Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 30 May 1930, p. 4

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, . FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1930 L kind in {he utter of fo h'yite munl- gd i it of Tuts le mun tarded our public development, It is of the 'same low and. unfair character as the muck Conservatives used to pass out with regard the failure of Mr, King t0 enlist as a sol- vory |. at 8 time_when he was carrying so eavy a family vesponsibili such a course would have been selfish and man is not the less honorable, he is the EL ug a hl bilan i because | | 'possessor of wealth. There are such Rane j he ranks oF both the historic parties \ RA ih 1 carrier, 15¢c a week. By mail ' (outside Osha PA uv i by nba fo myear ' - ' : b £ai LY oth vd "518 Bond 160 Temperance! Streoh, &. Telephone Adelaide 0107. H. D, Tresidder, ln Yepresentative. ,.. + REPRESENTATIVES IN U.S, ' Powers and Stone Inc, New York and Chicago i re ph) Yum +. FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1930 SMASHED CROSSING GATES Theve is an object lesson for motorists in the accident at a Cobourg railway crossing & few days ago, when six lives were lost when an automobile was struck by a train, This lesson: is to be found in the official re- port of the rallway company to the effect that the gates at the crossing were out of + commission because a car had crashed into them some days previpusly, and that these ' gates have been broken by metor vehicles no less than ten times this'year.. ~ One can hardly consider. it possible that "any motorist would be so foolhardy as to crash into gates which are placed at railway crossings for their protection. That is the "essence of recklessness, and in this particu® Jar case, it not only endangered the lives of the people in the car which did the damage, t~nlso" caused another accident in which '8ix people were killed. #+ The periodical reports of the Board of "Railway Commissioners of "Canada contain many instances of motor vehicles running site. crossing 'gates, For what purpose do "4H¢é 'Motorists responsible think these gates are placed at crossings? Only those of pin- headed mentality would think of trying to pass over a crossing when the gates have been closed, but yet there are ten drivers who have tried to do this at the Cobourg crossing this year. Six lives weve lost in Monday morning's accident, not so much be- cause of the recklessness of the driver of the car involved in that accident as because f the man who had not when he saw the cross- st hin. en y y' : a bors abiy i 1 . a Wem Ey "months for the exténic 'God at home and abroad, to make : "ithe future, and to discuss moral | 'the day with which the church has to do. 4 It is well that such gatherings should be. "held annually, They serve a useful purpose, land, in fact, they are very essential. The, i>ichurch requires to take stock to ascertain 'iif it is going backward or forwardy~and to 4 consider what can be done to stimulate what + + should always be for the church & ny ! 'progress in things spiritual. p) Bg. Budgets, allocations, filling of - study of mission reports and needs, and 'many other things come within the scope of ~ 'all church conferences. The study of these ' 'constitute in very reality a church stocktak- 'ing period, and they serve to quicken anew 'the spiritual fervour of the people embraced 'within the church folds, as well as providing for further extensions of religious work at included in the com- EAN ELECTION CAMPAIGN H ------ "issue the Toronto Saturday des of 1" Mr, Hepburn would not intimate that the late Hon. P, €. Larkin was a crook be- cause he was amply possessed of this Noxids Soods, I that man Tks Hon, W, | ougald or , Vincent Massey worthy of public confidence men of wealth, It Is to be ers on both sides will put the gogues like Mitchell Hepburn and down, What the decent people of try most desire is & clean campaign," GRAIN I8 MOVING The news that the great buk of grain which is still held in storage in a now moving towards shi ports is the best news the people of Canada have had given to them for some time, The holding back of the 1929 wheat crop from the mar« kets of the world was one of the chief res- dons for the temporary . depression from which Canada has been 'suffering, and the fact that the grain is now going forward will have a highly stimulating effect on the morale of the people of Canada, and this will be reflected in better business conditions, The wheat pool, however, can hardly claim to have made a success of its wheat blockade. The price of wheat today is far below what it was last fall, and the growers will not receive the high returns which they anticipated as a result of the world short. age which was reported when Canada's crop failed. Yet there is another angle to con. sider. Had the Canadian crop, below normal as it. was, been thrown into the open market last fall, prices would undoubtedly have dropped to much lower levels than are being paid to-day, and the growers would have heen heavy losers, So possibly the wheat pool should be given credit for having main- tained a-certain amount of stability in grain prices, eyen although they have dropped to lower figures than were anticipated when the blockade was atarted. The moving of the grain crop, even at this late date, will act as a stimulus to business of all kinds. The farmers loans will be liqui- dated, and their final payments for grain made, the railways will be busier, and in turn this will gause the wheels of industry to turn withigreater speed thay has been the case for the last few months, So that, even it there is some disappointment over present wheat prices, the whole of Canada will move ith grain to world markets. . FOR A WEEK , MLP., a coal miner and Lord missioner to the Chureh of Scot. 'second term, was driven through i of Edinburgh on May 20, in roy. ate, a4 personal representative of the King. | a week, while he holds court at ancient Holyrood, he and his wife, a former "factory girl, were addressed by the title us. ually' yeserved to dukes and archbishops. |" 'Mr, 'Brown may be all that Burns had in mind when he wrote th poem™A Man's a that," but as. successor to the Diches of Yorkin the senii-epis- copAl 'office he now adorns, Mr, Brown is a chilling reminder that just a few years ago a British Regiment's Band gave concerts not "by kindly permission of Colonel Harde- boyle" but "by special permission of Music. ians' Union No, 1318," which was one contris bution of the first Laber Government to in- ter-imperial foreboding that the Union Jack might soon be replaced by the Red Flag. Labor is its pwn worst enemy. There are very few plain people who revere the aristo- cracy, real or assumed lb mgst of the plain people do revere honorable t¥aditions which include everything bom governors'-general to periodical baths. t the politically suc- cesaful demagogue's first act always seems to be aimed at making a joke out of worthy ex» isting traditions instead of founding newer and better ones, As a result, so far, Labor in a political sense doesn't' get very far, and chiefly because its leaders alienate the very people who want to be its friends. EDITORIAL NOTES It is not what men think of women, but what women think of each other that gives spice to life.~Sir John Foster Fraser. Aviation ig no fun any more. You go up, you come down.---Anthony Fokker, % yr " .- nce, the most cone nider dio ent "recently set aod hymaRism.--Harry Emerson Fos. a = Geis * . * sae The next great dramatic-renaissance in .'| America will conte when: the theater is re- «| 'captured fromthe producers by the |. when we become active en aan we hicorge ation sicugh In mind and Eich Snough. in ¢ t to begin the creation and a folk-theater in Am- erica--~Glern Frank. . + = Li forward in'sympathy 'with the movement of | | we put on two murders, Comments SOME PERTINENT VIEWS 1 r(Edmonton Journal) wil Rogers, in the New York Times, advances the following rea- sons to explain why the ore "sitting on ry the word "For every automobile we furn| an accident, For every relle t robberies to every ht lnstallad. We build two golf elub to every church, Our bootleggers have manicures and our fa have mortgages, ou. full, our jails are full, ¢ clans are full, we can't a prisoner we burn him," ---------- due next i J bh column for on of these n in of the third generation, is the classification we want to be in, There are columns for the rac ial origin in the census for Poles, Ukrainians, Chinese and Japanese, Indians and Negroes, and there never has heen a place for the Johnnie Canucks, PEDESTRIANS RIGHTS (From the New York World) Not so long ago t lawyers were enforcing what ti consid- ered their legal rights by driving past crossing signals and ring trafic policeman's warning, Now- adays nobody tries to claim the legal fight to commit suicide by sisting at the wrong time, The offort further to saf trians ig worth making even if it In not completely successful at the outset, ' WILD FLOW. | MOTO (Fort William Times-Journal) The advent of the motor car has permitted the ravages of the des: troyers of wild flowers to be spread over a wider territory than ever, Tourists will All their cars with flowers, only to throw them away st the first stop, becauss they are too wilted to' carry home, The flower that is unpicked and left in its native woody remains a thing of beauty for days and gives plea- sure to party after party of tour ists. When pioked, it becomes & wreck in a short time, and brings no pleasant memoriey to the one who. picked it. And, when the roots themselves are recklessly torn up, future enjoyment of the beauties of the vgodland in there by spoiled, | Bits of Humor Hi§ DEADLIEST WEAPON wi Game Hunter (at dance)-- 1 killed four llons that day, She---How wonderful-Did. you tread on them?" AND INSURANCE In view of the fact that it ls now fashionable to insure any pari of the body essential to ones pro- tession, it is significant that so far no politician hag done anything about his brain.--Punch MERELY MULTIPLIED "What, asked the teacher of one of her pupils, 'do we mean by the word 'plural'?" Pupil--=Ry the plural of a word we mean the same thing, only more of it, HARD TO LOSE Billy Brown was dreaming of the glorious game' of football he was going to have as soon as he ot out of school,' He wasn't a ft interested in the elephant, which wag the subect of the lesson to which he ought to have been listening. The teacher saw this and pounced on him, "Brown, where are elephants found?" he demanded sternly. Billy was staggered for a mom- ent, but rowe geliantly to the oc- easlon, \ "P.please' sir," ha stammered, t'glephants are #0 big that they're hardly evey lost!" ---- It is perfectly all right for a wo- man to want to hold on' to her youth, but she should not do It while he is driving. ~~Montreal Star, Bits of Verse | TT UNATIO at i NR mie I aaw an yioh full moon upride Cy branching prongs. Her 2s) er, ttle with the fingering roat. on The air was broken too, it cut My eyes until the EH was lost The ridge, the wood, the lonely hut, The moving aheep beneath the OR Yn smoke, : it, Freezing me inward til T stood A statue in the moonlight, blotting some stars, Timeless, chipped with cosmic soars And fabulous to human blood, uart eview, arte Rey in the Virginia Wri Without Love --- And $hoaeh bestow all "10 oha it toth t | -- Shay profiteth me nothing. ~1 . Prayer: We know, Lord, that the gift 'ont of No ane anawered, Think a Mttle, what fa It T am {I 8 W ith blockhouses at each corner, Within aro the cabins that housed the piofi- cers, the first school in Kentucky, and the recreated spring that sup- plied the water during the frequent Indian attacks, Blockhouses and cabins now contain priceless relics of pioneer live, some of which were used in the orginal fort, Near here Is the cabin in which the parents of Abraham Lincolin were ried, Here . ted the Ant sthutery women sleep t rave' oer men, 1 and little children" whose saerifico made possible. this great state. 1 saw there the grave of the figst white child born in Kentucky, is _ceme- tery is unique in that eight distine- tive periods of wrave markings are shown there, from the rough sur- face stones on which settlers had no tools to carve a name or dates to the marble used a century aff A trip to this park is wonderfully interest- ploneer life. AS 1 B ADE MR. HUTTON F 1 w ERFUL HOURS | HAD SPENT IN SEEING How OUR FOREFATHERS LIVED IN THE DAYS OF LONG AGO, THEN IN A FEW SHORT STEPS | WALK. ED INTO THE HEART OF THE MODERN CITY OF HARRODS. BURG, WHOSE PEOPLE ARE LIVING IN THE DAYS OF TO. DAY, WHAT A DIFFERENCE! -------------- ------ By James W. Barton, MD. CAUSE OF HIGH BLOOD PRES: | SURE De. Williams who examines appli- | cants for the state police in Mas sachusetts, says dbat when geyeral men have to wait inian anterooni for half an hour of more. for physical examination they often have a high blood pressure when they come into the examination room, But if a man can be put off for "ome reason until next morning, he is examined quiets ly, and his blood pressure is {found to be within normal limits, Dr, W. R, Houston, Auguata, Ga, tells us that he was in China tor | four years and during that time he never saw a case of high blood pres: sure except in kidney ailments, He attributes this normal or low blood pressure in the Chinese to their philosophy of life, their acceptance of things, no inner struggle against their fate in life, And yet when the Chinese coms to live in Great Britain or America their blood: pressure goes up. Also when Europeans or Americans live in China for a number of years their blood pressure goes down until it is about the same as that of the Chin ese, Now what is thought to be the rea- son that the blood pressure of the Chinese. goes up in a foreign land, and that of the foreigner goes down whilst living in China. Just a matter of relaxation, 1 have spoken more than once of the green boxer meeting the world's champion and how tensed he was bes fore and during the bout, how utter. ly exhausted he became. An experi enced boxer keeps cool and collect. od during a bout, He keeps his body relaxed, when he is not hitting or guarding a blow, It is the constant tensgness or alertness that brings on fn. « It would seem that this condition is responsible for many of the cases of ng blood pressure, the Chinese because we were not thus born, but certainly we can try to learn the lesson they teach us in the calmness of their lives, We don't want this calmness al ways, it would check our ambitions and lessen the amount of work ace complished, However if we could learn to rest our eyes, our ears, our brain, for short periods of time daily, and try to acquire sonjething of the quiet high blood pressure. It wold prolong the lives of many middle aged folk opyright Ac GREATRST VIRTUR The philanthropio lady was vis- {ls she questioned: "hy doing when' 1 give up time and ure to come and talk with you your own good' fist we way the reply. WORDS OF W Without the giver is bare. ing and means of lowering does efficiency mean to your employer? It envelope and your hope for future promotion or success. ing and an educational lesson in early | Bye Care and / Eye Strain A CY==PART "19" To the dondition then where vi- BYBESIGHT, EDUCA' EFPICTEN sion is weak and muscular condi- no | tions of the eyes, are not in proper tone, wastg of o in always It is readily seen that any strain in the system is & strain on It glare, moving traffic, constant fix- ation, ete, the eyes directly or reflexly, 8180 8 direct strain on the eyes oye muscles to be exposed to Wasted energy is nerve woaken- discou ond is a ency, What you or flocty the pay In the interest of education, eye- sight and efficlency«-toachers, par- ents and students shoyld study the function of vision an the eyes, cause of thelr children and because of thelr own eyes earning them a Hving. children in their care its necessity in nequiring an education and find- ing the proper vocation, dent will be In a position to know for himself when he attains to the ago to know, and in the meantime we must be expected to do our du- ty as humanely as possible, the care of Parents should know be Teachers, because of the The stu- (To be continued) COUPLE END LIFE AT HEALTH RESORT Found With Gas Tube on Pillow Beside Them in Bed London, Eng --What fs believed to be a.double tragedy of ill-health was revesied at Leigh-on-Sea, Es sox, Mr, and Mrs, Lawrence Fenn, of Stratford, E,, a middle-aged couple who have been staying at Leigh for the benefit of their health, were found dead in bed, 1t is understood that a length of tubing, copnected at one end to 8 gon bracket, was lying on the pillow between them. about two months, noticed that thelr milk had not been taken in, and as the people in the flat below heard nothing of them the police were informed and an entrance was forced, letter writen by Mrs. ¥enn, endeavorng to get her 11-year-old daughter into a school wag" found, In the letter she stated that she herself was {ll and suffering from nerves, A son is employed as « The couple had lived in a flat on the Orand-parade -- one of the best parks in the district -- for When it was clerk in the city. Leslie Gerrard Camp Borden, visited Mry, E. -------------- HAYDON PERSONALS Hayden, May 28.--=Mr., and Mrs. and daughters, rard over the holiday. Mr. Welsh and son Roy, of To- ronto, visited Mr, and Mrs, Clarence Mr, Ernest Engils and son, of To- rN, So "Skinny Shamed , In Bathing Suit. . bry Gained 15 Lbs'. Gained 15 tbs, take ing Ifonized Yeast. Was always ashamed to wear bathing suit but sow 1 can and not* foe Ko inny. YN ula am, Thousands write, ofS to 15 Ibs, gained in 3 weeks with Ironized Yeast! Bony limbs round out, Ugly hollows fill in, Blemished skin gets clear and rosy like magic. Nervous. ness, indigestion, constipation disap- ear overnight, Sound sleep, New ealth and pep from very first day. Two grént tonics in one «special weight-building . Malt Yeast and strengthening Iron. Pleasant Httle tablets, Far stronger than unmedi~ cated 'yeast, Results in % 4. So quit being ashamed of "skinnie ness," sallow skin. Get Ironized Yeast from druggist today, Feel great tomorrow, Money back from manufacturer if not delighted with quick results, ) yaa Ee ---- ronto, visited Mr. and Mrs, Lilas Trewin, Miss Rilda Slemon, of Bowthins ville, spent the week-end at Wome. Miss Alice Ashton, Enniskillen, vise ited Miss Annie Trewin on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, Leslie Graham and sons spent Sunday, with friends, in Port Hope, Mr. Roy Thompson week-end at home, Mr, and Mrs, Will Ingils and family, of Toronto, visited Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Trewin recently, Mss. John Wright has returned honfe after spending the winter with friends. in Oshawa spent' the ow you and I can't become like |: poise of the Chinese, it weuld cer | tainly lessen the number of cases of [* (Regiffered, in Aedorddnge with the fi {ting a school, To teat the bright. | nesa of a group of rather poor pup- | dren, which ia. the great. 11 virtues?" th A grimy nt wu i "Well, what am I ine. little good feed oad though 1 : body to burned ut I POY bless, ma'am, buttin' int" | wnoM All things come to those whol stop waiting and go after them, --_" oy OUT :OF-TOWN CALLS =~ QUICKER AND CHEAPER THAN EVER She almos | Mrs. Kane was a timid rather terrified her. t trembled - at the thought hg soul--no doubt about it! Modern Ld

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