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Oshawa Daily Times, 9 Nov 1927, p. 2

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in is y ada, The ®sh the Oshawa Daily 8 1Press, the Canadian Daily N 40" Bond Buildi - PAGE TWO except Canada, by Mun M. Mundy, Presi fe Outar's Provincial ~of Circul<_.ons. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Defiverca by carrier: 10c a week. 'By mail: in the | Cudnides of Ontario, Durham and 1.83.00 a year; elsewhere in -States, $5.00 a year. TORONTO OFFICE: , 66 Temperance Street, Telephone "\delaide 0107, D. Tresidder, representative. blished every afternoon holidays, at Oshawa, Printing Company, Limi nt; AR. Alloway, Seer Tunes 13 a member of the Canadi~n ewspapers' Association, and the Audit Bureau aoa Baily Times THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) An mdependent newspa| pul Sundays pic ited; Chas. etary. orthumberland, $4.00 a year; United ER REE = ~ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1927 INSANITY AS A PLEA Winnipeg jurors in finding Earle Nelson guil- ty of a particularly horrible murder, which is believed to have been part of a series of crimes against women both in Canada and the United States which Bluebeard might have envied, gives another body blow to the plea of insanity Nelson will be hanged in January very probably and this continent will be the better by one less sinister degenerate. There is no need to labor the point whether this strangler-murderer is insane or not. Per- haps he is. But when reading the list of those he is believed to have slain under circumstances of unmentionable horror, common sense is in- clined to ask: "What of it?" In the jungle man-eating tigers might easily be found insane by expert alienists, the more so from the fact that their victims are more often women and children than men, No one, however, wastes any sympathy on the tiger. 'Whole villages are organized to get rid of him, and when the job's done, a general celebration capital crimes. in order. ...We are perhaps too civilized to declare a holi- day over the Winnipeg verdict, but one can still thank God for the sanity which marks the ad- miinstration of justice in Canadian Courts. IMMIGRATION PROBLEMS its suppliant refugees, That something is indeed very wrong with Canada's immigration system is evident from Saturday's report of the Provincial Premier's ' "Conference at. Ottawa, thority that all the Government leaders of the Dominion's nine provinces were in accord in condemning the present system. disaster could befall Canada than for it to fol- low in the steps of the United States where, for many years, the incoming ships from Eu- rope were loaded with newcomers who, in too many instances, regarded the Republic not as an asylum for the oppressed or the miserable, but as a land to be exploited with no more moral regard for its laws, customs and institu- tions than if these aliens were its conquerors, It is stated with au. Much the same thing, though on smaller séhle, has been happening in Canada recently iffithe united voice of the provincial premiers ig'to be believed. In connection with which it is well worth remembering that Canada itself is on a small scale so far as population is con- cerned. To blame the Federal Government entirely : would be more than unjust. It is the Federal Government that called the heads of Provincial Governments for the very thing they are do- ing, which is to criticise where such seems to be needed. The Dominion leaders undoubtedly expected criticism, and they are to be com- mended for a rare display of political courage in going ahead with the Conference plans de- spite the risk involved, However, since something approaching un- animity, even' a fearful phase of that condi- tion, has been reached as regards immigration, the Federal Government should lose no time in remedying the situation by every means in its power. Population, without question, is one of Can- " ada's great needs. But it isn't imperative enough to throw down all bars merely to gain numbers. Quality made Canada, and when that ideal is forsaken it will no longer be Can- No greater NATIONAL MEMORIAL DAY Another Armistice-Thanksgiving Day has passed into history, and various bodies, includ- ing organized veterans and the Ontario Regi- ment, on Sunday paid tribute to the heroic dead of the late war with splendid ceremonies. But these ceremonies, staged as they were in competition with wintry weather, merely emphasize the need of a national Memorial Day in Canada. The final Monday of each May is suggested as one on which the nation could best unite in | a solemn day of remembrance. | Such a change would restore Thanksgiving | | i \ could be traced, indirectly, to the New England ed Empire Loyalists had a share both in found- ing and observing. marked by commemorative exercises in which | too few are able to take part. This applies particularly to the children. It is their hands which should be trained to strew flowers over the cenotaphs of heroes. It is their young minds which need to learn, by ac- tual share in a Memorial Day's ceremonies, the lesson of patriotism, selfless living and valiant dying which such a day would teach. MAKING HIGHWAYS SAFE Through the prompt arrival and efficient first aid rendered by W. A. Reid, highway traf- fic officer of Pickering, a Toronto citizen's life was very probably saved Saturday night in a motor accident two miles west of Whitby. The injured man sustained a severed head artery. In such cases prompt and skilful treatment can alone prevent a tragedy. Mr. Reid, of course, deserves great credit which is no way lessened by the fact that the men who are being enlisted in the Provincial Traffic Force are qualified to do emergency sur- gical work. Rather, the department concerned and the force in general shares in the public's sincere "Well done" for a fine action. Canada, it seems, has a genius of its own with regard to special police forces. The old "Royal Northwest Mounted" made a name that many famous regiments could regard with hon- orable envy. The Provincial highway force, young as it is, is laying the foundations of a fine reputation. It already has its martyrs to duty, and continuing good work coupled with its developing traditions of service and marked courtesy will give it a high place in public esteem, Its officers, it may well be said, haven't the. pleasantest of jobs. The cars they halt for speeding are invariably driven by bosom friends of Premier Ferguson or some other high official of the Government! They are offered advice in tones that at least border on the abusive; their work is looked down upon by some who should be the first to salute a man brave enough to risk his life in support of law; and it is per- haps true that they meet more lies where truth should be expected than any other class of pub- lic servants, Yet, amazingly to visitors from the United States and to the growing admiration of Cana- dians trained to expect such, they keep their good humor and courtesy. The highway force seems to be made up of men who are entitled to that name on other grounds than mere sex. GOVERNMENT HYDRO RELIEF After months spent in studying the problem of hydro rates in this district, the Central On- tario Power Association at its meeting in Co- bourg on Friday decided to appeal to the Ontario Government for substantial relief as regard the local hydro system's excess capitali- zation, Whether the Government will be inclined to grant that rclief is problemetical. However sympathetic its members may feel to this dis- trict, they will have to consider thc effect of substantial subsidies asked upon other sections of the Province., However, the Ontario Gov- ernment and the Legislative Assembly to whom the matter would have to be referred at last is made ol British citizens who, at the test, al- ways put fair play above politics. That Central Ontario is entitled to a full measure of relief cannot be disputed by those that have studied the situation, The rates which Oshawa and other municipalities in this district have to pay, as compared with rates in force in Toronto and Western Ontario general- ly, are intolerably high, The Central Ontario Power Association under the able leadership of ex-Mayor Frank L. Mason, Secretary J. O. Herity of Belleville, and the executive in general, has rendered real pub- lic service, They kept their heads amongst the clamor for action. As a result, they can now go to the Government with facts and figures to prove their cause, and with unanimity in the district which they will represent, Bit of Verse I stood in Venice on the Bridge of Sighs, A palace and a prison on each hand; I saw from out the wave her structures rise As from the stroke of the enchanter"s wand; A thousand years their cloudy wings expand Around me, and a dying Glory smiles Rl 1 to its proper place and add deep significance to it. Before the war Thanksgiving was a holiday O'er the far times, when many a subject land that, in Canada, had few or no traditions. It holiday in which, doubtless, ancestors of Unit- The linking up of Thanksgiving with the an- ; niversary of Armistice Day was designed to give the day an unquestioned historical back- ground. But it has, more and more, been {man and a business woman is that the TE, 'WHAT OTHERS SAY IN ENGLAND (London Punch) Tt was so cold last week that every- body thought that summer had come ack. CAN NOW FINISH EDUCATION | (Border Cities Star) Detroit girl who got married at the age of 14 has obtained a divorce ut 17. Now nothing need interfere with her going to school. COMES UT EVEN 'ele Mele, Paris) Husband--But why have you datcd| By Jas. W. Barton, M.D. i this letter the tenth when today is' A woman in Toronto some montis only the fourth? | ago undertook a fast of fifty-five days Wife--Because I'm going to give it, Despite careful hospital treatment for to you to mail, my dear. fone week afterwards, which included | Sugar injections and blood transfi- i sions, she passed away. She was an tintelligent young woman, only twenty- cight years of age, but somewhere she ads has Yad a zoos word & hy 4 ¢ | had read of the benefits of prolonged Hon. Mr Fernan the new Ti of | fasting. : Now what about diet fads RT : » y {and fasting? Bre hon os es wher wa rll these days of overeat au that the mud Will Degin to fy. underexercising, fasting certainly looks like a sensible proposition for a great THERE'S A LIMIT man folks. : owever this matter of fashion in (Detroit Free Press) ., {foods is not only unwise but positively Probably John Wallace, of Ham'l- | 4a oerous ton, who wired the Camadian premicr | There 1s only one basis for eating suggesting that he appeal to the Lea- | ,0d that is to fulfill the different need gue of Nations to set aside a day '1iof the body. This means meat and prayer for the redemption of Chicago, eggs or else peas, beans, and cereals was moved by a recollection of the repair tissue worn out by work or Biblical declaration regarding the po- exercise; sugars, starches and vege- tency of the petition "of a righteous | fahles to supply fuel to give heat, to man, But Mr. Wallace should also {keep the body going; fats and oils have recollected that not even Abra- | for their vitamins, and to make repair ham was able to save the cities of the | f50ds go farther; salts for preserving plain from what was coming to them. Registered in accordance with the i Copyright Act. WHEN THE MUD FLIES (Farmers Advocate) | Practically every publication in Can-, the blood and tissues and building Re -- bone; and water or liquids to keep LET THE GREAT KHAN SLEEP things in solution, » AL tha hee York Sun) { That sounds simple enough, and Z that Marco Polo says of the really is simple. The fad of eating end of Genghis Khan is that "in th 1 A is. ibut- one article of food only, even if seige of a castle named Thaigin h- y ; i rich in food and vitamins, is onc of was struck by an arrow in the knee, | the mistakes many individuals make and, dying of the wound, was buried | That a certain amount of rough food in the mountain of Altai." h € d This docs not interfere with the claim of Profes- sor Kozloff that he has found the is necessary such as cabbage, the cores of apples, and the peelings and solid tomb | part of oranges to irritate the intes- of the Mongolian conqueror in the [tine is admitted. ruins of dead city of Khara-Khoto in! The use of too much meat or eggs the Dobi Desert. Polo's informatio: ! by indoor office workers is likely to was second hand, Professor Kozlofi lower the alkaline condition of the says he has come upon the Khan's coi {toad and cause what is called acido- fin, resting on the crowns of seventy - | sis. cight conquered princes. "Seven sil | Milk is an excellent food, and yet ent Lamas" are on guard and ever: |it ranks low as a blood builder as seven -hours one of them strikes seve: | compared with other foods. Liver is times on a huge jade bell. This indeed outdoes our old friend Tut-ankh Amen, We hope the archaeolovists will no: go too far in this case, Let the silver coffin remain unopened. Let the seven gong ringers continue their' dramatic vigils. Let the old Khan sleep. CRISP COMMENT | an excellent blood builder, but it is. a | concentrated food and in.normal folks "may irritate kidneys. ! What is my point? That fasting, or having to very care- i fully choose your food, should not be [ really necessary. 3 If you simply think of how much! | work or exercise vou take daily, and | govern your appetite and diet accord- ingly, there will be no need for food --Kitchener Record, x ) fads or fasting. Girls now set their kneecaps for | ; 4 i els men.--Life. { ; Trt : Every mother of young ariaver JWI) ARE KILLED should qualify as a fingerprint exper. 3 Port Arthur having had a tidal wave, Fort William will have to go one bet tree sane IN Ue 34 ELECTIONS In the days of th han bh tl 'Smith i Leading in Detfuit =~ n the days o e hansom ) re | H seat driv. | New York Defeats Constitu- was no fault found with rear-seat driv | ing--Christian Science Monitor. | . tional Amendment { According to a bacteriologist, a mil | - Cd ive a " "3 ni ~ on isdn can live on the head of a Washington, Nov. $--From the Dn er Rens a diet.--Kit ! national stanapoint, mterest in Tues- * | uay's elections, held in a dozen scat- The modern girl would make a won tered. States, centered in the tate of derful cook if she could find a kit- | & Proposed constitutional amend- chen that was run by a steering wheel, | Ment 1n New York, opposed by .Goy- --Robert. Quillen, | ernor Al Smith, the election of a -- - Governor in Kentucky, and the re- "Colored stockings - will he seer | Sult of a referendum in Ohio, the more," says a fashion paper. We didn': | Mayoralty battles in think there was any more of them to! and Detroit. be seen.--Montreal Star. In New York incomplete returns indicated the rejection or the pre- strange Assuming that static was virtually unemployed prior to the arrival of the radio, how and where did it put in its | time.--Detroit Free Press, | by Republicans, to increase the term tor Governor to four years, begin. ning at the next election for Presi- When she appoints herself {(o the | 3°00 office at his own personal request they | Demoeral Leading. call her the bride-elect just as if she | Scattered returns in Kentucky won in an election.--Brandon Sun. | showed J. C. W. Beckham, Demo- . | crat, slightly in the lead of Flem After the average girl reaches a cer- | D- Sampson, his Republican oppon- tain age she discovers that there arc! ent, for Covernor, with the result other adjectives hetween "detestable" | in doubt. During the campaign and "gorgeous."--Detroit News. | Beckham, twice Governor and once United States Senator, advocated re- ! pe of the pari-mutuel race-tracg petting law. In Ohio a majority was piled up, on the face of early returns, againsc the Marshall bill, which would re- store to Mayors and Justices of the Peace authority to collect fees in A New York dentist was slain by a man on whose teeth he was operating. Dentist may have said: "Now, this will hurt just a little."--Toronto Tele- gram, A man who has sailed round the world thirty times got married recent- "BELIEVE THE WEST Philadelphia | posal tought by Smith and favored Confederation have not been realized in regard to the Maritime Provinec- es, that is no reason why they should oe abandoned. The older and strong- SHOULD CONTROL fer Provinces must be prepared to | assist them. That is the attitude of | the Provinces of Ontario while it | continues, at any rate with the best 4 A) Government it ever had. (Laugh- ter.) We also believe that the West- ---- fern Provinces should have control of Premiers Taschereau and Fer-| their natural resources." . | Premier Taschereau of Quebec : guson Arouse Enthusiasm | spoke in the same strain. "After 60 years," he said, "we have been call- at Banquet | ed here to modify and make better Ee ~ the work of the Fathers of Confed- CANADIAN CLUB EVENT | eration. We canndt do it in a week. . {The more you study the work of the . e . . Fathers of Confederation, the more Spirit of Co-operation is the!,,, realize it was great, and very Keynote of Inspirin, 1 g difticuit ) improve upen. » the . people of Canada must have admir- 1 Addresses | ation for some men, it must be {for the men of '67. Canada holds Ottawa, Nov. 8--If there are any her own among the nations of the poor relations in the Canadian fam- | World. She'is one of the great trad- ily they must be made happy. This . ing nations. England and France declaration by Premier Taschereau for centuries opposed each other. The of Quebec, heartily endorsed by best King Edward could do was to Premier Ferguson of Ontario, arous- | Bet an entente cordiale. We have ed the Canadian Club to a high | done better than that in Canada. We pitch of enthusiasm tonight. It was are a united country today. a notable event. Provincial Pre-| "I am of French blood, and I am miers from Atlantic to Pacific sat at | proud of it. I am proud of your the head of a table with the Domin- A British blood also. But here in Can. jon Prime Minister and his Cabin- 2da we have united French and et. The resources and the problems | British blood that will stand the of Canada were passed in review as lest of centuries to come. Quebec the leaders from every Provinca | has given to the Canadian nation a led by Premier Mackenzie King, | G0d-fearing and loyal people, who addressed an audience of 1,000 peo. | Would not change their allegiance ple. {for any other allegiance in the Spirit of Co-operation | wend. We have, plogressed and {are happy under British rule. Al} spoke of the spirit of co-oper- | "Canada cannot allow ane of her . ation and unity which has prevailed ' Provinces to suffer, and if we have > y % A 5 ie Delition Fron ial Copier. | any poor relations in the Canadian characterized by complete harmony | family we have got to see that they from the outset. In the words of A 2'e Made happy. Quebec will sup- : ji port the West in her request for Preis) etpuioy SL Juans, hin control of her awn natural resoure- federation is actuating Canada's jos. statesmen of today." | eo ---- - "We are endeavoring," said the | . . . o Ontario Premier, 'to renew and per- | ElectricWiring and Repairs petuate the work begun 60 years CR uk 4 ago. It is true that they did not OLD HOUSE WIRING contemplate that the terms of Con- pid hdd federation is all its details should be fixed for all time. There were bound to be innumerable changes, and it is for us to try to adjust the differences that exist and carry Con- federation farther than it has gone today. There is a great work for the Provinces to do in the uniting of this country. The Province of Ontario has always endeavored to look beyond its territorial boundar- ies, and to see what worthwhile con. tribution it eould make toward the upbuilding of this Canadian nation. We must go forward with common ideals and a united effort. "I went across the prairies after the Winnipeg convention--(laugh- | ter). The boundless prairies were | pouring out millions of bushels of golden grain. I saw vast mineral | wealth in British Columbia. Com- | ing back to Ontario and Quebeq I see wonderful development and pros- perous people. Ontario and Quebec get along very well together, and when these two Provinces, with all their difficulties, and possibilities of irritation that exist, ean get to- gether and operage on the lines of team-play, there is no reason under | the sun why all the other Provinces should not do the same. We must be conscious of Prince Edware Island's difficulties. A man cannot | live by potatoes alone. (Laughter.) | A. RUSSELL . Free Estimates -- Phone 2209 CHIROPRACTIC D. E, Steckley, Chiropractor and Drugless Therapist, wiil be in the office, 146 Sim- coe street, north every afternoon and Mon- day, Wednesday and Friday evemngs, Forenoons by i Residential calls made in town and surrounding dis- trict, tation is free at office. Phone 224 REFRESHMENTS Soft Drinks, [ce Cream, and Light Lunches © LAKAS 14 Simcoe St. N, Phone 2264 | | | | (A omeirist EYESIGHT SPECIALIST. Certain conditions are more pro- nounced with age. Even though weakened you may still have youth- ful vision with the proper lenses. We must, if necessary, subsidize 331 them. And the same thing applies 1516 =--FHUNE~-- i516 to New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Disney Bleck opposite Post Offpe "If the dreams of the Fathers of 325 LE CASSELS, BIGGAR, TURNER & CRAWFORD ESTABLISHED 1902 Members Toronto Stock Exchange BOND DEALERS New York, Toronto, Montreal 'and Mining Quotations being received over Direct Private Wire. All Quotations Boarded Enquiries and Correspondence Invited Telephone 2600-1 OSHAWA OFFICE 9 CELINA ST. Fred G. Carswell, Manager J 0 A ly. Evidently he never thought of | ¢Fiminal cases . The measure had the support of the Anti-Saloon League and the opposition of auto- mobile clubs. doubling on his tracks to elude cap- ture.--London Opinion, The difference between a business | In Philadelphia Harry A. Mackey, Republican candidate for Mayor, with support of the Vare organiza- tion, piled up a commanding lead over J. Hampton Moore, former member of Congress, running as an man looks for the latest wrinkle in his trade paper and the woman in her mir- ror.--Judge, Pullman porters appeal to the Inter: a 3 al Independent. state Commerce Commission to abolish | In Philadelphia also James M. tips. Now where is the commission to | Beck, former Solicitor-General of Wisely the barbers may appeal?--Bos- | the United States, was elected to on Transcript. Congress. He is a Republican, sup- ported by Senator-elect Vare, and fills one of the three vacancies in the House of In the u s proarious greeting to R Elder at EH, Paris, Capt, George Halde- at . Representatives for man was practically forgotten. And which elections re held yester- why not? All he did was pilot the 2 plane.--Border Cities Star. ay; in the Thirty-fifth New York Dis- trict, 'Clarence E, Hancock, Republi- can, was elected to serve the unex- pired term in the House of the late Representative Magree, also a Re- publican. Smith Has Slight In the Second Ohio election was held to fill caused by the death of tive Stephens. Running on a platform of liberal prohibition enforcement, Mayor John W. Smith, in Detroit, had a slight led, on early returms, over John C. An Eisteddfod held recently in the Welsh village of Pentrevoelas, which contains only 22 houses and is eight miles from a railway, at- tracted more than 22,000 visitors, who paid $7,210 in admissions. --p------------ PARTRIDGE BREAKS ITS NECK & O A SCHOOL WINDOW i . Milton, Nov. 4--Ag George Mann, | Janitor at the Acton Public School, dy at work in ome of the upper 'rooms he was startled by a window crashing in, and the noise of a large bird in hte room. Investigation' showed that a Lead District an the vacancy Representa- Bank by Mail It is convenient and may save you a trip to town. Your bank book, with the deposit entered, will be promptly re- turned to you. THE BANK Established 1871 Looked at the winged Lion's marble piles, Where Venice sat in state throned in her hundred isles. good-sized partridge had flown against one of the windows with such force that the window was broken, and the bird had landed half-way= across the --Byron. room. The partridge had broken its neck with the impact, and was dead Lodge. Little disorder was reported, al- though in Harlan County, Ky., there was a shooting scrap at the polis, during which two men, one of them a candidate for Councilman at when picked up. Evarts, were killed, Oshawa Branch C. N. HENRY, Manager

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