«PAGE FOUR THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, MARCH 131, 1928 --_-- ------------------ -- Zhe @shawa Baily Times Succeeding OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) 0 independent newspaper published every afternoon yg Pik Sundays and legal olldays, at Ushawa, Canada, 0y Mundy #rinting Company, Admited; Chas. M. Mundy, President; A. R. Alloway, Secre way. he Ushawa Lally limes fs a member of the Cana ey Press, the Canadian Lally Newspapers As sociation, I'he Untario Provincial Dailies and the Audit Bureau of Circulations. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ivered Dy carrier: 1U0 a week. By mail; in the Taliveieg of untario, Durham and Northumberland, $3.00 a year; elsewhere in Canada, $4.00 a year; United States, $6.00 a year. TORONTO OFFICE: 407 Bond Building, 46 lemperance Street, Telephone Adelaide 0107. H. D. Tresidder, representative. . REPRESENTATIVES IN US. Powers aud Stone, Inc, New York and Chicago. SATURDAY, MARCH 31, 1928 A WISE DECISION Tt was with real satisfaction that the people of Oshawa received the news last night that a settlement had been reached be- tween the striking employees of General Motors of Canada Limited and the Company. A strike is always to be deplored, but when a strike does occur through misunder- standing or for any other reason the quicker an adjustment is made the better, An in- dustrial dispute always becomes more com- plex and difficult of settlement the longer it is continued. In this instance the employees and the Company very wisely agreed to accept a Board of Investigation and <TConciliation, That the strikers accepted the Company's proposal made through the Minister of La- bor, Hon, Peter Heenan, in spite of the ad- vice of the communists who by their noisy and trouble-making tactics obtained a small following, is all the more to their credit, The heart of the citizenship of Oshawa is too loyal to British traditions to be carried away by the Red element whose chief stock- in-trade is violent abuse of everybody but themselves and those whom they are able to mislead and exploit. In our opinion great credit is due the Min- ister of Labor for coming to Oshawa in person and lending his good offices to bring about a settlement of the strike, His arrival here yesterday was, in our opinion, most opportune, and his wise counsel and fair dealing was, we believe, appreciated by both parties to the controversy, The people of Oshawa will have a higher opinion of Hon, Peter Heenan as a result of his visit here this week, The Oshawa Daily Times has not "taken sides" in this dispute, It has felt that it could best serve both sides by opening its columns to them for any statements they wished to make public, by fair and unbiased © news reports on the situation from day to day and by editorial comment of a concilia- ory nature. We have felt that the issues raised were too complex to permit of those not directly concerned expressing a dogmatic opinion. The better way, it has seemed to us from the outset, was for both parties to re- fer their differences to a Board of Investiga- tion and Conciliation as provided for under the Industrial Disputes Act in the hope that after a fair and complete hearing such a Board would be able to bring in a report that would commend itself to both the Company and its employees. And we are extremely glad that such a course has now been decided upon. The decision does credit to all con- cerned. ENCOURAGING TOURISTS Touring in Canada is an American fad, and touring the United States is quite as popular with Canadians, But it is conceiy- able that there would have been more cross- ing of the international boundary for plea- sure had there been less red tape involved in the undertaking. Border formalities have been the fly in the ointment of touring on the other side of the boundary. For some years both governments have been trying to make it easier to cross the border. The latest move in that direction is abolition of the permit heretofore issued to American motorists upon entering the Dominion for an extended stay. Issuance of these permits necessarily delayed tourists at the border, with a consequent tie-up of traf- fie. Now the motorist who does mot remain in Canada longer than thirty days needs only the registration card for his car to re- enter the United States. Those who wish to remain longer must furnish the bond as in the past. It is to the mutual advantage of both countries to foster this exchange of guests. Canada reaps a rich harvest from the hun- dreds of thousands who come from the States in the course of a year, and the United States need not discount the value of the tourist business coming from the Do- minion. But the benefits are not confined to the materialistic. As long as these two great American peoples enjoy mutual under- standing and sympathy all will be well along the international boundary, and the seed of understanding and sympathy is knowledge gained by actual contact. THE SPRING SUIT Announcements from tailors and men's shops at this time of the year are too usual to be designated under the name of news. Nor ordinarily ought they to give any grave alarm as to letters received from them later in the season when spring suits have been delivered and there are certain accounts to be settled, Tailors are agreeable, kindly men, willing to serve, anxious to please, and painstaking in their efforts to conceal the pointed shoulders or rounded paunch which nature so humorously bestows, But sometimes they pack dynamite in the style announce- ments they mail their patro . Men's clothes can be divided into four gen- eral groups--ultra-stylish, young men's, con- servative and ultra-conservative, And the trouble begins when a particularly snappy new cut attracts the fancy of a man who from custom belongs to one of the latter two classes, Now, wives will trust their husband's judgment on a bond or a new automobile, but clothes--! A wife wants her husband to be in style, but she cherishes the horrid fear that her bald, timid spouse may be inveigled into an extreme that will put him in a class with cake-eaters, play actors and race-track followers. She is never so- sure that what the Prince of Wales selects will be quite suitable to a man of fifty. Most husbands ostensibly select their own clothes, but there is a suspicion that the "old boys" and a considerable number of the young ones follow direction from home. That "quiet good taste" husbands claim for themselves does not always orig- inate in them, EDITORIAL NOTES The rain is no respector of newly pressed suits, Anyway, two on a diet can live as cheap- ly as one eating freely, Civilization still moves ahead: Lumber is too expensive nowadays to put into spite fences, It is estimated that 92 per cent. of all 'wars in history have grown out of parking problems, It is estimated by a philologist that radio has added 5,000 words to the language, ex- clusive of expletives, He is a fortunate business man who hasn't some of his wife's relatives listed as over- head. What the country probably needs is any kind of cigar that will smell as good when abandoned as it did in the box. There is just so much worry for every- body. If you dodge your share, there is more for your creditors, | Bit of Verse SCOTTISH HILLS I would that I could look and see Across my little winodw pane, Above the open estuary, The old familiar hills again. Among the meadow lands of home The country breezes rise and blow But there they ring with rings of foam, The Scottish hills I used to know. Like guardians of sleeping towns, The Giant brethren closely lie, Lifting a line of lovely crowns In painted splendor to the sky; Their mantles covering their knees All shadow patterned every fold, And round about them breaking seas, Like silver fringes rent and old. In Cambridgeshire, so fair and wide In summer beauty glows the Fen, But far beyond this countryside My heart is in the hills again-- The hills where sun and shadow dwell Beneath the spaces of the sky, And weave an ever stronger spell, To bind me there as years go by. ~--Elizabeth 8. Fleming, in the Christian Science Monitor. : EE Library News A brief review of the new books shows many of importance and in- terest. One of the outstanding among the works of fiction is "Winter's Moon," by Hugh Wal- pole. The story is of Janet and Rosalind Grandison, two sisters who are etched with consummate artistry. Janet is old-fashioned, more stable than the mercurial Rosalind, who handicapped with her two natures, moves through divergent worlds so uncer A Some of the most fascinating parts of the book are the descriptions of London in the majesties and depressions of her moods, In "Red Rust," by C. J. Cannon, one finds a new epio of the rural life. Perfecting the growth of wheat had become the major passion in & man's life. It was a fight against red rust, for bigger and better grain, not for the gold hidden in the kernels, but for sheer accom- plishment and perfection. A fine appreciation of its peasant life and an ardent admiration for the Bas- que country is present in 'Bas. querie," by Eleanor Mercein, The story is of a charming young Am- érican expatriate's reluctant love and marriage to a young Basque peasant, and her life in the Bas- que country. The lover of dogs will welcome "The Luck of the Laird," by A. P. Terhune. Mystery and adventure, the pleturesque but bleak Highlands, and a mar. vellous collle form the nugleus of this tale, The hero is a young American youth who goes to Scot- land to discover the dog. A good western story of early days when railroads were new and bandits numerous is to be had In "Flambeau Jim," by F. H, Spear- man, It tells of a payroll murder and the untangling of its mystery by Flambeau Jim disguised as an itinerant fiddler, 'The Canary Murder Case," by 8. 8. Van Dine, is a well written detective story with an ingenious plot, convincing in incident, and engrossing .in its unravelling, 'The Ugly Duchess," by Lion Feuchtwangery, a coming German author, is characterized hy a brilliant and flashing truth which at times makes the actors in the drama intensely human, and at other times caricatures themr mere- ly as pen-puppets, The story of "Margaret, Duchess of Tyrol," ugly, hated, and tyrannical, is a masterly reconstruction of four- teenth century life in Europe. An interesting adventure story has heen written by Cecil Roberts in "Sagusto." It is the story of a romantic young lady who has lost an island, and of the British offi cer In Venice who comes to her rescue, thereby winning a wife and starting a series of quick-fire ad- ventures. "Out of the Ruins," by Sir Philip Gibbs, is a collection of short stories hy the well known English journalist and author, each of which deals with a dramatic Fincident of life and love on the continent, Three very necessary books have been added recently to the refer- ence department of the library. "Who's Who for 1928," Falrbairn's "Crests" and *The Dictionary of Hymnology," by J. Julian. Fair- bairn's "Crests" is a book of the crests of the leading families In Great Britain and Ireland and their kindred in other lands, "The Die- tionary of Hymnology," edited by J. Julian, is hymns, based on those contained in the hymn books of English-speaking countries, to be found in one alphabet with bio- graphical notes of authors and translators, and the history of na- tional and denomipational hym- nology. Autobiographies of two well known authors have been recejv- ed. 'The Story of My Life,' by "Giants in the Earth," by O. E, Rolvaag, is a saga of the prairie. The founding of a Norwegian se:.- tlement in South Dakota furnishes the background of this fine pion- eering story. Optimistic Per Han- sa, who loved the vast plains and his lovely, sensitive wife, Beret, who feared themr, are the main characters. While every member of the tiny settlement stands as an individual the settlement {itself fis Hans Christian Andersen, is as fascinating as his fairy tales. "My life is a lovely story, happy and full of incident," So writes An- dersen in the first line of his auto- biography, which has the charm and felicitous phrasing of his well loved fairy tales. "'Marbacka," by Selma Lagerlof, is tender recollec- tions of the author's childhood at Marbacka, the family home in Swe- den. The old grandmother, the nurse, the lietuenant father, the peasants, offer an intimate picture of a foreign life and atmosphere, simply and beautifully deseribed. "Literary Blasphemies," by E. Boyd, is a collection of unconven- tional essays with enough humor to allay any rancor in readers. "Cities and Men," by Lewisohn, is a series of essays fresh and pro- vocative. Mr. Lewisohn has de- cisively but nome the less suavely replaced the critical dogma with which the figures of Arnold Haz- litt, Santayana, W. E. Leonard. G. Hauptmann, Thomas Mann, Flau- bert, Baudelaire, Heine, Brandes, and several others have been sur- rounded with fresh appraisals keen and stimulating. Succeeding these are notes on various world cities. "Only This," by J. H. Pedley, is a war retrospect and narrates the experiences of a subaltern in the Canadian expeditionary force. It TW of - a" after," evening, St. Andrews, Rev, R. ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH = of the = UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA REV. F. J. MAXWELL, Minister SUNDAY SERVICES, MARCH 25 -- 11 a.m.--Morning Subject: "A Nation Sidetracked." 8 p.m.--Sunday School and Bible Classes, 7 pm.--Evening Subject; "Memory---~Here and Heres SPECIA". PASSION WEEK SERVICES AS FOLLOWS: Monday evening, Simcoe St, Church, Rev, C, W. DeMille, Tuesday evening, King St, Church, Dr. Dougall, Wednesday ing, King St, Church, "The Crucifixion, Friday evening, Sim= coe St Church, Rev. F, J. Maxwell, - A. Whattam. Thursday even bl BE Simcoe St. United Church REV. DR. H. S. DOUGALL, Minister, 52 Simcoe St. S.--Phone 148 t SUNDAY, APRIL 1, 11 am, Rev. C. W, DeMille, B.A. 3 p.m.~Sunday School, ------ Fleming, Mr, H, Salmon, 7 p.m.--Sacred Cantata "THE SEVEN LAST WORDS" By DUBOIS Soloister=~Mrs, W, A, Hare, Mr, W, H, Scilley, Mr. E. Jones, Mr, E. East, Dr, Ferrier, Mr, G. ER Emmanuel BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday, April | Minister: Rev. John (alt, A. M, -- Public Worship and Communion Service with recepton of new mem- bers. P.M. -- Evangelistic Ser- vice with community singing from 6.50. Sunday School at 3 p.m. B.Y.P.U, Monday, 8 p.m, Prayer Meeting, Wednes- day, 8 p.m. Choir Practice, Thursday, 8 pm, Entrance hy side door on account of decoration work, Albert Street UNITED REV. R. A, WHATTAM, Minister 30 Elena St, Phone 567F Sunday, April | 11 a.m.--=" 'Overcoming.' 2.30 p.m.--Sunday School and Eirra Bible Class, 7 p.m.--"The Crown of Thorns." Song Service and Lantern, Pentecostal CHURCH OF THE ASSEMBLIES OF CANADA 200 Kin, St. West PASTOR J. T. BALL SUNDAY, APRIL 1 10 a.m.--Sunday School, 11 a.m.--Morning Wor ship. Sacrament, 7 p. m, -- Evangelistic Preaching. Services Tues, and Thurs- day at 8 p.m. Wednesday, 3 p.m.--Pray- er Service. --_-- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE First Church of Christ, Scientist, 64 Colborne Street East Sunday, April | "UNREALITY"' Sunday School at close of Church Service Wednesday Meeting 8 p.m. Including testimonies of Healing through Christian Science. You are cordially invited to at- tend the services and to make use of the Free Public Reading Room where the Bible and all authorized Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased 1s subscribed for. Open ob Tuesdays and Thursday from 12 to 4, and Saturdays from 2 to 6 p.m. ne, TO th i stadelphlon Psalm 133:1, Proverbs 15:17, Better is Proverbs 20:3, from strife: Matthew 5:9, shall be called the children of I. Peter 3:10, 11, eace and ensue 2:18. let him seek Romans Jesus our Lord, Exodus The Rewards of Peace Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity! a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled ox and hatred therewith, It is an honour. for a man to cease but every fool will be meddling, Blessed are the peacemakers: for they God, For he that will love life, and see good days, let him refrain his tongue from evil, and his lips that they speak no guile, Let him eschew evil; and do good; it, If it be possible, as much as lieth in you, live peaceably with all men, PRAYER: --May the peace of God which passeth all understanding guard and keep our hearts, through Christ Remember the Sabbath Day, to Keep It Holy-- 20; 8, Go to Church Sunday, REV. F, SUBJECTS: -- Service, Sunday School at Pastor of Waverly Road SUBJECT: CALVARY BAPTIST (Independent) Athol St.--Between Simcoe and Centre Sts, will preach morning and evening Il AM. -- "IT IS THE BLOOD THAT MAKETH ATONEMENT FOR THE SOUL." 7 P.M.--"SAFETY FIRST," Prayer Meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. SPECIAL GOSPEL SERVICE SUNDAY AFTERNOON AT 3.30 REV. D. ALEXANDER "CHRIST GREATER THAN ALL" The Merpal Gospel Quartette from Toronto will sing, A CORDIAL INVITATION TO ALL SERVICES DICKIE Communion 2.30 p.m. Baptist Church, Toronto CHRISTIAN Church REY, W. P. FLETCHER, . B.A., D.D. Sunday, April | 11 am.--"The Prince of Peace Cometh." 2.30 p. m. -- Sunday School. | ~ 71 p.m--"Victory for the Tempted." Holy Commupion--8 8.m, 11 am.--~Morping Prayer Centre St.--2.30 p.m. 7 p-m.--Evensong. Baptisms 2nd Sunday each month 8 pm. nfirmation class Friday, 8 pm. in the KNOX Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North sad Brock Street REV; A, C. RERBVER B.A," 84 Brock St. W, Phone 1838 Sunday, April | 11 a.m, -- "An Ancient Church Bormula, Faithful Is The Saying" (2 Timothy 21 11-13.) é p.m,~Sunday School, 7 p.m. ~* The Household er and His Vineyard." shall the God of Heaven set up a 2 Kingdom, which shall never be destroyed."--Dan. 2, 44. Christ to return as the "Lion of the Tribe of Judah", to be King of the World. GENEROSITY-- Withhold mot good from them to whom it is due, when it is in the power of thine hand to do it.--Prov. 3 : 27. - -- does mot cover the history of the , and the climax of the story is the battle of Amiens in August, 1918, where he was wounded leading an advance. Vet- erans will find in the volume echoes of their own thoughts and memories, civilians a meticulously faithful picture set down with ade- quate powers of expression. "David Livingstone," by C. J. Finger, PRAYER--May we, Lord, learn of Thee and do good unto all men. shows that Livingstone"s aim was to live a life of adventure, hazard and accomplishment. His travels, explorations, and his amazing ad- ventures sre recounted here with freshness and enthusiasm by a map well acquainted with the subject and background. While harnessing a horse Tuesday morning, John Diggs, of Preeceville, was kicked just month of his silo.-- Yorkton, Sask. Eaterprise. The centennary of George Mene- Unity Truth Centre 8.0 BE. HALL, KING ST E. SUNDAY, APRIL 1 11 am.~Public Service. Everybody welcome Christ Church | (ANGLICAN) North Simcoe School (Temporarily) REV, BR. B, PATTERSON, nA, Rector Palm Sunday, April | Sunday School, 9.45 a.m. Morning Prayer, 1] am. Evening Prayer, 7 p.m. Divine Services on Easter Day, April 8, at 8, 11 and 7 KING STREET United Church REV. C. W, DeMILLE B.A, Minister 134 King St. E--Phone 218 Sunday, April | 11 a.m.--Morning Wor- ship. Dr. Hugh S. Dougall 2.30 p.m.--Sunday School, 6.45 p.m.--Song Service. 7.00 p.m.--Evening Wor» ship. Choral Class Singing. Mr, DeMille, preacher, Monday, 4.30-- Misslon nd, Thursday, 3.00--W. M. 8. Special Eastcr Service, . Holy Week Services, 8 p.m. Monday, Simcor St.--C. W. DeMille. Tuesday, King St.--H. 8. Dougall. Wednesday, St. Andrew's --R. A. Whattam, . Thursday, King St.-- "The OCrucifision" by; King St. Cheir, , Cartef and John Deacon, of Toronto, soloists. . Friday, Simcoe St.--F. J. Maxwell, PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY OF CANADA OVER ARCADE. ON SIM- COE ST. N. pd Sunday, April | Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Meeting 7 p. m. Speaker, Mrs. Boyaton of Kitchener. Prayer Meeting Tuesday elght o'clock. occupying, was burned to the ground the other might, but, wath the help of neighbors, te saved some of the contents, which were dith was recently observed in En- gland. stored in 2a shed on the premises. Thieves last might stole a ocnuet, J ------ # rifle, and other articles. ; ' Sy BURNS ABE FATAL $. Thomas, March. 30. -- Ter - | mibly burned about the lower part: | of his body on March 20 when th he wad flannelette nightgown wearing came in contact with electric heater, Donald Sutherd land, 19-year old son of Mr. Mrs. George Sutherland, 29 (sa bel street, died in the Memorials Hospital this afternoon." ds