Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 19 Nov 1928, p. 4

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THE OSHA wA Med AueS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1928 WOMANLY MODE [G3 Sier Gio SAYS THE PRESS I a intima Rhack of rorealing un: BUSINESS CONCERN Hi 4 | | : | Ef | | 4 i 1 it i s% H 2 E g iz 5% £ 5 i Ef i 8 F. EVERSON, Local Manager - Private Wire System ! i oF 4d 11 King Street Eaet, Oshaws -- Above CFR. Ofiee Phones 143 and 144 it i 23% it should be appointed to preside over such a Court, A CLOSE UP VIEW OF THE TELE. PHONE BUSINESS Audit Bureau of Circulations, SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier: 0c a week. mall (out side Oshawa carvier delivery )1 in the Counties of Ontario, Durham and Northumber- land, $8.00 a year; elsewhere in Canade, 84.00 a year; United States, $5.00 a year. TORONTO OFFICR 407 Bond Building, 4a Temperance Street, Tele» phone Adelaide 0107, H, D, 'Tresiddev, repre. sentative, : REPRESENTATIVES IN U8, Powers and Stone, Inc, New York and Chicago, English Artists Pleased That] expected things," says the womaa cdltor of the Daily News and West | Lord Buckmaster's Strange the Women Are Forsaking minster Gazette. "They have just | Reliefs Ave Utterly None lannounced that in amonth's fatal Boyish Styles motoring accidents only two per- sensical Ideas cent. of the driver Snvelved ere Eng., Nov. 19.--Por- [women, as against per cent. oO _-- i 118 welcoming the |men drivers. Does this mean that| London, Eng, Nov. 19.--"I um more womanly modes in the mew [Women at the steering wheel are Imot at all sure that the Press is style of women's dresses, as seen in [Wore efficient than men, or merely Inot too much talked about," de- the mew dress shows in London, |that they are more cautious? - AM fclared Lord Buckmaster at a din The modern portrait painter con- honest woman will confess that it {ner of the Authors' Club. "Per- or --_ fosses that during the boyish» |means the Jatter, Woman doe sonally; 1 get very tired of the in- oa RAR auterptise which upon the period he had to resort to dress not Hght-hearted y take p Yaien terminable alteration between adul ho es conducted as all English camouflage to make successful ple- phi a WB od Ly cet [ation and objurgation of the Press. tase oe ly Id squarely, tures of his sitters, corner and watch how she crosses a |/°0Ple are always speaking of Ms 0.00 "0 "0 To ll divides Meclf One famous portrait painter, Al- lroad or mounts a bus, to realize |'MMortal function being to secure |, © Co bo or Toa diva 9 melt fred Praga, President of the Socie- this, To woman the car is invar- [the elevation of the human race. |, "00 "5, 0 6 18 the am ty of Miniaturists, and author of |iably an instrument of pleasure |! regard that as pure monsense. it, "woo ls © oro Rg -- the book, "The Renaissance of {rather than business; she drives in is a business concern, Whoever HOUR TT Te neh haa h Miniature Painting," declares that [her leisure hours and in a leisurely [talks about the immortal purpose | ,, "0 0 ©, oF 2p gM Bought Clothing and Sent the fashions of recent years have spirit, . of a stockbroker being to elevate at a splendid insti" Bill F. H a. [ag . tution the Press is. Then there is to Former use been incongruous from a portrait COURT FHLLE COVPLE™ the Jose) qualities bh Be flow the man Who thinks thot Re nay doing , and that mo artist TELLS creatures, or even tha band The Bell Telephone Co, of Canada is Rams ot Mev gh sitter could TO FIGHT IT OUT [purpose of a lawyer? Joully Sad He. Soins at 3 orth ------ a real service in acquainting the public with [fina pleasure in painting thom with- | Hamilton, Nov. 19.--After advis-| "Althoush some of us may winee | oo", (50 08 8 TEUETIE VME | por Nov. To. Mrs, Helen Tess many details of teleph tructi d |out some modification. Some of ing two neighbors last week to 0 (when we find the innermost, the | ©. oo . Rh Paar Ram yb y detal phone construction an ttle thel fev. ite in-|he thinks so, and next morning the reasons he gives for disliking [home and settle thelr grievances most sacred sanctuaries of life when he finds there is mo refer. |0f the French baron, Hardonin operation, through a series of newspaper ad- (the modern dress are: Short skirts Iya Siege Jugs oN fe Lord's vaded by people whe dulie be oie 1 My or he Th Dereinach Werth, was sentenced to erti peared 1 men » LJ ce Imake public the ng you abo six months in pri 3 Yertizementa, the fire: of which ap. By bing thelr A isi court Saturday recommended to |others seek to have concealed. fore Be Solspiracy of silence in |¢or buying 1 lon dagsgar The Times this week, fully. Fashions have been too Je ather Witendly Beighbata when you shrink from seein the [es Je 'Witly Pras ate engan: valued at l00e francs and dending at they get a pair of boxing grief of a bereaved woman, the ag-|"™ e o her former hsuband. In a letter to subscribers the President, stundurdlzed. Which has Jude 2 slaves and soltle (heir ATZUMEGHL, (ony CF. 8 Toren vod the wav to the in Tote iy mul. wd Mr, C. A, Size, gives the reason for this [iy (jirough her taste in clothes. Jge Berhowiis, 2 33, ey street, |~allows, or the sufferings of peanle LONDON WOMAN that the New York Saurts Jad : ress exactly alike, north, was charged with threaten- in a railway accident being la grante alimony o a wee Inlet Supulgn ve Solgwes f A clauses Jv 91 hides i ffi ing to kill Sam Goldman, because [bare to the world, T would bee vou NEVER KNEW OF In 1888, which had not been hid ® are Cong " use we have found al lines of the figure is ugly, [he paid attention to a young lady |" to remember that has nothing THE GREAT WAR be He Daten Mesen > The! nid that the workings of the telephone system |cCiothes for women should be fash- Inend ot bia, Sah take Hekin whatever to fa with Ihe Jen. tet on. Naw Haar doans were e to s method ; y "It has to do w urs ' ' y 19.--. who 1 ' are not well understood. We think this is oad i Tigi Ri BR les wns and settle an argument like "* vou want to have it stonned. the |lived in London through the air to Nee. esters Jathod had bead not a good situation, either for you or for graceful in clothes which emphasize ; this Jn : manly way?" asked the | vener wav is to edveate the ponte ralls and troop. activitios of the ost of them with Re pA his i magistrate. a that thev will refnea to nurchase | World Jar without knowing that 5 [ us, because the telephone system and the the Jerpendicuier Tathoy then the '"Fight with him?" inquired the 'ha paners that contain that news, |a conflict was in existence, and jibe yest, to ey husband, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1928 | Mrs. Tester's companion, whom TET CHILDREN'S COURT A case involving twelve Oshawa boys, ranging in age from eight to fifteen years, who came before Magistrate Hind in Child. ren's Court last week, seems to call for more than passing notice, It appears that these lads, like many another boy, discovered that a haystack was a particularly attractive play» thing, The thing they failed to recognize was that in upsetting part of the stack, mak- ing holes in it and generally exposing it to the weather, they caused damage to the pro- perty of someone else and for this offence they were quite properly taken to task, These twelve boys, whose ages average less than twelve years, were summoned and they and their parents appeared in Children's Court on Thursday and Friday of last week, The boys were found guilty and their par. ents required to pay for the damage done to the haystack amounting to $20,00 or $1,67 cach, They were further required to pay the sum of $108 in court costs or an addi- tional $9.00 each, These costs, we are told, were made up of magistrate's fee $3,560, con- stable"s fee 50c, and crown attorney's fee $5.00, We think no one will dispute the fact that the conduct of this case, and particularly the assessment of such a large amount for costs, indicates that there is something wrong, either in the set-up of our Children's Court or the conduct of it, The Court is held in the office of the Children's Aid Society with a view to having the co-operation of the Children's Aid Officer, although in this. case the circumstances did not bring the children directly under the application of the Child- ren's Protection Act, as they were not "neglected children" within the meaning of the Act, They were charged under the Criminal Code, and as seen, were treated exactly the same as if they had been over the age of sixteen, except that the hearing was in private and held in the office of the Children's Aid Society instead of in the re- gular Police Court, It is perhaps fortunate that this case has come up in the way it has, as it will direct the attention of the City Council and the public generally to the fact that Osh- awa has no properly constituted Juvenile Court as provided for under the Juvenile De- linquency Act and which Act provides a most complete and humane method of deal- ing with offenders and delinquents under the age of sixteen, Our present system seems to be merely an extension of the Police Court to provide for the hearing of child- ren's cases in camera and in co-operation with the Children's Aid Society with respect to cases that come under its jurisdiction. This scheme may have worked out fairly well with respect to "neglected children" as de- fined under the Children's Protection Act, though we think the practice of retaining the services of the Crown Attorney in such cases, at a cost to some person or muniei- pality of $5.00 for each case, is seriously open to question. In our opinion, the Judge of the Children's Court and the Children's Aid Society Officer should be able to deal with the great majority of such cases in an entirely satisfactory manner, The present system has been popularly known as a "Juvenile Court," but that is a misnomer. The whole problem would per-' haps best be solved by the establishment of a Juvenile Court in fact as well as in name, Such courts are now established in about twenty municipalities of Ontario and are, we believe, working out very satisfactorily, public have a mutual dependence on each other and are equally concerned in the growth of the country, "As the advertisements continue we shall also deal with certain subjects of particular public interest, including the financial record and policy of our Company, its relationship with the Northern Electric Company and its relationship with the American Telephone and Telegraph Company." The first advertisement, which was pub- lished on Tuesday last, was headed "He Works With Magic" and told in an attractive way of the building of telephone lines into new territory, bringing it in touch with the outside world, This advertisement and the others in the series, are well worth reading, One paragraph in the first advertisement is particularly arresting: "And the telephone of tomorrow will surpass that of today, To- morrow perhaps, this telephone at your el- bow will bring you the face of the person you talk with, will hold new magic we now do not dream of," So rapid and so revolutionary are the developments of science and invention that this prediction may come true in a very few years, and other changes even more re- markable may be on the way, of which we do not know anything now, These advertisements of the Bell Tele- phone Co, are more in the nature of inti- mate, chatty talks, than the ordinary type of commercial advertising, It is as though the president of the company were to call up each subscriber personally, Of course that would be physically impossible and that is where the modern newspaper, an- other wonder of this age, gets in its own peculiar kind of "magic" and carries the president's story, simultaneously and accur- ately, to hundreds of thousands of readers, nearly all of whom are telephone users, EDITORIAL NOTES If all the statisticians were placed end to end, we'd have a new statistic about as worthless as some of the qthers, The fraction of a person noted in the rat- ing of automobiles to population may be the portion left after one is hit by a speeder, Bit of Verse "BEDTIME Into the west a golden ball The dying day has cast, And clinging to his amber pall The daylight follows fast, Beneath the honeyed lilac hedge The bees no longer hum, But in the sallow and the sedge The frogs and crickets strum, Out on the cool and shady lawn A glow-worm trims her lamp And snails come out to feast upon * The tender bud dew damp. The ship that sails to slumberland Weighs anchor in the bay, And zephyrs blowing off the sand Are bearing it away. So haste ye, little "bless his soul," And hush ye, "bless her heart," The moon hangs up a crystal bowl To light us when we start. : 3 --Robina Stewart. in the natural position and slightly accentuated. 1f women are going to adopt the 'Princess' or Empire waist again they will have to lengthen their skirts, These comments by Mr. Praga have arisen out of a criticism made to him that future generations visiting portrait galleries would gain only a vague idea as to the fashions of today. "Portrait painters of the 16th and 17th century had none of the difficulties regarding dress the mod- ern painter has, because clothes were then more picturesque," Mr. Praga says, 'The natural feeling of the artists 1s to go back to that period of simplicity when clothes followed the graceful and natural lines of the feminine figure, ana 1 am glad to see that some of the hard lines so pronounced in fash- fons of late years are to go. "TI sincerely hope some of the hats will go as well, and that more becoming ones will be worn, Wo- men's heads were not designed for carrying chimney-pots, hiding their hair and the eyes, and destroying the beautiful shape of the head." "I hope, too," he added, 'that women will acquire the custom of making their hair a soft frame for the face." CRITICIZES VIEWS OF CHAMBERLAIN Daily News Says Remarks Provide Interesting Light on Safcguarding Debate London, Nov. 19.--The Dally News sald Thursday 'Sir Austen Chamberlain's remarks to an inter- viewer provide an interesting com- mentary on the safeguarding debate in the House of Commons. 'One after another, the Ministers are letting their little cats out o. the bag. Baldwin, subjected to in: tensive pressure within the C inet, and more obvious pressure by more than half the Conservative parliamentary party, agrees first that the safeguarding principle must be extended, and next that iron and steel have the right to apply for the treatment, The Chief Whip shows how far the constituencies can he bribed} and how protection can be estab- lished on the widest scale by pro- mising every local industry in turn. The safeguarders are blessing Worthington Evans who guilelessly explains how the procedure is sim- plified and, to make the system all- embracing, Chamberlain, far away in Canada, but spiritually in touch with his subtle-minded eolleagues, adds the final polish of Imperial reference, ¥o Attack on Food "There must, he asserts, be no attack on the people's food, Cana- dians mmst abandon or rather post- pone hopes of preference on Cana- dian wheat, Timber, yes; hides, yes: furs, yes; but wheat, and, we pre- sume, tinned salmon, no. It is not to be expected that tariff reform- ers will perceive that there is no essential difference between taxing food and taxing the instruments that produce food. IT'S LIKE SUMMERTIME IN CALIFORNIA A Glorious Place to Spend the Winter In Sunny California you will find wonderful places to spend a month or two this Winter. It is a land of unequalled climate of high moun- tains, of colorful deserts and fas- cinating cities, Sumptuous Hotels at the many resort centres along the Paeifie Coast will make your stay a plea- sant one. Many visitors to California plan their itinerary via the North Pae- itic coast. The beauty and cosmo- politan character of Vi er and Victoria -- Canada's famous far western cities, make the journey enjoyable and interesting. Complete information regarding California--fares, accommodation and literature gladly supplied by any Canadian National Railways Agent. accused, the bench, T have no svmnathy whatever with "Certainly," came the reply from |*h» neanla wha tall ahant the hich |missfon of what is nothing but a months as an accomplice, whe Is still ignorant of the fact ghe described as her brother, Hone that there was a war, celbrated her ore Declerck, was sentenced to tw 100th birthday yesterday. a THe | the bright heyday of youth, who could tell him of the storms that lay ahead? Later, when he had the full strength of manhood, who could hint to him of weak. ness or ill-health ? The need for Life Insurance protection always seemed dim and remote - - and because of this the day of decision was deferred, And then came the time when he tried to get Life Insurance, but I=") py) more grim realization of !-'s need, . His health was not what it had been, Too late! "Avert this tragedy from your life! Obtain the security of Life Insurance while you may. Now, while you are strong and well, the protection of Life Insurance is obtainable, and the yearly outlay will be less than in the future, Decide today, and see a Life Insurance representative before you, also, are too late,

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