Oshawa Daily Times, 29 Jul 1927, p. 1

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"ve SiAWA DAIL DAILY REFORMER 300 vee (Entablihed 1070) An independent newspaper pubifihed every afternoon except Sundays and legal holidays, at Oshawa, Cane » Hund Jrinting Company, ited; Chas. M. Mundy, Alloway. Secretary. ogy Times is a member of the Canadian dian Daily Newspapers' Association, adi Dailies and the Audit Bureau Cireutes ions, : Isewhere in rahe 00 a ron a year. _ SUBSCRIPTION' RATES: carrier boy in Oshawa, 15c a week. EL 14, TORONTO OFFICE: © Bd Bog; « Temperance Street, Télephoné Adefgide 0107. H. D. Tresidd "TT FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1927 p Counties of Ducat and Chand repr e. PATRONIZE HOME TRADE toy rn Residents evidently do not realize to an extent they are hurting home £5 cheasionally ordering goods from madl- BY cho judging from the remarks that béen made since The Times started the & gn against out-of-fown trading. at diffébénce does it make," one resident F&ifigtked, "if I send a few dollars to mail-order High oer now and then?" "Were Her particular case the only one of its nature in the City, it would make but little differénce, but individual cased in the aggregate do make a great deal of difference, She is only grié of hundreds who are doing the same thing she is doing; and, added togethér, the amounts an immense sum each month, It is the buyers that keep the mail-order houses going, While we have no way of knowing what tHe 'mail:orders average in any particular house, #48 it is safe to say that the sum is only a few dollars, . The $2.98 you send away today is not much {n}self, but when it is pooled with hundreds of othér like amounts it makes a substantial sum. That $2.98, or 69 cents, or however small fe amount may be, is a very important matter I 'évery mail-order house. ' The small sums by far the greatest part of the millions > dollars of mail-order business done in this country every year, spend your $2.98's with local merchants, # you do that you will not only be helping them and your City, but will also be helping yourself by keeping more money in cireulation Yoocgiere, If you spend your $2.98 here, yon stand a chance of getting a part of it back some day, but if you send it away the entire, sum is taken out of local circulation, In its campaign against out-of-town buying, ~The Times has called on local merchants to ad- vertise their goods more extensively, so that the purchasing public in Oshawa will be in a alc [Btter position to buy at home, PR nian? "TRAFFIC" TAKES ON COLOR "Foreign visitors to this country in past years Ma commented upon what they termed the funeral | Jui gepect of our motor cars, For some unknown reason black was accepted as the conventional {il colour, and 'to offénd against it was to invite a eriticism for garishness and display. When ho a colours did sometimes appear it seemed mn to suggest moral turpitude of one kind or an- , 4ther on the part of the ownérs, This year the convetion has been cast to the winds, An all-black car, within the space of a . few months, has become as rare as the' bril- line liantly-hued automobile was a few years ago. os, dn fact, the conspicuous car on the streets to- »4 «= day' is the black one. *"" "*7rne innovation is welcome, The dirt and me of modern cities have made impossible "' "fhe bright satins and silks and broadeloths that gave a charm to the society of yesteryear. *), Of late some one discovered that umbrellas and > iraineoats need not necessarily be black, and the result has been a brightening in the appearance J lige yess. And now the automobile is elie 4 like purpose, oli refreshing to know that the old taboo " peen broken and that any owner of a car pwn his fancy and contribute his mite . to & revival of colour without fear of losing his 2iné st in the community, bie is one threat in this trend toward rain- '4 automobile bodies, Individual tastes in 7 are as much at variance as opinions on '/ the relative worth of the several makes of auto- svi-mobiles, The inevitable result is that colour suis: gopibinations which seem beautiful to one car wee 'owner strike another as hideous. an flay oes Bik £ has yeni it aired sf eo ALAN AL A0 4 ET TO MAKE NEWSPAPER POSSIBLE "Without large supplies of cheap paper the ined "Pewspaper as we know it would be impossible. +hrnd' so significant a part does the press play on in daily life that any enforced curtailment of its activities would be in the mature of a na- Mola calamity. New processes and methods : ok paper manufacture looking toward an as- | perpetual 'supply of paper are, therefore, prime importance to the country. mills always have depended upon pa abruce, fir and hemlock for their pulp sup- "itn hese | id Species being called upon dna gt . ny? 250 4 Kika A mine He ESE ge es THE OSHAWA/DAIEY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1927 ware for 77 per cent of all wood copsumed, spruce alone contributing 55 per cent. Of ldte years consumption has run steadily ahead of re- planting. In 1919 a serioug shortagé of ma- terials was experiénced by the paper industry and many mills in the Eastern United States are now facing shutdowns because of a short- age of pulpwood. There is an urgent need for substitutes. After long research the United States forest service reports it has found 94 kinds of hard- woods and softwoods which can be made suit- able 'for paper making by mechanical ' and ical processes. Of spécial interest is the s for making high 'grade papér from 8 southern pines, for the availability of fuel, thé enormous quantities of wood and the rapid growth of the forests of the south ¢ombiné to make a perpetual paper supply from that sec- tion very promising. Forest conservation, reforestation, and the discovery of new woods and substitutes for wood in paper-making can delay for many generations an acute shortage of newsprint. If newspapers of the United States can draw their supplies, or part .of them, from the Southern States, Canada's supply of pulpwood may not be so heavily drawn upon, but Canada must conserve her forests with a kare that has not yet become apparent. TOLERATION IS RELATIVE Why is it that those who "make faces" at others never see the grimacea intended for themselves ? One half of the world goes through life criticizing the other hdlf, probably bétaise it does not know how the other half lives. It is easy to find fault with the unknown and to go on complacently unmindful of what the other fellow thinks of you. There are those known as "low brows" and those known as "high brows." The low brow's love of jazz and popular fiction is ridiculed by the high brow, while the low brow laughs scornfully at the high brow's predilection for the classical in literature and music. While both laugh at each other, neither is conscious of the other's ridicule, An analogous case presents itself in opposing manners of dress and speech. Different classes of society differ in their manner of dress and in their use and pronunciation of certain words. Each class is satisfied with its own tastes and each must express its dissatisfaction with the other's. These are only man's way of expressing his petty but inherent intolerances, When tolera- tion is discussed it is never in absolute terms. Toleration will be a relative term as long as this world is inhabited by more than one man. All mankind can hope for is relatively less in- tolerance ip the future than in the present and past. EDITORIAL NOTES 'The masses" include all those people who make less money than you make, Moscow has a shoe shortage. They haven't any leather. They cannot. get leather off the Moscows. The young aren't foolish, They are just willing to satisfy their curiosity at the cost of a blister, The millennium will have been reached when a law is required to compel men to stop work- ing at quitting time. A husband's petting of another woman is not ground for divorce, a judge rules. But there is a lot of trolible ahead of the 'man if he gets caught, nevertheless, ; Bit of Verse YOU NEVER CA You never can tell when you send g word Like an arrow shot from a bow By an archer blind, bé it cruel or kind,' Just where it may chance to go. It may pierce the of your dedrést friend, Tipped with its poison or balm, To a stranger's heart in life's great mart It may carry its pain or its calm. You never can tell whén you do an act Just what the result will be, But with every deed you are sowing a seed, Though the harvest you may not see. Each kindly act is an acorn dropped in" God's | productive soil ; Xou may not know but the tree shall grow With shelter for those who toil. You never can tell what your thoughts will do In bringing you hate or love, For thoughts are things, and their airy wings Are swifter than carrier dove. They follow the law of the universe-- Each thing must create its kind, And they speed o'er the track to bring you back Whatever went out from your mind. -- Author unknown. TINO XT) TG ow BEAT TAL SAL AM Ah Jee | | i Ua 31 NE ; : By Jémes W, Baron, HLA Registered in accordance with the Copyright Aect. THE SPOILED CHILD GROWN UP Someone remarked recently "Funny world. To require fitness in doctors, lawyers, and so forth, and do mothing about parents." You have met the man or wo- man with what is called the "in- fériority complex." He is always trying to escape from the responsibilities of life because he doesn't feel that he fits 1g the scheme of things the way e should. The editor of the Canadian Medi- cal Journal tells us that the lack of courage is gften the result of the upbringing of the yungster, Perhaps the youngster had some slight physical defect, poor vision, imperfect hearing, or other condi- tion and the parents tried to "face the difficulties" for the youngster, instead of having the youngster face the difficulties for himself. Thus a child that re- celves everything from others rare- ly develops a normal view of life. "These children, spoiled ny per- sistent petting, are apt to fail when faced with difficulties, unless they are educated to acquire a com- mand of. their will power in every situation." Research men in child welfare and our psychologists also, tell us that we cannot start at too early an age to teach the youngster that he must behave, must give and take in play, that he cannot es- cape punishment due him. If the youngster has any defects these must be recognized, correct- ed insofar as this is possible, and the youngster's resistance and courage huilt up, instead of "giving in" to him because of his defects. 1 know this sounds like severe measures, but all must agree that the editor fs right just the same, as we study the problem of the "neurotic" as this individual is called when he grows up. "The aim of the parents should he to develop a feeling of independ- ence notwithstanding any defects that may be present thus giving him sufficient self confidence to develop his responsibility to the world in general, a respect for others, and a strong desire to he of service for the general good." This all seems like common sense as you think it over. You can't live your child's life for it, and expect it to deve Yelop properly About the only way in which Bobby Jones can add to his glory now is by flying home. - Chicazo Evening Post. Leading £ CLlaigd CLAREMONT SOON "J HAVE HYDRO Reeve G. M. Forsythe is Sue: cessful -- Now Setting Up Poles Claremont, Julv 29.--For many years the people of Claremont and vicinity have looked forward to, the day when they would have electric light in their homes from the Hydro Electric Power Commission, and now, in a very few weeks, their hopes will be realized, Reeve G. M. Forsythe, of Pickering Township, and one of the best known residents of Claremont village, has been for a number of years pg in securing Hydro service, and at the last nomination meeting it was one of the principal planks in his platform Passing through the town on Friday | Mr. Forsythe states that the poles were now being erected by the Hydro ® and that in a few weeks lights. would | @ be turned on, In anticipation of this, | which will be the occasion for a suit | able celebration, many residents i Claremont are now having their houses ~ Delightful summer nourishment with co 4 ho ie milk. hd berries, ly flavorsome wired, Electricians from sult oi his efforts, & aha pra 1 Toronto. | Stouffville and Uxbridge are now busy | does your san wish to enter the busi- at work in the village. Reeve Forsythe has made numerous trips to Toronto in | connection with the Hydro project ar «is now naturally pleased with the res nL ---- First Pagtner: "In what position | ness?" Second Partmer: "wen, as far as «1! T ean make out, he wants to start near the top and loaf upward.' London Punch, Do You Own Your Own ~=huys 4 room cot- tage on good $300 down, balance rent, A bargain, Act $190 street, like quick. W, J. SULLEY, SULLEY & MAW Auctioneers 346 Simcoe St, 8, Phone 716J LYCETT Your Real Estate and Insarance Broker AUCTIONEER 25 King St, E.--Corner Celina Phone 205 FOR SALE $500.00 HH50.00 Grooms Avenue, Frederick St, ...... Water and Sewer Houses for sale, $4,000 to $5,- 000 on Frederick street, Kasy terms if desired, These prop. erties are only five minutes walk from the business dis. trict, SER Williams Piano Co. Phone 762, or R. P, Bull, Phone 626 a ARR RRR ith, FOB our city, Located on the main drag CARTER'S Real Estate 8 King St, East Phone 1380 Res, 1823W Oshawa, Ont. TEE REAL ESTATE Homes built to suit purchasers. R. M. KELLY G10 Simcoe St, N, Phone 16G63W Er it "ih Business Men of Oshawa ii Bs buying LOT iter TOT. THER IDGHENT ic coand Fetanie is tho mont beautiful, best located and carefully restricted Park for BEAUTIFUL HOMES in ) King East, makes it the most attractive proposi- tion B gras offered our BUILDERS, NTRACT ORS, HOME SEEKERS and IN- VESTING, PUBLIC. , ets Don't Delay Action, Call. on Corner of King and Celina Sts. Oshawa PHONE 295

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