal British city in the Dominion. In the same day's paper, mention was made of the fact that four former German officers, now resident in Canada, were guests at a re- union of a Canadian wartime artillery unit, and that they had decorated the cenotaph in front of Toronto's city hall. These things, happening twelve years af- ter the war, show how war hatreds die out. A few years ago,"they would not have been possible. In the years immediately after the war, the cry, "No truck or trade with Ger- many" was even stronger than the cry of "No truck or trade with the Yankees" -was in the 1911 election campaign. Yet it has been forgotten, and men who fought on opposite sides of the line in the Great War are frat- ernizing as if it had never happened. Yet it is an encouraging sign that it is so. These men probably realize that those who fought on both sides of the battle area were alike victims of the system of international diplomacy which made war possible in 1914, that they and their comrades were sacrificed in the maelstrom of international politics, for reasons which they themselves little under- stood, This fraternizing between enemies is, what makes the future of the world look more hopeful. These men, on both sides, see things with understanding eyes. They see things, not as the political war-makers see them, but with the vision of mén who have faced death and have seen comrades fall on the right side nd the left side of them, all because of the overpowering ambitions of certain rulers to be supreme in the world. A decade or a little more ago, there was only hatred between the Germans and those who fought against them. Yime has mellowed that feeling. Un- derstanding has brought common bonds of sympathy, and so once again those who were enemies are now brothers, and may they ever continue to be so. EDITORIAL NOTES The great crowd at the Motor City Sta- dium had plenty to cheer for yesterday when the Blue Devils won the Ontario champion. ship. Similar support on Saturday will help them to win the Dominion honors. Wild horses caught in British Columbia are being sent to a canning factory in the United States, and then what? When hurricanes come at the end of November, it makes us wonder if they are due to the hot air let loose at election nomin- ation meetings. If every Ontario citizen spent ten cents extra every day, it would put $2,000,000 more money in circulation inthe province every month. Wouldn't that help a great deal to keep the factories busy. One advantage of municipal election campaigns is that they are usually short and snappy. British builders have invented cork hous- es. We can recommend these for those cities which have a large floating population. Canada is truly a land of opportunity. The first prize animal at the Toronto Cat Show was found half-starved in a box car. Mr. Bennett will appreciate the fact that when the Imperial Conference re-convenes at Ottawa, he will be a long distance away from the Manchester Guardian, Oshawa has a month to prepare for the municipal elections. Let tha month be de- voted to getting the best possible men con- testing the various elective offices. The crowd is always with the winner-- but a game loser is not lacking in popularity. Isn't it strange that city folks, in many cases, think themselves so well qualified to give advice to the farmers? It is highly creditable for Oshawa that its efforts to provide employment for its work- less men should have attracted favorable at- tention as far away as California . "The boy or man who can do things even a shade better than the other fellow is the one to whom the plums will fall sooner or latter."--Sir Thomas Lipton. "Good looks are an introduction, but only an introduction; after that, men are measur- ed by their ability."--James J. Walker, "Tne gap between a living human being and the man who is alive is easily and quick- ly bridged by what is conventionally describ- ed as a liberal education."--Nicholas Murray by €. H. Tues, Opt. D. (Copyright, 1928) OPTICAL LENSES--"ULASSES Part "11" We have both these corrections combined by fusing the two correc- tions to one single lens. This it not unusual, the two-piece bifocal has been in existence for many years but the perfect product of toway does not show a noticeable attached seg- ment and makes a very direct appeal to the wearer in that there is no not- iceable line to irritate, to mar the appearance of the wearer or call at- teption to the fact that the wearer required bifocal lenses. There is no comparison therefore with the old product where the segment is pasted on, which serves to proclaim the age of the wearer and advertises the fact by showing the visible line on the cage of the segment where the dirt is sure to collect in the grooves It is a normal sequence to the ad- vance of time for the power of the eye to be deficient in its sustaining powers for close range vision after the age of forty years. Science in suiting itself to the needs of the human eye when it begins to tire, de- vised the bifocal lens as the best means of incorporating in one pair of glasses, ease, comfort and eye pre- servation--the three cssentials every wearer of glasses, should strive to obtain, (To be Continued) A SONG + VAITE Sr Jkla THAT PASSENGER BUSSES, VANS ANDt TRUCKS SEEM TO BE GETTING BIGGER AND WID- ER, MUCH TO THE DISMAY OF spent the week-end at the home of Mr. J. R, R. Cole. Mr, and Mrs. Everton White, | Marie and Edith were among the guests entertained by Mr, and Mrs. Eslie Oke, of Ebeneezer,, in honor of Miss Elsie Oke's birthday last week. This section has been favored with ideal November weather-- hazy and warm resembling Indian summer. Growth fs wonderful; pansies in bloom, an odd berry in some gardens and quantities of dandelions, Jack Frost must be visiting some other section, UXBRIDGE AY.PA. IS ENTERTAINFD BY PT. PERRY BRANCH Visitors Provide Excellent Program--Refreshmeats Served Port Perry, Nov. 22.-- About for. ty members of the A.Y.P.A. of St. Paul's Church, Uxbridge, were en- tertained on Monday night by the Port Perry Branch, A very excel- lent program was given by the vis- iting Branch after which refresh- ments were served by the local members. The evening was much enjoyed by all present, Mr. and Mrs, A. Orchard visited friends in Toronto for a couple ot the present office in 1870, thus the practice has been in the family for 60 years, HONOR VETERAN OFFICIAL Lindsay.--At the Fenelon Town- ship nominations, held at Cam- eron, a cane was presented to Man- ley Maybee and a brooch to Mrs. Maybee by the clerk, J. B. Powles, on behalf of the reeve, the council- lors and the township officials. Mr Maybee has just retired from-the treasureship of Fenelon Township, a position which he has held for 3 years, Previous to that he had served the township in other posi- ( tions for seven years, Kiddies' first courses go like magic where the dessert is-- McLAREN'S INVINCIBLE JELLY POWDERS BE SURE days this week, Rev. C, E. Whittaker, rector oa Blackstock, who was for thirty-five vears a missionary in the Arctic Circle, is to be the preacher at the Sunday "evening service in the Church of the Ascension, Mr, and Mrs. Hugh Wallace and family, of Toronto, visited at the home of Mr, and Mrs, Mitchell on | unday members of St. John's Presbyterian | Y.P.8. motored to Ashburn where they wera entertained by the Ash- burn Branch. A very enjoyable | program was presented, each socle- | ty contributing several good num bers. Mrs. GC A, Woods and Mrs, T. A. | Nind were the hostesses at a very | enfovable afternoon tea, which wae | {ven at the home of Mrs. Woods. THE MOTORIST. SOME = OF THEM ARE SO FAT AND WIDE THAT IT 1S BECOMING AN EN- GINEERING FEAT TO PASS a | They cecupy so much space on the | road and kick up so much dust, es- | pecially if on a dirt road, that it 1s | them, Many truck and van drivers seem to thing that "might makes right' and witth ntter d.sregard.. for motorists, tear on their way. | Passenger busses, trucks and vans | the expense, inconvenience and peril! of a greater number, Their drivers | should be very careful to respect the rights of others, If they keep growing in length and! width, roads will have to be widened and thickened and laws will have to be passed to limit their length and width or build new roads for auto- | mobiles, as wm many congested dis tricts the trucks, busses and vans are almost everything else of the highways Some heavy trucks with trailers look like freight trains nowadays, and occupy nearly as much space in width, BETHESDA NEWS Bethesda, Nov. 26.--Mr. Chalmers is convalescing at Norman Collacutt's, Mr, W. A, Gilbert, of Toronto, was a Sunday guest at the home of T. J. T. Cole, Mr. W, J. Bragg, M.P.,, of Bow- manville, visited his daughter, Mrs, Howard Couch, on Sunday last Mr, and Mrs. T. J. T, Cole, Miss Winnifred Cole and Mr, Gilbert, of Toronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. Er- nest Werry, of Enniskillen. Mrs, Harry Trear.motored to To- ronto with friends and spent the week-end, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fraser motored frgm Toronto and spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. D. K. Fraser. rowdir John Mr THEM SAFELY, | ie almost impossible to even get near | | srellow, are serving but part of the people ul Mrs. Johns and Miss Esther Johns motored from Thornhill and , ald of the Part Perry Branch of oe Woman's Auxiliary. The supper and concert, which a riven by members of the La- * Dible Class in the United hureh, wag a suecess. A good f n was given in which the lowing took part: The Sunday 'ohnol Orchestra--Mies Vera Wil am=, Misses Marion Goode, Helen Valde Hortop, Enid Wal Helen Willard. The Stone Vieses Mary and Grace Stone ter George Stone and the Orchestra. Rev, Mr was the chairman of thr ners neo, nd Ms ni at Mp. Orr Shunk has moved into » house on Caleb St, recently oc- 'a? by Mr. Ray Cook. Mrs, A. H. Rose was in Toronto a eouple of days, this week taster Leonard Newell, of To tn, {a the guest of Mr, and Mrs D. W. McIntosh The sympathy of the community « extended to the family of th 'ate Mre Jos. Britton, who dled Friday, Nov, 21st, after an illness if several weeks, Mr. and Mrs, FH, 1, Collacutt are 'n Toronto for the Royal Winter Waly Mr, Collacutt is one of the judees, Mr. John Harrison, an old res! tent of Port Perry, died very sud- denly on Tuesday. He had been in poor health for some time and was to have gone to Whitby but he sollanged while erossing the street on his way home from a neighbor's, He had no relatived®in Port Perry. TO PROTECT CROSSING Aftef the sad fatality at the first crossing east of Grass Hall in which three lives were lost, the county council took a step in the right direction when it passed a motion to petition the Railway Commission to order an overhead bridge to do away with the level crossing and the possible recur- LL.D., who has celebrated his 80th birthday, is probably the oldest Inwear in practice in Canada, as he he been actively engaged in this profession for (0 years His broth- er, the late T Walkem, took over Christmas Sailings > Dec. 8th LANCASTRIA from Halifax to Ply mouth, Havre and london. + + + Dec. 13th LETITIA from Halifax tg Bel- fast, Liverpool and Glasgow. (Leaving Saint John Dec. 12th). Direct trains to the ship's side. + Ask aboutour special Christmas. excursions on these ships, + Book through The Cunard Line, Corner of Bay and Welling: ton Streets, Toronto, (Tel. Elgin 3471), or any steamship agent, Go HOME with the Christmas mail this year! Have your Christmas dinner with the old folks! Book on a Cunard orAnchor Donaldson Christmas ship. Splendid food, in generous portions; trained stew ards to wait on you, and a Third Class rate of only $155 round trip. Also low Cabin and Tourist Third Cabin rates. CUNARD CHRISTMAS SERVICE IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE ANCHOR « DONALDSON LINE = - - On Tuesday evening about thirty - | 37000) 1 0) 1 FOR FINE FURNITURE PIANOS Erc. FEW drops on a damp cloth removes that blue fog and dullness, reveals the original beauty and grain of the wood, and imparts a beautiful, lustrous glow, making your home the admiration of your friends, HAWES' LE Oil dries at once, leaving no sticky film, It actually pre- serves and protects your furniture and woodwork. Edward Hawes & Co., 1td., Toronto, Makers of Hawes' Floor Was ITS HAWES" ON 26 Do You Shop at The Superior Store? If you don't this information is for you. There are close to seven hundred Superior Chain Stor treme BRUNSWICK Sardines full deep sea flavour . 4 tor 23C SEE BEANS WHITE " m4 1bs. 25¢ | ---- JEWEL B® Shortening ea] m2 Ibs. 27¢ i -------- POST'S - Bran Flakes # ® 3 ries. 33€] INGERSOLL CREAM CHEESE 2 rkgs. 25¢ | LIBBY'S i Pork & Beans Med. Size 2 tor 19¢C i e-- MARSHALL'S in tomato sauce 23¢c FRAY BENTOS No.1 1 buying power keeps prices consistently lower, Each store 1s owned and operated by expérienced grocers--men who know the business. They offer a personas service that cannot be excelled. Each store owner lives right in the community re serves--his prosperity is your prosperity. Support local enters prise and benefit yourself, WE SELL THE BEST FOR LESS Items for Week Ending December 3, 1930 ROYCROFT CREAMERY BUTTER 2 Ibs. 6'7¢ Cream of Wheat, POF PRE sve rrresois 25¢ Quaker Oats, Quick or Regular, large pkg, 27c¢ Icing Sugar .... 8 lbs, 25¢ New Golden Hallowi Dates 23¢ Quality New Cleaned Cur- 2 Ibs. 20c¢ New Pack Prunes, large 2 Ibs, 25c¢ Glacler Brand Sardines "Finest Canadian Pack in Pure Olive Oil" sesesssnsnes 3 for 28c Clothes Ping ...8 doz. 10¢ Chloride of Lime, 1arge PEE. «v.00 ivus 14c Salmon, Red Cohoe, 1's Per tin Creamettes Hes Macaroni Per pkg. Peel, cut, mixed, Wl PRB. vo orsrev iBE 2 1bs. 29¢ em ---------------- - .7 LUX for fine fabrics Z poke. i7c i HAWES' Vo] Floor Wax 3 pound size ROWNTREE'S B® Chocolate ® Bars Oo 3335 fat An afi 3 Ey Are Delicious 4 KKOVAH x Health Salts § 2 tins 35¢C Wm ---- ye Plum Jam a 40 Oz. rr sere---- NEW PACK U3 MINCEMEAT ¥ 2 ibs. 29¢ NEW PACK STANDARD PEAS No. 4 Sieve No. 2 Size 2 for I§¢C A -- 3 I ! ve # ' 43c® i -- The Boy Scouts are finding it hard to se- CABIN + TOURIST THIRD CABIN + THIRD CLASS cure articles for their toy shop this year. - . Rh Butler, | 3 ERNE JN i a iii i