Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 23 Jun 1928, p. 4

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« EIR Bn 0 t J ------ The Oshawa MWaily ~ {THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) {_ 'An independent mewspaper published every after- i} A except Sundays and legal holidays, at { { Oshawa, Canada, by Mundy Printing Company, | | Limited; Chas. M. Mundy, President; A. R. Alloway, Secretary. | The Osliawa Daily Times is a member of the Cana- "? dian Press, the Canadian Daily Newspapers' As- { ( soclation, The Ontario Provincial Dailies and the ..1 Audit Bureau of Circulations, i SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier: 10c a week. By mail (out side Oshawa carrier delivery limits): in the Counties of Ontario, Durham and Northumber- land, $3.00 a year; elsewhere in Canada, $4.00 * a year} United States, $5.00 a year. * : TORONTO OFFICE 407 Bond Building, 6a Temperance Street, Tele. phone Adelaide 0107, H. D, Tresidder, repre. sentative. s LT i A th ! t REPRESENTATIVES 'IN US. "Powers and Stone, Inc, New ¥ork and Chicago. SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1928 Et BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE The 'publishers of the Oshawa Daily are pleased to be able to announce the forth- ,. coming production :of a "GREATER OSH- t. AWA EDITION" of The Oshawa Daily Times, featuring constructional progress in the several fields of enterprise. § The.eonstructional progress of the City of "Oshawa duging the last few years is a source of pride and gratification to those who rea- lize Oshawa's possibilities as one of the im- portant manufacturing centres of the North American continent. "The publication of a GREATER OSH- "AWA EDITION of The Oshawa Daily Times will serve a useful purpose in showing the great strides that are being made and in mapping out the paths of future develop- ment. Oshawa is pre-eminently a city of opportunity--pre-eminently a field for profit- able investment, a field long past the specu- lative stage. ~The men who guide the destinies of Oshawa today are men of vision, Many of them have piloted important industrial enterprises to success and are still at the helm, Not transient spirits these, but men with a stake in the community, These men are building Oshawa not for today, but for tomorrow, ..._. The. material transformation Oshawa has witnessed in recent years serves only as an incentive to greater efforts on their part and "ours, Such a spirit it is our duty and privil- ege to promote and encourage. "The GREATER OSHAWA EDITION of + The Oshawa Daily Times will serve a useful ' "purpose in providing a reference to the con- -structional activities of the city and in an- "'swering 'many enquiries from prospective manufacturers and others. SUNSHINE : rd The Boy Scouts, Girl Guides, and other 4 . things of the world in a new light and under- 9: e "genial companionships, + 'stand nature better, exponents of the out-of-doors are enjoying benefits of life in the open. They see the They meet friends in "the same cause, swap stories and form con- Every student of #""the big outdoors gets new object lessons, ..y to the camper, makes new resolves and forms' new links of character with the day of sunshine, Sunshine is the test of summer time, It ripens the grain and fruit and gives strength All nature has a smiling face ' + when the sun causes the plants to grow, the % flowers to open and the fruits to mature, * Sunshine induces youth to get out, amid the fields and forests, drink in the pure air and enjoy the healthfulness of exercise in the open. . There are profits in sunshine that one does not always reckon on when planning an outing in the open. It creates beauty and attractiveness and thereby adds to efficiency and usefulness. It helps in fitting one for future work and inculcates a desire for keep- ing young in order to continue enjoying the playfields of youth. Yes, there are countless benefits to be derived from mingling with the all-outdoors. The sun paints smiles on the cheeks of humanity in unerasible lines. SYNTHETIC SLEEF -Man's day is triple; a work day which is : ever growing shorter (except for editors); which is becoming correspond- ingly longer; and a sleep day which, so far THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1928 as man knows, has been neither lengthened nor shortened with the progress of mankind. "Blessed be the man who. first invented sleep," observed Sancho Panza as he grate- fully accepted the hospitality of the hard cobble stones of the market place. But though sleep be commonly accepted as one of the blessings given to man, man. kind would feel twice blessed if it could do without sleep. Had the squire of Don Quix- ote not been weary from travel his hard and rough bed would not have been so welcome, and if man could do without sleep he would not count it one of his blessings. And scientists, especially chemists, believe it is possible that man may some day sub- stitute chemicals for sleep. They are now seeking a chemical that will so resolve and recombine the elements which sleep has alone been able to convert from the poisonous to the benign that man may have longer days without the cost of lessened years. No other discovery would work such a re- volution in human society. In fact it would fatigue the imagination to try to think of the changes which would follow the discovery of a synthetic alternative for sleep. Probably the indolent would find little sat- isfaction in it but there are many, who now find the day too short and the night too long, who would see in it opportunity for a richer and more abundant life. ECONOMICAL ADVERTISING | Competition for business is keen and likely to remain so. This year and the years fol- lowing are a time te buy advertising econ- omically, to match in advertising the in- creased efficiencies of production. Newspaper advertising is low-cost, pro- ductive, localized advertising, It is the logi- cal aid of business at a time when volume is large, when hand-to-mouth buying puts a premium upon flexibility and control. News paper advertising permits more speed be- cause it has four-wheel brakes, Newspaper advertising reaches the great- est number of people and its seed is sowed in fertile soil. That is, the merchant buying newspaper advertising space knows it is cov- ering his trade area and reaching the maxi- mum number 'of old and prospective custom- ers in that territory. The Oshawa Daily Times efficiently serves this rich market for advertised goods. Its readers look to it for shopping information and news of the commercial world, and its advertisers look to it to apprise the public of shopping "advantages and opportunities they offer. Newspaper advertising, and newspaper ad- vertising alone, can sell everything from patent medicine to automobiles, It has done it, is doing it and will continue to do-it. But of Verse HOUSE O'DREAMS From "Gifts of the Year," by Molly Bevan I possess a little house; Caressed by sup and rain, The ivy clambers up its walls And taps each latticed pane; There all within is quietness And peace of homely things, For I would have my little house A rest for tired wings. The firelight flickers on the walls Where hang my pictures quaint A dozen garden scenes or fo, A famous artist's saint. My well loved books stand round about In long, inviting rows, And there beside the fender bright An old brown dog's a-doze. Be-cushioned nooks, designed for ease Await one here and there, "Whilst bowls of pinks and mignonette Waft fragrance on the air, The kettle hums a merry tune That never seems to cease, And little china figures shine Upon the mantelpiece. Upstairs--such crooked, twisty stairs! And yet so pleasant, too-- The little slant-roofed sleeping rooms Are decked in white and blue; And there sweet sleep forever broods From candlelight till dawn To bless the weary traveller And send him strengthened on. I sweep and dust the pleasant rooms, I climb the crooked stair, I keep the glowing fires alight, I tend the garden fair. So well I love its every nook That strange to me it seems, This little house that I possess Exists but in my dreams. --From "Gifts of the Year," by Molly Bevan A ws-- | At a Glance Could you imagine a woman, after flying over the ocean, leav- ing society and all the receptions to study welfare conditions? There's only one in a thousand would do it. . L LJ A rve-echo, or rather a re. do some of the time if the fire doesn't burn all the tino so as to make it necessary to look after I the whole time. . The fire that is Is a fire that was, ° But the fire that was Was bigger---- : And the fire that was Is now the fire That is, I oughto figure. . LJ Ww Mary Pickford had ther hair cut. Will Mary now remain the idol of the screen? Time will tell, * Wonder what Doug thinks. Ll] Ll] - A controversy has arisen in Pembroke which' will require a great deal of investigation, Some one's bees are stinging the school children, The question is "whose are they?" The town council has not the right to ban the bees from the town, and even it it did, the bees would probably make objection. LJ LJ % New York is now talking two- deck streets. Now we advise these New Yorkers to have the upper deck a 'go' sireet and the lower deck a "come' street so that you can come and go at the same time providing you right street, LJ * * New York has taken Quite a fancy, To streets that come and go, Because the streets One mostly meets Nowadays, are far too slow, . * . Like sailing boats With two twin decks The streets will be set up; And at the end Of each there'll stand A motorcycle cop. LJ LJ . They will direct The traffic which Above, will come, 80} And if you're caught Where you ought not To walk, there'll be a show, * *. LJ below, will Kiddies, "K" day, dies " Day. watch out for the hig the "Kinsmen's Kid- By Renrut are on the | What Others Say FINALLY WON (Toronto Mail and Empire) The bill giving votes to women of not less than 21 years of age, passed the House of Lords a few hours before the death of its great advocate, Mrs. Pankhurst, YES, THAT'S SO (Ottawa Citizen) "Why do newspapers get every- thing wrong," asks an indignant convention attender. The answer is they don't When something 1s wrong the fuss inside the news- paper is bigger tham the one out- side. PREPAREDNESS Just when everybody (Hamilton Spectator) down to enjoy the summer, cir- culars begin pouring in stressing the advisability of laying im the winter's supply of fuel. There should be a, law against it. settles LET'S GET AN ARTIST (St. Catharines Standard) An editorial in The Stratford Beacon-Herald is accompanied by a picture of Herbert Hoover. Next thing we expect to see in the hright editorial page of our contempor- ary, is the comic strip of Jiggs. The funny editorials should also be illustrated. LADIES FIRST (Baltimore Sun) A small boy found the follow- ing sentence in his grammar ex- amination: "The horse and cow is in the field." He was told te cor- rect it, and give his reason far the correction, He wrote: "The cow and horse is in the field." Ladies should always come first." AMERICAN THRIFT (Toronta Mail and KKmpire) The head of the street cleaning department in Brooklyn receives a salary of $3,800, and the present incumbent, one Frank C. Gannon, banked $111,588 in the last three vears.. But this lesson in thrift is somewhat impaired because 'net was ¢i investigation into grafting the department, mn PROGRESS IS EXPENSIVE (Port Rowan News) The rate of Simeoe's taxation this year will be 50 mills on ue dollar, and the as per cent. higher than it year, Progress costs it brings many comforts, ns, autos and fine pavements to run them on; it furnishes hread wagons, and abolishes the drudgery of home haking; it brings ys lumb and green peas, hut it doegn't pay the taxes, These taxes have put mortgages on some farms in Nor- folk and some dwellings. Dut we can't do without our autos. or our bread wagons, or our good roads, was last money hut It hrings StoBIE-FORLONG STOCKS BONDS ad Office: Reford Buildin AND WELLINGTON STS. TORONTO S. F, EVERSON, Local Manager Private Wire System 11 King Street East, Oshawa -- Above C.P.R. Office Phones 143 and 144 GRA! &(0 the elicited in the course of | sessment is ten |, {ing June 23, train leaving Torontn and perhaps we will be glad to manage the taxes someway. LONDON'S DEATH BLOW (Port Rowan News) It is not easy to understand why there should be such strong op- position to the company that would build a railway from London to Port Burwell, and build a great coking plant at the Port Burwell end of it. Of course London owns the Port Stanley Railway and the development of Port Burwell would draw traffic away from it. But it seems like a small thing for a great. city like London to deliver a death blow to a little village like Port Burwell to escape a trif- ling shoek. to its own big business. But business is war, and success- ful war is not conducted on friend- ly. lines. HUSHAND AND WIFE (Manchester Guardian) The number of husband and wife records is increasing rapidly. Not so long ago it was Mr. and Mrs. Runciman who gave us for the first time the affecting picture of hus- band and wife sitting together in the House of Commons. Then we saw Mr. Harold Knight elected ta join his wife among the Associates of the Royal Academy. And now thel ast week has given us--surely for the first time%--the sight of a counsel--having as his junior his wife. Dr. and Mrs. Earengey, who ap- peared together for the Rector in the recent' inquiry into the state of parochial affairs at Avening, have set in an ecclesiastical court an example which will certainly be followed in the civil courts. One gan gee the day coming when-- the advantage of bringing two fees into the one family being patent-- every unmarried K.C. will hasten to engage himself to a junior of the opposite sex, or, if he is al- ready engaged, will insist on his hetrothed going to the Bar at the earliest possible moment. NEW SERVICE TO GEORGIAN ' BAY POINTS VIA CANADIAN PACIFIC Convenient trains to and from lidland connecting with Georgian Bay Tourist Company steamers. With the advent of new Canadian Pacific line into Midland, a very convenient route ,is opened to Georgian Bay Summer Resorts when on Saturday, June 23, Geor- gian Bay Tourist Company steamer servies commences its 1928 season. Daily except Sunday, commene- 10.25 a.m. (standard time) and |arriving Midland Dock 2.15 p.m., will conneet with boat for Honey Harbor, Parry Sound and interme- diate Georgian Bay points, while Resort Train leaving Toronto 4.30 p.m., standard time, arriving Mid- land 8.30 p.n., will connect with steamer operating Fridays only to Honey Harbor. Southbound, steamer leaving Parry Sound daily except Sunday, and calling at intermediate points en route, connects at Midland Dock with train arriving Toronto 3.55 p.m., and on Sunday a special steamer from Parry Sound making Special leaving Midland 6.15 p.m, arriving North Toronto 9.556 p.m., standard time. The Sunday service, in conjunction with 4.30 p.m. Fri- day Special from Toronto making boat connection for Honey Harbor, provides an excellent round trip service for patrons desiring a long pleasant week end in Honey Har- bor, one of the finest summer re- sorts on the Bay, Detailed information, reserva- tions and tickets from Canadian Pacifie agents, A Dollar Is Saved When it is in the Bank And the sooner it is deposited in the Bank the greater the assurance of its being saved. A Savings Account is a magnet for the money that ordinarily slips through ones fingers, and an 'in« come paying guarantee for the future. THE STANDARD BANK OF CANADA ESTABLISHED 1873 E. C. HODGINS Manager, Oshawa Branch Branche also at Bowmanville: Brooklin, Newcastle Pért Perry. Whithy SARNIA, ONT. OWEN SOUND, ONT, Resident Manager: A.L. HUDSON & Co. MEMBERS / NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE WINNIPEG GRAIN EXCHANGE STANDARD STOCK and NEW YORK PRODUCE NEW YORK CURB EXCHANGE (Aste) MARKET (Ass'te) . OFFICES AT: -- TORONTO, ONT, BUFFALO, N.Y, | OSHAWA, ONT. UNITED STATES Oshawa Office Times Building Telephone 2700, C. N. HENRY MINING EXCHANGR DIRECT PRIVATE -- WIRE CONNECTIONS TO ALL PRINCIPAL MARKETS THROUGH. OUT CANADA «nd al' Bay stops connects with Sunday |* a ©nfederation EQUIPMENT: Standard and Tourist Sle Cars, Dining a Compartment, Observation Lib- 2 8.45 a.m. 3rd 1,00 p.m, 3rd 6.40 p.m, 3rd 11.40p.m, 3rd 10,00 a.m, 4th 6.40 p.m. 4th ar. Winnipeg ar, Brandon ar. R ar, Sas! n ar, Edmonton ar. Jasper Park " ar, Calgary " LE I 3 TRAVEL ar, Vancouver " Iv, Toronto daily 9.00 p.m. 1st day Best. Time 8 LE I I 9.30 a.m, 5th " 3.00 pm, 5th " Pac, Tims H. W. Sheridan, Agt,, 89 Simcoe St, 8.,, Telephone 515 ToRoNT 0 Cent. Time -f - Ww 7 J) CANADIAN NATIONAL i ™ > The Triumph of a Great Social Principle BY" Gash Distribution maderto Mitual Life Poliéyholders Fifty-eight years a Ga small Body tages of Mutual Lite | ular di they. succeeded 'm Canada, is now ho! guarantee the secu a CASH® DISTRI DOLLARS ee -- "Insurance > » YATERLOO ~~ 'Hume Cronyn, 'President! 0 ins iol sn a i oe utua pany,w. t capital and so without sharehol ders." Their idea'was to'0 bain the best of protection at a minimum outlay «That ayibe]scentfrom}the}fact Lh g assets Amo sity of the policy TO ITS, POLICYHOLDERS, apart and as LJ f citizens; firmly believing in the advan? hod / pat 5 This event is without parallel in the history; of Insurance in Canada; and on this record of good service: we base our ¢ x laim to) your consideration.) CANADA ONTARIO W. H. Somerville Gereec! Manager Frank V. Evans, Representative, Standard Bank Building, Oshawa, Ontario. 7 Simcoe Street, N., at\The] Mutual; Lifefof unting to over ninety million dollars to holder's funds, and this year is makin TION» OF 4 SEVEN; HUNDRED § THOUSAND ide from their reg.

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