Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 3 Aug 1929, p. 4

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wy ni LY I TE SPR Ei , .struggles, threw the whole resource a alice ide te iin ig '(Established 1871) An independent newspaper puklished every afterncon fsexcept Sundays and legal bolidays, at Oshawa. Canada, by Mundy Printing Company, Limited; Chas. M. Mundy, President; A. R. Alloway, Sec- The Oshawa Daily Times is a member of the Cana: dian Press, the Canadian Daily Newspapers' As- sociation, The Ontario Provincial Dailies and the' , ..Audit Bureau of Clreulations. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier, 15c'a week, By mail in Canada (outside Oshawa carrier delivery limits), $4.00 » year; United States, $5.00 a year. TORONTO OFFICE "#07 Band 'Building, 66 Temperance Street, Telephone Adelaide 0107. H. D. Tresidder, REPRESENTATIVES IN U. S. Powers and Stone, Inc, New York and Chicago. SATURDAY, AUGUST 3, 1929 AUGUST 4, 1914 Fifteen years ago tomorrow, on August 4, 1914, the British "Empire faced 'the greatest test which ever confronted any people. The British people were faced with a momentous decision. They had to choose whether they would stand aside and allow the ruthless forces: of militarism, as represented by the German Junkers, to ride roughshpd over the weaker nations of Europe, or whether they would bar the way, andicomnpel respect for the pledged word of nations, The decision that was taken dis known to the world, for Britain filled the breach, called to- front the four corners of the globe, and four months of terrible of the Empire on the side of fr€edom, justice anu i ar dealing. Many people will be going back in memory morrow to that day, fifteen years ago, when the call to arms was sounded all over the Empire. There arc "vacant places in many homes today because of that call,' There are many men who are going through life today mutilated and maimed because they re- sponded to it. Yet those who have been bereft of loved ones and those avhose bodies will ever bear the marks of their sacrifice have no regrets that fate willed it so. There is no bitterness, no needless grieving because those young spirits who went forth to fight for their king and country did not come back, but "went west" to "Her with their comrades before?the throne of thc Al- mighty *King:: Their lives were Spent in the cause for which the Empire stood, and that 'was sufficient. In those hectic days which followed August 4, 1914, it was often said that the war would be the last great struggle of nations against nations. This be- : came a cfeed with the boys who were fighting, and "it" stirred them with an enthusiasm which knew no defeat. ~ Many times, since then, there have been those who have. doubted that the last great war had been seen. There have been many who have said that the idea of the war to end all war was a sham and a niockery and that ere long, the world would again be plunged into bleodshed and slaughter. "Yet there are signs that the creed of these days was, not so far wrong. Each successive month and , year sees. the closer approach of the goal of universal world peace. Each time international troubles arise and are settled peacefully strengthens the hands of those who are laboring to put the creed of 1914 to 1918 into cficct. The past few weeks have seen the greatest war menace since 1914 risc up, linger for a hrief space, and then be dissipated before the wiser counsels of mediation and conciliation. When a dispute such as that between Russia and gether her sons and - for four : years to- - China can be scttled without resource: to warfare, then anything is possible in the realm of promoting peace and preventing war. The world is 'pregnant with hope that this may be so, and should these hopes "He 'realized, then those who gave their lives in the struggle which was thrust on the British Empire fifteen years ago will not have lived and died in vain. TOURISTS GOOD SPENDERS There have been many people who have had' the idea that, while there is a great volume of United States tourist traffic passing through. Canada, this dees not bring as much bencfit {o the country as is generally claimed. These critics contend. that the tourists spend very little money in: Canada, and buy _only what they actually. need in the way of necessi- "ties of life. Even .if this were true, of course, it would still ~ represent a considerable amount of business for this country, for the tourists must at least be fed and kept supplied with gasoline while touring the coun- try. There is strong cvidence, however, that it is not true. ! . Qne of the United States customs regulations al- lows cach tourist to take into that country, on his return irom Canada, goods to the value of $100 without tlic payment of duty. Where there arc four or five people in Canada, this mcans a duty-iree allowance of $400 or $500. Taking advantage of this privilege* nreans that the tourists do spend a con- siderable amount of money in this country, and it has been found that they do take advantage of it. According to Walter S. Perry, acting customs col- ae lector at Detroit, and his officials, United States tourists, in nearly every case, take full advantage of this : permission to take home $100 worth of goods '§ree of duty. He stated definitely that nearly all of the toutists returning home through his port buy all the good clothes they can while in Canada, and that, sin most instances, they have purchases up to the, full legal limit. This is interesting testimony, since it must cause 'many people to revise their opinions of the spending 'propensities of tourists. It is also sufficient to cause an upward revision of the estimates of money spent by tourists (no years period, {gr these citimates are 8 a. * rage 1nalat sequitewicnts of Surists, multiplied by -the-number of mde cars slaying in the country, for certain periods, and does not take into account the thousands of motorists who buy theic. $100 worth" of dutyfisee goods while on their trip, (OIL IN THE WEST So, much, attention is being paid to the growing of wheat and other grain in Westérn Canada that another type of development, that of the oil .in- dustry, is being rather overlooked. In an effort to overcome this apathy' fo what is really a big and growing western industry, with wonderful - possibili- ties, the Calgary Herald chas issued a pretentious special edition dealing with the oil fields of Alberta: With typigal western enthusiasm, the Herald tells a wonderful' story of the oil areas' of the western country, And the story is convincing. Pointing out that at the present time' Canada's total production of oils for a year would only' serve the country for one week, it goes on to show the vast potentialities of Alberta's oil fields as a great source of the na- tion's supply. Much has been heard of the oil wells of the Turner Valley, but most people will be sur- prised to leatn that this is but one of twenty struc- tures in the northern section of the province, each of which has possibilities for producing oil in com- mercial quantities. The Herald does not base its statements on hap- hazard speculations. For years it 'has been keeping in touch with the oil situation, and its special edition at this time provides a wealth of authoritative in- formation on the future possibilities of the develop- ment. Perhaps the situation can best be summed up in the newspaper's own words: "The Herald believes that within the next five years developments of an extraordinary scope will place Alberta in the forefront as one of the world's greatest producers of oil." The whole of Canada should have its eyes on this oil field area, because, if it proves to be as profit- able and as productive as our Calgary contemporary believes it will be, there is more than a possibility that it will outstrip even the wheat crop as a pro- ducer of wealth for the west. NINETEEN YEARS OF PEACE August 4 is a memorable day in the history of the British Empire, for it marks the anniversary of the beginning of the greatest of the Empire's wars, Yet it is notable, in Canada, as another anniversary, for it marks nineteen years of industrial peace on what is now the Canadian National Railway. . As many citizens will recall, nineteen years ago, on July 18, the great-trainmen's strike on the old Grand Trunk Railway began," On August 4, 1910, nincteen years ago tomorrow, it came to an end, Since that. time, there have been no strikes on that system, There have, of course, been disputes and disagree- ments between employers and employees. But the wiser course of compromise and conciliation has pre- vailed, and solutions have been found 'without resort to that disastrous industrial weapon, the strike, It is well that this record can be pointed to with a touch of pardonable pride, It spcaks well for the reasonableness of Canadian railwaymen and their cmployers, and for the desire which they have to serve the public interests while by no means sacris ficing, their own. Nincteen years without a strike is a splendid record, particularly in 'view of the . troublous_times through which the system has pass- cd, but it can be made much longer by a continuance of the same policy as has animated both employers and employees in that long period. A DISTANT PERSPECTIVE It is. surprising how distance from an event will affect one's perspective: of it. Three months ago, . according to a letter just received from a missionary, a Manchurian community was invaded by a band of Mohammedans, and 20,000 persons were massacred. The cvent took place so far away irom any kind of . lines of communication that it was twelve weeks be- fore the news of it drifted through to civilization, Even when it did come through to the newspapers, it caused scarcely a ripple on the public mind. It was just another story, even although the unfortun- ates who were massacred were just -as much human beings as they who read of the incident without feeling in the least perturbed about it. Supposing an incident of that kind had happened anywhere on this continént, or even on the continent of Europe. It would have been more than a sensa- tional story. It would have crowded everything else off the front pages of the newspapers for days. But just.because it happened in far-off China, in a remote and distant corner of the globe, it amounts to very little, There: may be some conditions under which dis- tance tends to lend enchantment to a- situation, but in a case of this kind, distance seems to deaden the human infellect to a sensc of human values, EDITORIAL NOTES Another good 'test of blood pressure is a caller who brings her threc small children, Never yet have people scorned the law in a land that treated stock exchange gamblers as it treated crap shooters, The Soviet govérnment has sent out several expe- ditions to look fdr minerals. They would be better employed in endeavouring to discover some truth nuggets. en A chemist foresees. synthetic beefsteak made from cotton seed, but even at that 'we suppose the tough portions would exceed the fillet in order to be true to type. Zing The Lancashire cotton strike, it is expected, will reach a speedy settlement. The threads of: dissen- sion between employers and employees cannot be gathered up too soon. A clergyman recently passed away in England who left an estate of $170,000. It is obvious that he knew enough to include some rich relations among his attributes. The St. Louis aeroplane endurance flight has come to an end without mishap. As a matter of fact the participants were much safer up there than an auto crowded streets, President Hoover defines naval parity as "Com- plete defense of the United States in any contin- gency." In the same way it should mean for Great Britain complete defense of all her far Aung posses- © SIONS, commas THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3,1929 a Other Editor s y Comments | MORE COMPETITION (Toronto Star) The new Utited States quota law nearly doubles the number of per- mitted immigrants from Britain and Northern Ireland. This may have the effect of still further reducing Bri- tish emigration to Canada, ------r WIPING OUT LYNCHING (From the New York Herald Tribune) "There will not be a lynching in Alabama if I can prevent it," says Governor Bibb Graves, and to prove his words he orders two Birming- ham Guards. units to entrain for Kil- by, instructed to protect a Negro suspect "at any hazard" There has never been any danger that Negro criminals in the South would es- cape justice at the hands of South- ern courts, and the ghastly roster of 'lynchings has been a perennial dis- grace to the American name. The number of Iynchings has been declining steadily since the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People began its agitation for a Federal anti-lynching bill; and if other state authorities act as Ne- braska's Attorney General acted last week, as Alabama's Governor is act- ing today, lynching will become as dead an issuc as dueling. The local authorities can stop it' if they have the will, and a new determination to wipe out the old disgrace is manifest throughout the South, THE MYSTERY OF THE LOAF (Victoria Times) Several weeks ago the price of wheat went down to $1.05 a bushel. But not a word was said about re- ducing the price of bread... When trading began in Winnipeg recently the figure stood at $1.75 and the clos- ing price was $1.68. We are now told in a despatch from Vancouver that we soon shall be compelled to pay more for our loaf, We have never been able to solve the mystery of the price of bread. We think of ten cents for sixteen ounces here and cighteen cents for a four-pound loaf in the Old Country. We grow the wheat from which the flour for Bri- tain's bread is ground. It has been said that the Canadian loaf is more costly to produce by reason of cer- tain preservatives which enter into its manufacture, that wages paid ¢o Canadian bakers and deliverymen are much higher than the wages paid in Great Britain, We have no reason to doubt the truth of this statement; but it still seems extraordinary that in a country where the wheat is grown the price of bread should be just twice as much as itis in a coun- try which depends upon our wheat-- and which is three thousand miles away, - Bits of Humor - DOWN IN ARIZONA "My father was a great Western politician, in his. day." "What did he run for?" "The border."--Arizona KittyKat. ONE GOOD REASON "Alice is a girl that could married 'anvbody she pleased." "Then why is she still single? "She never pleased anybody."-- Pele Mele, Paris. have HOW'D HE SUCCEED "When I began business on my own account I had absolutely no- thing but my intelligence." "That was a small enough begin- ning."--Tit Bits, A man is that large irrational crea- ture who is always looking for home atmosphere in a hotel and hotel ser- vice around the house. ts RIDDLE . "What keeps. going and going, but 1s never gone?" "That's easy--the radio." "Mother, there's a strange nigger lying on the cellar 'floor and groan- ing" "Dear, dear, your father must have fallen down the chimney while he was fixin the radio aerial" . A woman knows when her hushand is licked. He always slams the door as he goes out. the Then there's absent-minded society woman who kissed her: hus- band 'and cussed her her poodle. | Bits of Verse PORTRAIT She was like any anc by day, Her hair screwed in a knot, Bang! would go the oven door, Like a pistol shot. Oh, very much like any. one-- Busy at her labours, Shelling peas and stringing beans And nodding to her neighbours, But when night came the buttons burst Up and down her back, Avg out would come a giddy moth Flapping through the crack. She'd paint her lips and 'powder, And flit into the night. Oh, such an one I never saw-- So fond of candle-light. --Thomas Hill McNeal in Poetry. IY => "i ag ete ot ood BM le fe Te TR The Day of Judgment--Many will say N me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? . and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I-profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from he, ve that work ' iniquity.--Matthew 7:32, 23. Prayer: Lord, save us from ourselves, 'Fand' from' self-astustofsos = BURNS HEGLER, EDITOR OF THE SHAWNEE (OKLA. NEWS, SAYS; THAT newspaper advertising has reached the point where it rightly can be classed as commercial news. It is as necessary to conducting of a successful business or the opera- tion of a well regulated home as rain is to growing crops, or as food is to a human being. It would be impos- sible to estimate the saving to the American housewife through this medium, Merchants who doubted the advisibility of advertising a de-* cade ago, and who then classed newspaper advertising as an ex- pense, now regard it as am in- vestment, which will prove gaod or bad according to the attention they give this modern method of contact mith the buying public, Among allthe forms of advertising offered, newspaper - space still re- quires the least investment for the value it offers, and all others merely are supplementary to it; most effec- tive when used in conjunction with it. No merchant can lose by putting his money into newspaper advertis- ing if he merchandiscs what he has to sell studies his market and sticks to the truth, The Jewish race is credited with having an, unusual amount of busi- ness acumen, and one of ihe strong- est arguments in favor of advertis- ing is that no one puts more money into it than the successful Jewish merchant, THERE 1S NOT A NEW IDEA IN WHAT | HAVE SAID, BUT THERE IS NO DODGING THE ESTABLISH- ED FACTS REGARDING TRUTH-TELLING, GO-GET- TING, NEWSPAPER ADVER- TISING. Bours By -- W. Barton, M.D. EXAMINING YOUR OWN EYES One of the first things that people from Britain and Eurepe notice in the United States and Canada is the very large number of individuals wearing glasses. In fact it has been said "that there are 'more people wearing glasses in New York City than in the whole of Europe." Now this is really a serious matter and although the people: of Canada and the United States would say that as a people they took more care of their health than do other nations, this may not be true. But as far as you are concerned personally, it would be only good scnse to find out if your eyes nced any help. Perhaps vou are prejudiced against oculists and optometrists and believe that they put glasses on in some cases where they are not needed. Did you ever think that if you do not find out about your cyes from oculists and optometrists that vou may be daing just the opposite, that is doing without glasses when you really nced them? Why not scttle the matter for yourself in a very simple manner. Go to an optical house in your town or city or send to a wholesale optical house and purchase the little card that oculists and optometrists use in cxamining your eyesight. These cards were used in the army and can be purchased for a trifling sum. On the cards are letters of the alphabet which you should be able to read at 200 feet, at 100 feet, at 80, 00, 40, 20, and 15 feet, For instance the letters at 15 feet are about one-fourth of an inch in size. Put the palm of your hand lightly over the right eye and read with the left then put the palm over the left eye and read with the right, If you cannot read cvery one of 'these letters correctly at the dis- tances marked, then you should see an oculist or optometrist, Now this is a simple test, but it will prevent you being foolish enough to take chances on your eyesight. Working in a poor light, or much night work, may necessitate glasses during such use. Of course there arc a number of tests that the oculist or optometrist uses but the above will get vou think- ing about those important organs the eyes. (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act). Ken (ringing up George)--'"That you, George? I'm just going along to the club. Can you manage to get along." George-- 'Sorry, but I'm afraid you've got the wrong number. This is Main one--four--five."" Ken--"Right, old boy. Give me a ring when vour wife's out of the way, will you?" VALUE OF SLEEP (Hamilton Spectator) Science has evolved drugs that will. put one to, sleep, but just what it is that brings natural sleep is-as great a mystery today as it was to the cave-man who curled up on his rock mattress, with his flowing beard spread over him for a quilt It is a commentary on human nature that we are more particular about our food than.we are about regular hours of sleep, yet it is a fact, de- finitely established, that it is pos- sible to live much longer without food than without the benign ebyace of Morpheus. LORD "JIX" WRITES ~ OF IS EARLY DAYS 3 Was Candidate or 10 Years Before Securing Election _ London.--For some time past I had known that it would be necessary for me to give up some of my work. No man who has not the constitution of an ox--and a young : one at that--can carry through the work of the Home Of- tice for nearly five years, with Parliament on the top of it and a big and growing constituency on the top of that, without feeling the strain. by my docters to take things eas- fer; that was quite impossible, writes Lord Brentford in the Lon- don Daily Mail, Two months ago I was again warned that I could not carry om the work of the Home Office much longer, and accordingly, when after the election his Majesty graciously intimated that he would confer a peerage -upon me, I decided to leave the House which had been my home for so many years and ga to the other. It was a terrible wrench in many ways, and last week I went down to the House of Commons to take my seat and sign the roll of Parlia- ment for the last time. Lord Hugh Cecil had made a humorous refer- ence to myself the day before--a' suggestion that I should soon be sitting with the angel faces in the galleries above them--and when I appeared there were some good hu- mored cries of "Angel face!" which took me back to my first contest--- that for the London county council for the Woolwich division about 4v years ago--when I was so young that Lord Wemyss, who came down to. speak for me, prophesied that young as I was I should on the election day be "the little cherub that would sit up aloft." However, that was not the case, and I had to wait a long time for what was my real ambition--the House of Commons. Ten Year Waiting For ten consecutive years 1 was a- candidate for a division in the City of Manchester, and only on the third contest" was I returned. Of course, nowadays a young man stands for Parliament and thinks that if he doesn't get in, or if he is thrown out, the party should find him a safe seat within the next ten minutes, and the Press seem to think that this is a reasonable atti- tude. I doubt it very much. After all, you may want young men to lead your forlorn hopes, but you want older. men of experi- ence to carry the country through grave times of difficulty such as Ministers: during the last twenty years have had to do. 1 looked round the new House; it seemed to be a strange place, with many strange faces. It was somewhat of a shock to see Mr. Baldwin and my other colleagues seated on the Front Opposition Bench to the left of the Speaker, while facing us sat Mr. MacDon- ald with the leaders of the Social- ist Party. Far away in the ais- tance below the gangway were Mr. Lloyd George, Sir John Simon, and the perennially youthful Sir Her- bert Samuel, returned to the House after many years as one of the leaders of the Liberal Party. It is impossible yet to say what the new House of Commons will be like. It is certainly older than the last; there are fewer young men on the Conservative side and there are more middle-aged men on the Socialist side, and it is certainly sterner in appearance. - The young men who came up into the House from their universities or their reg- iments, or their country seats, are now replaced by men . who have served a long apprenticeship in the Labor world. The House looked cheery and more serious than of old. There are many new men, not to mention women, of whom nothing is known except by their immediate friends, and they will all have to be "broken in' '--by that sterner disciplinarian, the Me- ther of Parliaments. Political Career I often wonder why men come into the House. A trade union leader of course tries to come in; it is perhaps the natural stepping- stone from the life of agitation to- wards better . conditions which he has led outside to a life of--as he thinks and hopes--intensive agita- tion inside. It is not my intentivn to write now of party politics, but I am afraid the new Prime Mints- ter may find a little intensive agi- tation on his back benches before he has occupied his post for many months. Then there are the representa- tives of old families--such as the Stanleys--who always seem to have members in the - House or turies: it is the natural event that they should be members. Then there are the lawyers, who come in--dare I say--because with "M.P." after their names they will get more briefs or better fees, ur because it is a good avenue to a they come becausé they desire to place at the disposal of the com- mon weal talents and abilities greater than those of ordinary men. Then there are the manuractur- ers who come to keep the traae unionists in order and to represent the views of some great commer- cial constituencies--and of course the bankers, who come to see that the Exchequer carries out its duty properly. And there are the men who come for no reason that I have ever been able to make out--and I believe honestly for po reason that they have been able to make out--just because they have been asked. They live in a certain locality: they A year ago I was ordered |, '| selves--and to me less | Commons, and have had for cen-| judgeship? No---let us put to one side all such ideas and say that|' have served the district well in minor matters; the sitting member dies or suddenly retires and there is no obvious person to succeed him until somebody thinks of Mr. Smith or Mr. Brown. The idea appeals to him and he comes to the House of Commons, and a very good member be makes. He "sits on Committees--and Private Bill Committees take up = great part of the time of the House of Commons--and he does wonder- ful work, greater perhaps than that of members of many other Parlia- ments in the world. And at tne end of twenty of thirty years ad- mirable service "by day and by night, following his party chiefs in- to the lobbies, not making many speeches, but there when he 18 wanted, he becomes known as a useful, dependable member and re- ceives the honor of a baronetey in the end. There are still many men who enter the portals- of the Mother of Parliaments with the main deter- mination to make a name for them- gon gatally to remedy the evils of orld in the first five minute Yor generally do neither. But there #8 One particular rea- son why the Seeiglists should give reverence to the House of Com- mons, afl that is 'that there is no such | 1eveller in the whole world. unately, like most levellers, ft levels down rather than up, snd the man who 1s a leading Mght in his own constitu- ency and who has sat on the dis- 'triet ofudicil or corporation, who has bees a guardian or the chair- of ® political party, and who ®y his voice the feelings ana of hundreds of his fellow son finds that, however big ay be at Little Pedlington, thé House of Commons cares very little for his turgid eloquence, but mainly wants facts, and it wants those facts, moreover, put before it very concisely. . Spectacular Win It js a long time since 1 was elected--in 1908. Incidentally it is a mistake to win a spectacular by-election. I ¢ame in after de- feating my present friend and cole league Mr. Winston Churchill (ae had defeated me two years provi- ously, so the honors have remain- ed even), and I had been made much of bv the whole of the City of Manchester, so that I am afraid I thought that I was a much more important person than I really was; it took some time to sober me down.. My maiden speech was not a success: it was too long and too dogmatic, and betrayed, I fear, Iit- tle of that modesty which the House prefers more than anything, particularly {if the modesty leads the maiden speaker almost to the verge of a breakdown. The very building itself, occupy- ing as it does eight acres of ground, linking one "of the olde; buildings. in England---the Gr Hall of William Rufus built in th eleventh century--+to 'a compar: tively modern one--the new Palad of 'Westminster, built by § Charles Barry less than a hundre years ago--is calculated to inspi awe even in the most courageo: new. member, with "its eléven hui dred rooms, its one hundred stai cases and its two miles of passage And one 'of the most interestin things about the shuilding, is th the young member will find th mallet and chisels used by Hen Broadhurst, stone-mason, who too part in the building, preserved a glass case, and he will remembe that Henry Broadhurst afterward became Under-Secretary of Sta for the Home Department. It must have some effect on man to realise that he is a membd of a body which has been in ez tence for over seven hundre years--two hundred years befor even the first Secretary of Sta was created. And all that time has resisted tyranny from ever guarter; it has represented tj rights of the public; it has mad and unmade Governments; it h: declared war and approved peacd it has been the example of dem cratic government throughout t world. And it still lives, and is sti an example; and in spite of § cumbrous procedure it carries o its duties, whatever critics m say, exercise a very real contr over the committe of membe: which rules the country under th title of the Cabinet. Him Healy--or to give his form name and title: T. M. Healy, K, ( (King's Counsel) and first Governo. General of the Irish Free State--po sesses a native Irish wit that was once the envy and dismay of his pol tical opponents during the ma years he sat in the House of Co mons as an Irish Member. It wi devastating. For instance, when English member asked how ma horses were sent to South Africa du ing the Boer War, Tim Healy inte) jected. "And how many asses?" SEA NOCTURNE Lights on the sea-line go, Vibrating to and fro, Errant, mysterious, low, Seen bright, seen dwindled; But that one steadfast spark That cleaves the drooping dark,' For what all fortunate barquy Is it enkindled? ! With far flung beam it stands, On rough and perilous lands, Warning with upraised hands The gray shipmasters; Why did no beacon free Flare out on life's broad sea, To warn and presage me Of Love's disasters? ~James Grant in the Londo Spectator. Direct Private Wires to Biggar, Turner & Crawford Stock and Bond Brokers ESTABLISHED 1903 Members Toronto Stock Excharnye Associate Members New York Curb Market Quotations Boarded on New York, Toronto, Montreal and Standard Mining Exchanges Enquiries and Correspondence Solicited OSHAWA OFFICE ' Telephone 2600-1 New York and Toronto Alger Building, Opposite Post Office F. G. CARSWELL, Manager mail, called in person. securities, MONTREAL WINNIPEO VANCOUVER "4 EDO ene Complete Investment Service by Mail We maintain a complete investment serviee by Clients wishing to avail themselves of this service will receive the same benefits from the organization as if one of our representatives Our August booklet "Investments" contains a carefully selected and diversified It will assist you in choosing securities most suitable te your requirements. We welcome the opportunity to demenstrate the convenience of investment by mail and shall be pleased te furnish booklets or infer- matien concerning any issue en request. DoMmINION SECURITIES CORPORATION LIMITED Head Office: TORONT® 26 King Street E: list of 17 KING STREET Srosie-ForLoNg 60 . go Office: Reford BAY AND WELLINGTON STS. "8. F. EVERSON, Local Manager Private Wire System EAST, OSHAWA Phones 143 and 144

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