Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 20 Jul 1927, p. 2

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-- i Ey A, ep DAILY REFORMER . (Beteblished 1071) An indenenden dewuper Dublished every afternoon s and holidays, at Oshawa, x ns Mundy Fring Reidy ited; Chas, undy, President; A, R. Alloway, Secretary. Oshawa Daily Times is a member of the Canadian the Canadian Daily Newspapers' Association, "hw Ontario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Bureau i Circulations, Ba o 'SUBSCRIPTION RATES .B bo; Oshawa, 15¢ a wee y i AN and Ontario, $4.00 fri . in Canada, $5.00 a year; United . Rr ONTe OFFICE: " Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street, Telephone Adelaide oz. , D. Tresidder, representative, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1927 "AN AWFUL TRAGEDY The whole Province has been shocked by the 8 of 'the drowning of Maurice Cody, the only gon and only child of the Honourable Canon H, J. Cody, rector of St, Paul's Anglican Toronto, and a former Minister of Education for Ontario, e sympathy of the whole Province goes out in the fullest measure to the bereaved fath- er and mother, Few men are so widely known, so_generally popular, and so universally re- gpected as Canon Cody, He has lost his only Son just as that son was beginning his career, and all Ontario mourns with him, Maurice Cody was the great son of a great father, A graduate of the University of Tor. onto, he did not lose his interest in that in- stitution, 'but took an active part in various worth-while movements, Scarcely more than thirty years of age, he was already doing well in law and was an examiner at Osgoode Hall, He had his father's geniality and democratic spirit. He was active in the business affairs of his church and denomination, Canada can ill afford to lose a young citizen of Maurice Cody's type, To his parents The Times ex- tends its sincerest sympathies, CANADIANS ABROAD There is an imperialism of service as well as of government, and each year adds to the dis- tinguished list of Canadians who, in far-away lands, bring honour to their homeland by splen- didly unselfish efforts, Of all these the Can- adian missionary, both ministerial and medical, ranks amongst the highest, Self-exiled from their native land in obedience to the highest form of--idealism, they-spend their lives far from even the publicity which heralds the more--| spectacular services of those that stay at home, Adding point to the above generalization is the fact that Dr, N. Found, medical missionary to Korea which is now officially listed as the Province of Chosen in the Japanese Empire, is spending a part of his sabbatical year's leave from duty on the home of his father, John Found, at Ebenezer, His past six years in the Orient have been filled with the very stuff from which romance is made. His modesty undoubtedly kept much wholly honouring to him and his wife who shares his responsibilities from the interviewer sent to him by The Oshawa Daily Times, It was brought out, however, that he has brought something of medical attention within reach of hundreds of thousands in Korea that, otherwise, would have gone their neglected way, Most important, however, is the fact that Dr. Found established Korea's first Child Wel- fare Clinic, What that means to current and future generations history will have much to report. 1t is certain, however, that life-giving seed has been sown on a soil--blighted by ancient super- stitions--that has made Korean infancy a peril much more terrible than war. Dr. Found returns to the Far East, it is un- derstood to take the chair of pathology at the Severance Union Medical College in Seoul, the ancient Korean capital. This new post of dis- Dr. Found has brought honour to his native land, Ontario County honours him. STANLEY BALDWINS VISIT There are some funny people in the seats of to City, the board of control managed, whether intentionally or otherwise, to give the Prime Minister and his colleagues a deliberate slight. "In any official Toronto did not honour the i mot moticeably it must be said; but there was mo lack of demands for and that. Premier King and his ministers might well have agreed with the sentiments contained in that old couplet, In matters of commerce, the fault of the Dutch iH Is giving too little and asking too much. Now it happens that the arrangements for "the 'visit of Premier Stanley Baldwin.are in the hands of that same Dominion Cabinet which was rebuffed in Toronto, And the Queen City wants two addresses from Stanley Baldwin, one on the City Hall steps where the cowboys and rodeo artists are regularly received by the Mayor, and the other at the Exhibition, The Dominion Government grants the first and re. fuses the second, Toronto's mayor and board of control, after due deliberation, sent a cable direct to Stanley Baldwin--and receive from -his secretary just the sweetest and most polite slap on the wrist that could be imagined, It ia just such foolish and thoughtless procedure as this that makes ordinary people disgusted _ with official Toronto, In the Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph of July 11th there is an excellent editorial; in which suggestions are made as to the British Prime Minister's reception in Canada. In part, this ia as follows :-- "It is our duty, no less than our pleasure, to be kind to such an honoured guest, but the part of true hospitality will be to make quite sure that we do not kill him with kindness, Mr, Baldwin's health has not been entirely satis- factory of late and for some time cable des- patches indicated: grave uncertainty as to whether he would be able to make his Canadian visit at all, He is, moreover, just completing a parliamentary session with all its attendant fatigues and anxieties, The sea voyage, com- plete change of scene, and the interest of new experiences should be highly beneficial but if, in a well-meant effort to lionize him, the Prime Minister is hurried from one function to an- other and from ene community to another; if he is compelled to speak two or three times a day for days on end; then it can be predicted with but too much certainty that he will return home more tired than when he set out from it, "Since it is physically impossible for Mr, Baldwin to see the whole of the country and since his time with us is necessarily short, he ought to be left as free as possible to go where he himself wishes to go and facilities should be provided that will make it easy for him to see what he himself may desire to see. As for speeches, with our elaborate means of tele- graphic communication and with the develop- ment of radio transmission, there is no neces- sity for him to deliver numerous addresses; through three or four speeches, at most, made in central localities, everyone in Canada who is interested will he able to hear and read for himself or herself what Mr, Baldwin has to say," MORE NAVAL COMPETITION? p-- So many things of interest to the public at large has happened recently that the Confer- ence at Geneva on further limitation of Naval Armament for Great Britain, the United States and Japan has been somewhat eclipsed, The present conference, however, is "not just another of those things," The results of its deliberations will, ultimately, affect the pocket books of the taxpayers in all the countries named, Unless a basis of agreement can be reached with regard to the number of non-capital ships which each of the conferring countries can with safety and dignity accept, the world will again revert to the old competition in navy building. Italy and France are not taking part in the conference, but if the three greater Powers fail to come to terms on naval armament, they, too, will be drawn into whatever armament rivalry may ensue, Rightly or otherwise, the United States charges that the spirit of the Washington Dis- armament Conference has been kept only with regard to capital ships. The republic claims that the marked superiority of both Great Britain and the Japanese Empire in cruisers constitutes a menace to its interests, On the other hand, the British Empire delegates point out that every cruiser flying the White Ensign is needed to protect the Empire's line of com- munication. Japan's own counter argument is of a similar nature. The fact that the world's three greatest Powers are conferring on the subject at all gives ground for hope that a solution will be found, A return, even by a step, to the ruinous armament competition of pre-war years would be turning the hands back on the clock of civilization. To do this after so much has been achieved toward the ultimate goal of self- imposed world peace would be nothing short of a tragedy. Bit .of Verse | PETALS Do you kmow it's raining? Raining all the day: Though the sun is shining Through the flagged pathway, Yes, I know it's raining, Raining all the day; Raining leaves of roses On the flagged pathway. --Athena. : Ad THE OSHAWA. DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1927 ---- ayy AT OTHERS SAY Bf . NO REASON TO TO HE TIRED {The Outlook) A' kind ol gentleman noticing a small boy carrying a lot of newspapers under his arm, said: "Don't all those papers make you tired, my boy?" Naw, 1 don't read them," the lad replied. ------ OXFORD AND WOMEN VOTERS (Ota yd Citizen) The decision' of Oxford to limit the number of women students at the uni- versity is an ifiteresting example of 'conservative adherence to tradition It is an add coincidence that this, act of exclusion synchronizes with the proposal to give the electoral fran- chise to young women, absurdly called "flappers." The grant of the franchise is useless' without education. The thought and judgment which precede the vote are fully as important as the marking of the ballot. Oxford it might be supposed, would desire to influence the vote to the full extent of its pow- ers, and it seems strange that it should deliberately deprive itself of its influ- ence over women voters and to some extent lose touch with the democracy. TACTLESS UTTERANCES (La Presse, Montreal) The . undeasonable remarks of a Montreal speaker on the occasion of Confederation are regretted. It is feared that English-Canadians may take them for the views of the French- speaking population. This is not true, at least for the vast majority of the French-Canadians." = French-Canadian: know that, taken generally and as a whole, the pact of 1867 has been to their advantage, since it has given them, so to speak, the freedom of the city all over Canada, while if there had been no Confederation, their, rights would have been undoubtedly disputed in theory as well as in fact W stable. This alone is more than enough for us to cherish the work of Mae- donald and Cartier and their collea gues. A BARKLESS DOG (Toronto Globe) No, this barkless dog which The Border Cities Star announces as hav- ing been developed by an Olympia (Wash.) breeder won't do. He was no lover of dogs who bred him, nor, we'll venture, has he ever had a joy- ous, bounding, barking collie at his heel. Imagine this poor tragic animal! Sleck and beautiful he may be; obe- dient, trustful, courageous--let him be all these, and still he isn't a dog. Ask any small boy who has a dog--any kind of a dog. As a youngster we had one that we hitched to a cart. And he wouldn't move a step without bark ing. The greater the speed, the great er the bark. No. A dog has to have a bark. Hq has to have a tail to wag--a stump of a tail will do, but there must be tafl. He must have large, soft eyes which show understanding and whicl speak. Any boy can learn the lan guage, He must have ears which perl straight up on occasion. He must have a long red tongue which protrudes and wags as counterbalance to the tail. He must have ¢ auberance of Joy or an equal quantity of dejection at the right and proper time, Every dog has all these--every dog but this monstrosity which the Olym pia man has brought into the world- bad cess to him! Waiter: Mr. Gray has left his umbrella again, I believe he would forget his head if it were | asi loose. Judking: I dare say you are right. [I overheard him say yester day he was going to Switzerland for his lungs.-- Belfast Evening Telegraph, Without it, our dominion on Canadian kindly and well-dispes: not of the type, one would Whink, 10 wantonly attack: his "fellow humans, The New Glass 1 Teceived a circular in my mail the that gives indication how quickly events are moving. Some time, ago Iw vrote about the new that pe rmits i by the bh pi you "ic the ordinary window glass permits the entrance of warmth, brightness, and certain rays that. kil off harmful organisms, but: unfortun ately the' ultra violet rays cannot ge through to do their eur; ative work. This circular was new type of glass ai the price now very reasonable. Formerly if an hospital one room, a solarium as it was called fitted with this glass, i i ff Now it will be pos- sible for hospitals to equip all their rooms, because in cases chances are only fair for recovery, the curative power of the sun through this glass might make enough difference to However it will likely be the. habit of our architects in the near future to specify this type of glass for the sun { the home, so that in times of always available, + from its Bo bi : are children the nur- ws should also be of this lass, thus giving aw obtained by the ir artificial sunlight, TAG ID Sma Se a OUT OF His ELEMENT _ a rl Rgrder, Cities Star) : Mr. Ford is usually ken of as a --_ He is Yet 'there is no denying that a paper owned by 'him and carrying his name, has achieved an international reputa- tion for its attacks on Jews. The re- sponsibility is Mr, Ford's. If he has no time to look at his own paper or to scrutinize the matter going into its cal- umms, then he should not be in the publishing business. Perhaps it is i one more example of getting into an outside line for which he is not adapted, either by temperament. or training, In the end, he may have taken the only course possible, but it will be distressing, to newspapermen everywhere, to see Mr. Ford "passing he buck" to the writers who work for, mm, Sweet young thing: I don't ap- prove of your friendship with Mrs. Swiftset, Mummy. Her children have brought her up all wrong. Wife: 1 saw the doctor 'today, dear, about my loss of memory. Husband: What did he do? Wife: Made me pay in advance. '| familiar with the wonderful results ob- tained by means of these in cases of tuberculosis and "rickets." Schoolboards may alse be wise enough to secure this type of window for the school rooms, Its use in commercial pursuits such as greenhouses and poultry houses is al once apparent, I am just wondering if we fully rea- lize all that this glass is going to mean to us all, Just think of it, the full benefit of the sunlight to be - within reach of everybody in a shart time. This glass is being manufactured in the United States, England, Canada, re [and other countries. to its he New and Finer PONTIAC SIX NTIAC SIX adds yet glowing record. Motors to fill the insistent priced quality six . . . accorded the most enthus. 1astic 'reception ever given any new car further improved and refined at the outset of its second record-breaking year , announces PRICES STILL FURTHER REDUCED. Coupe - - Sedan (2000) » =~ Sport Roadster ,...2... Sport Cabriolet ,....,. Landau Sedan De Luxe Landau Sedan Panel Delivery | Prices at Factory, Oshawa, Ontario. 88 Simcoe St. North, Oshawa, Ont. PRODUCT OF GENERAL another achievement Introduced by General demand for a low- "Ne Pontiac Six now $ 930 950 ano 990 1055 1158 Government Taxes Extra ey MOF FATT MOTOR SALES, LTD. Phone 915 PARS-A MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED

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