_ pvening classes, . of education. f. one of Canada's largest advertisers, yet FOUR Ag RE BR TT | ¢ Oshawa Daily Times ; Succeeding "THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) blished every after. except Sundays and holidays at Osh. by The Times Publishing Company, + Can of Rory ited. Chas, M. Mundy, President. R. Alloway, Managing Director, Oshawa Daily Times is a member of The Cana: Press, the Canadian Daily Newspapers Asso+ tion, the Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier in Oshawa and suburbs, 12c. a ok. By mail in Canada (outside Oshawa carrier felivery limits) $3.00 a year. United States $4.00 a independent newspaper + TORONTO OFFICE ne Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street, Telephone Adelaide 0107. 11. D. Tresidder, representative. FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1981 DEPRESSION AND EDUCATION It is somewhat paradoxical that the de- pression which was made it necessary for public bodies to exercise the most rigid econs 'omies in their expenditures should, at the same time, have prevented the board of edu- cation making as large a reducation in its ~ estimates as most citizens would have liked . tosee. Yet this, according to Dr. F. J. Done- _ van, chairman cf the board, is exactly what has happened. : 3 It is not difficult to follow the line of "thought suggested by this assertion. When "times are good and work is plentiful, it is . not difficult for boys and girls to find em- . ployment, so they leave school as early as they can legally do so, and go to work. In | times of depression, however, it is hard for . them to find employment, so, rather than "waste their time these boys and girls gon- "tinue their education, remain at school long- er than they would normally do, and thus . afd to the numbers of students to be educat- The same reason of depression is respon- gible, too, for the increased attendance at for young men and women, * finding themselves handicapped in the labor . market, go to these classes to fit themselves for better positions, for which there is a greater field. : These are, in some respects, healthy con- _ ditions, since they add to the period of edu- sation of our young people. But, at the same | _gime, they add to the problems of the board The attendance at the collegi- ate and 'ocational institute, for instance, is 160 greater than last year, in spite of the . decrease in population, while the enrollment at the evening classes is 250 more than last year. This means more teachers and added educational costs, which cannot be avoided, and which have prevented the board of edu- on making as great a reduction as had been hoped for. Thus the very conditions which makes lower taxes imperative has, in this case operated to prevent them being made lower. NEWSPAPERS THE BACKBONE The testimony of Harry Ireland, advertis- ing manager of the General Motors of Can- ada, Limited, as to the place which news- ~ paper advertising occupies in merchandising, is worthy of attention. Pointing out that * the company was carrying on the most ag- P sive sales campaign in its history, with a view to bettering business conditions, Mr. freland says that nearly all known types of advertising, including radio, motion pictures, and magazine advertising are being used, e adds: at, newspaper continues to form the backbone of oUF SANpaigns po for the continue to do so. Y ren eneral Motor of Canada, Limited, I 8 . interesting to note that, in carrying an in- greased advertising campaign, the greatest / portion of its advertising is done in the news- papers. In a time when business is hard to ' get on the newspaper Beat applies to a great corporation applies line of business. Newspaper adver- ; Tn now acknowledged to be the run- mate of business development, and those who would secure their full share of the busi- ness which is available at the present time, , do better than adopt the policy of 'the General Motors of Canada. FOREIGN TEXTBOOKS IN SCHOOLS Considerable progress has ben made dur- ng og past wi or two in banning foreign ks from Canadian Schools, The Can- adian Chamber of Commerce hag devoted much attention to the subject and the con- sequent publicity has had excellait rosults. Many foreign textbooks in use in ths differ- have been r>placed bv publica- fn conformity with Canadian the Victoria Colonist, one of the s in British Columbia, pointed of the textbooks used in the {versity is entitled "Economic red by two Wisconsin A profestort. nada or Fg PA i anada, 17 to Great Britain, 10 to : ote bo nd three to New Zealand, an ab. § surd proporticn for Canadian students living § onthe Pacific. follows: ; erence to Canada is as : Ong relent desirable land of North Amer- is' now and we rapidly may dea b with interest to see how rapidly the pressure of the world's population upon the total food supply and the resultant rise of / other words, the company is depend- ino publicity to stimulate more THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES. food prices will encourage farmers to endure the hardships and to take the risks of loss incident to the development of the cold fron. tier of agriculture in countries like Canada and Siberia." In British Columbia the minister of Ed- uaction has played a leading role in banning foreign textbooks from the schools. He be- lieves that young Canadians should be | taught something of "heir own country and of the great empire of which it forms a part, and he is acting accordingly. Doubtless On- tario's minister of education believes like- wise and will see 'o it that Canadian and British literature is given the front place in all schools. EDITORIAL NOTES One can be sure that the Liberals will see that the MacDonald government is not de- feated until the Electoral Reform Bill is passed. After that, anything is liable to happen. Ferguson is being missed already. Very little is being heard of the Grenville election campaign. The man who threw grape-fruit at Rudy Vallee and missed deserves to be punished-- for having missed. A French mother of sixteen children has been made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. There are plenty of women down in Quebec province who could qualify for hon- ors on that basis. Other Editors' Comment i THE FIRST BUSINESS MAN ndon News-Chronicle) The Prince of Wales' keen interest in the South American trade has lng been known; but his invita- tion, published today, to the ex-Master Cutler and the President of the Sheffield Chamber of Commerce to come to London and talk about it with him pri- vately must be without parallel. The proposed con- ference is by no means a formating, for the Prince must have collected a good deal of first-hand inform. ation on the Argentine himself, and is, no doubt, ready and cager'for more, There was once a Prince of Wales who liked to be called the First Gentleman of Europe. Our own Prince is in a fair way to win the title of the First Business Man--gquite us honour able, much harder to earn, and far more useful. DOWN WITH UGLINESS (Toronto Globe) The Bell Telephone Company was justified in mak ing something of a ceremony of the removal from Yonge streets of its last telephone pole, It has set a good example to other public services in this respect. Toronto has lagged somewhat behind other centres in this matter of strict beautification. . Recently considerable headway has been made in Toronto itself, The new uptown store of the T. Eaton Company owes some of it beauty to the elim- ination of unsightly poles and wires. Even the over- head stay-wires which hold the power lines of ihe street car system have been fixed directly to the building. BITS OF VERSE TORNADO She bore the hardships of a pioneer - With fortitude: only, she learned to hate 0 Wind--a hostile norm of fate-- d It I quer. Queer How it would trample every tender spear Of ribbon uri beside the urehard gate, And like a live thing lean its phantom weight Against youny tree She fought a shadowy fear Wi cud over and Until one day «the sk moky yellow A dun cloud reared elt the praires' hush-- The quake of sud an! wally caught in a erush Of milling winds! Below the stampede's bellow She knelt upon the cellar floor to pray That God would keep the vengeful herds away. ~Leslie Dykstra, in Poetry. SNOW CRYSTALS Methinks the Jasper City must have come to earth to-night The trees are making music and the earth is gauzy white; Q'er hill and dale and lake and woods, the sparkling jewels shine And lacy crystals nod and gleam in beauty most sublime From steeple high to lonely cot the angel's wings unfold, And scatter bits of fairy flakes and specks of shining gold; The stars hold sweet communion and the clouds de- part to pray The moun a benediction gives to pilgrims on the way; Methinks -God must be satisfied with all the carth to-night, For everything 1s swept so clean and shining in the ight; And tiny baby tear-drops and fairy fancies hide : Along the drooping evergreens from all the country- side. ~Margaret Rhynas. BITS OF HUMOR Two clergymen met one da. One of them was smoking, a practice to which the other objected very strongly. . "Is it possi'le" said the non-smoker, in disgust, "that you smoke tobacco? Even-a pig would not smoke so vile a weed." "Then, 1 suppose," asked the other, "that you do not smoke yourself?" "No, indeed; 1 should think not?" : "Then, my dear brother," said his companion, quiet ly, "who is more like the pig--you or I "Hey, mother, Johnny's jabbing me in the eye with a joke book," cried Estelle, "Johnny," ordered mamma, sternly, "don't be poke ing fun at your pister." In some novels the lovers live happily ever after. wards, In others they simply get married. . New Maid--"Please, sir, » man came and stole your car, I could not see what the man is like, but I took the humber of the car." Mr. Bacon: "You should never judge a man by his clothes, my dera." Mrs, his clothes, my dear," A husband told a_magistrate that his wife had hit him with a bedroom chair, but he did not know why she had done it. Perhaps she could not lift the wardtobe. It is alleged that cat skins are now being sold as iii skins to be used in the making of imitation caver, Bacon: "I never do, 1 always judge him by [N THAT somotimes some people talk too much. Sometimes most people should talk don't talk. There is a great tendency on the part of many members of busi- ness organizations to keep quiet at the wrong time. When propositions come up concerning the welfare of the nome city, a majority of the right men sit like clams and leave the proposition hanging in the air like a balloon ready to blow .up at any minute. Some of them seem afraid that if they start talking they will get the reputation of talking too much or trying to run things .to .suit themselves, It's better to get that reputation than to sit like a dum- that ye _It 1s not necessary for a man to be a fluent after dinner speaker to talk, They should get up and speak their piece and tell what they think about the proposition and not wait to do their talking on the outside. IF PEOPLE WILL NOT TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE OP. PORTUNITIES TO EXPRESS THEIR OPINIONS, MEETINGS OV THIS KIND WILL GET A CITY NOWHERE. by C. H. Tuek, Opt. D. (Copyright, 1928) EYE STRAIN Part One It has been said and I fully be- lleve -it to be quite true that 80 per cout. of all headaches are due to the eyes. When we take from this thoee conditions due to mus- cle strain. we may eafely say that 60 per cent, of headaches are due to eyestrain. Jlls of the body arc frequently traceable to eyestrain thus proving that a great deal of our physical enerxy may be wasted when we neglect any of the warn- ings indicative of discomfort in the use of the eyes, Keen distant vision was a neces sity to the existance of the natives of Ameri before elvillzalon, To | digtinzuish friend from foe, to! sight game ot a distance wu vital to. maintuin lire. Today our Hye are lived at short range. Conce trated ure of eyesight exhaust the whole nervous system. Glassy uve required to glve relief and en ' to curry on ti harmful ey foundation of « + traced ft Many route and the eye dl glacted | I these calise Perhap: the i ouly teuipo wfort, thi discomiort | attention Is regu / warn tha wl W. INDIES LOOKTO CANADA FOR TRADE: Big Developments in Fruit and Vegetable Trade Are Expected Port-of-"pa'n, Uritish West In- dog. ~ "Canada {x expecting a huge trade development with the Brit ish West Indies in fruit and vege tables." ways The Trinidad Guard fan editorially, "Last year th Dominion imported a miltion dol lars worth of tomatoes from the United States of America and Mexico. Next year it is believed the whole supply will come from the Carihlean,. with a consequent | reduction in price to the Canadian | consumer of about 40 per cent and, of course, considerable bens | tit to the producers in these is lands, "There is also a good demand I Canada for other West Indin: vegetables such ag cucumbers, er plants, carrots and string beans Under the provisions of the new Dominion taritf, West Indian vege: | tables are admitted free and !t! now remains for enterprisir: | growers to walk into the door | which hag been thrown wide ope: for their reception, "Several of the smaller islan' are making active preparations ! take advantage of the opporiun, ties offered in the Canadian mar ket. In tomato production a splen did example has been set hy Mont serrat, for example, where a cen tral packing house has heen established and already hag achiev- ed practical results. A recent re- port states that tomatoes were ac cepted from a hundred growers on CHRIST FOR ALL=ALL FOR CHRISTY n Sea ni ay 1 pavents will have their children "ie the drily Bible sdections, 4 « priodless horilage to them in alter esr. HOW TO GAIN ALL----Seck y: first the kingdom of God and his righteousness; and. all these things shall be added unto you.--Matt. 6:33. PRAYER~Help us, Lord, to get in tune with the Infinite, that His 'British three days a week, in spite of great difficulties in " handling, preparing and packing for the market. These difficulties included the lack of cqld storage facilities in the island. Shipments were made to Canada every fortnight and owing to care in accepting at the packing house only first class fruit no complaints were received. "Canada has done its part so far as tariffs are concerned, and busi- ness interests in the Dominion are displaying unprecedented interest in the possibilities of diverting to the West Indies some of the pat ronage which now goes to the United States of America, and in- troducing to their own public new agricultural prodycts from the colonies." Trinidad is using less Canadian flour than formerly; at least, less tlour (by 4,600 bags) was import- ed from the Dominion in 1930 than in 1929, The Canadian Trade Commissioner to the British West Indies, Lester S, Glass, in an inter. view with The Trinidad Guardian, says he thinks Trinidad house: wives are abandoning the use of tlour as a luxury, But one Trinidad baker rays that his importation of Canadian flour in the past year was In- creased by nearly 100 per cent. He says others bakers and biscuit manufacturers are using large quantities of English flour, PRINCE'S PLANES INSOUTH AMERICA: Private Avroplans of Prince of Wales Goes With Him on Tour London. ~The airernft carrier "Eagle, detailed by the Admiral- ty to vigit Argentina for about a month during the British Emprie Trade Exhibition at Buenos Aires, carried in her hangars two flights of her usual aircraft complement, a flight of new Fleet Aly Arm types for demonstration flying, and the Prince's own private light monoplane, The Prince is scheduled to open the Exhibition on March 14, The carrier selected. for the cruise possesses historical interest for the Jatin peoples, "Eagle resened Major Franco, the Span- {sh airman, in June, 1929, when, in attempting a flight from Spain to New York, he way forced down in the Atlantic Ocean. The rescue wag greeted with enthusiasm by the Spanish-speaking nations in Spain and South Ameri and the warship's exploit was rightly interpreted ng an example of comradeship and eplendid en deavor, AUSTRALIA CUTS HER NAVAL FORGE Economy Is Explanation for Handing Two Big Sub- marines to Britain Sydney , Australia, --The two comparatively new Australian sub- marines, the Otway and Oxley, have been handed over to the Royal Navy and will join the Med- iterrancan Fleet. Economy fis given by the government as the reason for this move. A new 6,000 ton cruiser however will replace the olsolete Brishane. The move is said to be the re- sult of conversations between the British Admirality and Premier James Scullin during his recent visit to England, Apparently the changing hands of the submarime involves an un- dertaking of which Australia will roplace them with the latest type of the Leander class cruiser as soon as finances permit. The change does not effect the recent Navy Treaty, because the Em. pire's naval ships are treated as a unit, and, accordingly, the sub. marines are merely being trans- erred, The agreement will give Aus tralit four up-to-date over-water craft, which will provide good cilities for training, It is point ol out that submarines are extrem. 1 expensive to operate, and the nowest type of cruiser has all. round advantages to Australia, Meanwhile the giving up of the submarines will save Australia yma thoueands of pounds, It is not desclosed what the British Government fs paving Australia for them, Presumably Great Brit. ain fs purchasing them instead of building new oues under the 1930 estimates, One of the features of 'Jane's Fighting Ships, 1930," is a plan of tht Leander class which class, says the editor, 'represents a retitn to ganity in cruiser design, compared with tho overgrown and over Jun. ned 10,000 Treaty type (H. M. A. §. Canberra). The 6,000 ton cruisers are cone templated as auxiliaries to the 10. 000 vessels, carrying 6-inch in. gtoad of B.inch gune, The Otely and Oxway were coms ploted In 1927 in England, with and underwater displacment of 1825 tons, surface speed of 15 1.2 knots, armed with a 4-inch and one gmaller gun and elght torpedo tubes, Why, oh! Why does not Mr. Bennett ralse the price of wheat? -«Goderich Signal, Evening rates on Anyone" (station-to-station) calls now begin at 7 p.m. Night rates begin at 8.30 pm. Just give "Long Distance" the num- ber you want--it speeds up If you don't the service. know the distant up'for you, power may pe ours. BELGIAN ORDER 1S TRIUNPH FOR BRITISH CRAFT Orders for British "Planes by Belgian Government Will Total $1,500,000 l.ondon.--Facts which came to light within the last few days em- phasize the achievement of a Dri tish company in obtaining from the Belgian government the largest on der for service aeroplanes placed in Great Britain by a foreign power since the war. The struggle among ajreraft constructors of several na tions for contracts worth more than $1,600,000 belongs to the high romance of business, When tho British representa- tives "Firefly" single.seator fight. er and "Fox" two.seater, reached the Belgian testing ground, the de- cision to buy from I'rance and Czecho-Slovakia was already taken, and the contracts awaited the sig- nature by the responsible govern. ment officials, © These documents were torn up after the British ma. chines had flown in demonstration before Belgian air officers and tech- nical experts, The "Firefly" galned the day by exhibiting a range of speed and rocket-like rate of climb which far surpassed any other competing aeroplane. In the hands of the Belgian air officers, the machine was put through every conceivable manoeuvrve, including flight up- side down over the entire length of the aerodrome, showinz ease and swiftness of control that sure prised and delighted the pilots, The "Fox", powered like the "Firefly" with the Rolls-Rovee "I type motor of about 600 horse power. was equally outstanding in fierce competition, Belgium is now assured of fly. Ing equipment which will place her air regiments above all other na- tions, Great Britain alone except- ed,in the qquality and performance of one and two seater fighting air- eraft. A radio engineer predicts the development of a new musica! in- strument eapable of shattering thea ears. May be np sort of super-saxo- phone.--- Kitchener Record, Styles change with the chang- ing years. The old-fashioned girl used to he the apple of his eye. The newer one seems to be the applesauce of his car.-- Boston Herald. Does Hepburn believe in Price cutting ?---Kitchener Record, South Carolina Avenue At the Boardwalk ATLANTIC QITY'S Newest Centrally Located Fireproof Hotel $500 DAY AND UP AMERICAN PLAN Write, Phone or Wire. R. B. LUDY, M.D, I ---------------- ce A -------- Rheumatism Goes Swollen Joints Vanish How To End Rheumatism in Less Than a Week If you suffer from torturing rheumatie pains, sore muscles or stiff inflammed joints, it's because your system is full of dangerous poisons that cause rheumatism and make thousunds helpless, What you need is RU-MA, and need it right now. RU-MA acts on the blood, stom. ach, kidneys and liver, and drives the dangerous rheumatic polsons from the system through the nat. ural channels of elimination---it eases pain the first day. You must use an internal medi- cine to free the' joints and muse cles of crippling stiffness, soreness and torturing pain. That's why RU.MA succeeds while external remedies and pain deadening drugs glve only temporary relief, Jury & Lovell Ltd., says no mat. ter what kind of rheumatism you have. or how long you have suffer- od, try RU-MA--it must complete ly end all rheumatic agony or you get your money back. SETTLED IN THREE Betty was greatly enthused about the dance her mother was giving her. But she was wortied, too. "I do want to ask Janet", she explained, "but it will take three or four days to get a letter back and if she can't come it will be too late then to ask someone else", number, "Information" will look it "Why not telephone her", suggested her mother. "It won't cost much. In fact", -- as she found the out-of-town rates in the front of the directory «= "if you call after eight-thirty in the evening it will be only 45 cents", So Betty called after dinner that night and Janet said "yes" right away, It was all settled in three minutes, and another young hostess had dis- covered how easy it is to use the telephone for out-of-town invitations, wt A Sh ty K, Manager