+" THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER Ai 3 (Established 1871) nin t news ublished aft FLITE SE kel hldrs, 3 Cuba : i ) t WE Hinds, President; A. Alloway, Secretary awa Daily Times is a Bgmber of the Canadian Pails, Ne Shapers' Association, ial es py ig Audit Bureau A CRIPTION RATES: j Wo ier boy in Oshawa, 15¢ a week. By { in 1 ties of Durham and Ontario, $4.00 vr; elsewhere in Canada, $500 a year; United Stal , $6.50 a year. TORONTO OFFICE: 3 nd, Building, 6 66 Temperance Street, Telephone 0102 . Tresidder, representative. FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1927 BETTER STAY WITH THEM . Premier Ferguson told his audience at Port Elgin the other day that he prefers the pro- vineisl sphere because there he can get closer to the people. Anyone who knows Mr, Fer. gusol will be quite certain that he meant what hes#id: The reply that came from his hearers hi ff "Then stay with them." They, too, meant it they said. The Prime Minister of Ontario is a great mixer--and he enjoys mixing, His most rabid political foes cannot help liking him personally, when' they make his acquaintance. He may make a mistake once in a while, as all human Beings do, but most people will agree that he does, hig' very best to carry out the wishes of the majority of the electors. The federal Conservative party needs to be rehabilitated, Both Liberals and Conserva- tives 'will agree on that. Canada needs two good, strong parties--no more and no less, The Conservative party needs a strong, per- ménént leader, but it should not be necessary to rob ont of the Provinces in order to get him; We have a feeling that G, Howard Ferguson will be the ultimate choice of the Winnipeg Convention in October, And we have an idea that. the call to go to Ottawa will be so Toud and 80. insisted that he will be compelled to respond to it. But many in both parties will be Bokry to see him go. There are in his present cabinet at least two men, either of whom woilld make an excellent prime minister for this Province, Both, however, are doing good work where they are and Mr, Ferguson's de- pafture for the larger sphere would weaken the' Government, By the way, is it not amusing that no To- rope politician has a chance of- securing the Conservative leadership in éither the federal or the 'provincial field? There are good men in Poronto--shoals of them; ;but the garru- lous, loquacious, and verbose political orators in that city completely ruin the chances of the more solid and substantial public servants. It is tough luck for deserving aspirants, The rain of alleged eloquence falls on the just and on the unjust in that metropolis and over- whelms both, ROAD TO SUCCESS RE y wry . In fhe attainment of solid, well-founded suc- cess there has been found a substitute for hon- est labour with the hands or mind. The ages have recognized this as an immutable truism, yet every age including the present, has had its skeptics, its unbelievers, its seekers fame and fortune without paying the prigedin work. »Bome sage has said that to attain success use half as much effort as you would exert in aS as to seek success without work. There sm wisdom in the axiom that it takes less . effort to climb to legitimate success then $e elimb to illegitimate success. Legitimate ment requires no fortifications, no pro- m. Illegitimate achiement demands more 'a gross injustice to humanity to say that re. is any one thing, more than another, very much of the attention, time of the people it is. in scheming and to get something of value for nothing. of society's parasites is large but Climider of honest, hard-working supporting } rs of society is preponderously larger. "pe THE COMUEN, ord Balfour confesses that all his long and life he has been a "devotee of idleness." is perhaps an excuse for his not being $0 get up enough energy to go to the ,- but is in line with the rather languid which he used to assume when, as Sec- for Ireland, he was the object of fer- 8 attacks in the House of Commons by the The sincerity of "Prince Arthur" need mot be but it is perfectly idle for him te maintain that he has led the life of an idle man. He has, in reality, got through an im- mense amoant of hard work. Perhaps he would say that he had been forced against his inclination, and that he ve preferred to spend far more time inviting his soul. That is the kind 0 TIA EACROT PaniayY on CAPRIS [al THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES; - FRIDAY, AUGUST 35, 1927 . They ri ean Ten, es done more, although they themselves are cons- cious that they had exerted theéir full power. Their vanity prompts thém to éxplain that they would have wrought more yaliantly aa they not been incurably lazy. Undoubtedly, some affect an air of indoléiice and appear to have no fixed éngageménts, for the express purpose of astonishing the world with their achievements and causing the qués- tion to be asked: how they possibly could find time to do so much. The sin is not in loving idleness, but in be- ing idle. As long as one keeps busy there is no harm in preferring to be idle. There may be such a thing as "inspired effort" but most human effort is forced, Great men, inherently lazy, must often force themselves to great works, The brave man is the w one whe conquers his fear. The industrious man is the one who con- quers his laziness, WHAT'S THE USE? When the radio first became available for use in people's homes the great desire of every radio owner was to be able to tell his friends what distant stations he had "got" on his instru- ment. The average radio fan had no use for near-by stations, even for Canadian stations; he wanted to "get" the far-away ones, in Flor- ida, California, or elsewhere. The programmes might be just as good, perhaps better, from broadcasting stations just a few miles away-- but it was distance people yearned for. Now that distance has been conquered, the radio has settled down, or the radio fans have, and' the radio is a pleasure-giving convenience, Just as distance was the desideration in the case of the radio, so with the automobile it is speed, Motoring has not settled down, The great majority of motorists use the automobile properly but some still have the craze for speed. The result is a long list of week-end fatalities. Stricter regulations will assuredly follow. The Government cannot look on while | citizens are killed and mained. Speed-crazy motorists must be punished, What's the use of '"'cutting in"? No use, What difference does it make whether a trip takes three hours or three hours and a half? Merely that the motorist may be able to tell his friends that he "did" such-and-such a dis- | tance in such-and-such a time, There have always been fish stories ; there used to be radio | stories; now there are motoring stories, A certain type of man likes to say that he was "hitting" fifty-five miles an hour; when he does that he is likely to hit somebody or something else, "Cutting in," speeding, glaring head-lights, just one light--these must be regulated out of | existence, And there must be protection for pedestrians, Hon. George 8S, Henry announces that the Government will pay thirty percent of the cost of building walks for pedestrians be- side motor highways. Municipalities should give heed to this suggestion, It is much cheaper to build sidewalks than to have pe- destrians killed. What's the use of hurrying? Time is not | so very valuable--not as valuable as human life. And what do the hurrying motorists do with the time they save by speeding and "cut- ting in." They merely use it to tell their | friends how fast they went. But their friends are not interested, EDITORIAL NOTES s---- The hand that rocks the cradle doesn't roll the cigarette. The demand for politeness is great; but the supply is short. The only thing wrong with any country is the people. [ Bit of Verse | PIANO ELVES WHAT OTHERS SAY . (The New Outlook) We wonder what part the hen has to play in the welfare of a country' such as ours. A very considerable part we are very sure. také mubh ithagination or any very ' close knowledge of statistics to lead us to that conclusion. It is time we gave her this somewhat official recognition by allowing her to hold the centre of the stage at our fed- capital for a few days. We are re that the whole Dominion has a right to be very greatly interested in thé World's. Poultry Congress. FLOODED - uv 8. EXVORTS (London Sunday Pictorial) The report issued by the Com- monwealth Bureau of Statistics re- garding last year's imports into Australia shows that the United States is gradually getting a firm- er grip on this important market. | Over 30,000 miles of films were {sent from the U.S.A, to Australia. |and motor cars to the value of about £13,600,000. That the Ameri- edn importers are reciprocating by an increase in thelr orders is obvi- | Ohs from the fact hat Australian exports to the U.S.A. jumped from £8,000,000 to £13,000,000 an in crease of over 60 per cent, AN UNWORKABLE PLAN (From the Stratford Beacon-Herald) [ Mr, Houghton, the United States |athbassador to Great Rritain got a | weighty, hut not altogether original contribution to the solution of war | diMiculties off his chest the other day. He suggested that before a nation goes to war it should submit the (decision to a referendum of the | people, Sounds all right, But suppos, two 'nations have 'a quarrel and the {question of war or peace is put up ito the people. What happens if one {nation votes for war and the other | for peace. Will the other accept defeat hy | default, or will they be graded in- |to fighting after their shores are [invaded? | | ANBANNIN ™ HANG (New York Sun) | "My only concern is for my wife, {my sister and my children. If it's taps, I served in the war and am | ready." Thus the sentimental bra- |vado with which Charles Birger, the worst of th, southern Illinois | gangsters, received the death sent- {ence for his part in the murder of | Joe Adams, Mayor of West City, Men of Birger's type have no real | eoncern for anybody. He hired two |hoys to obtain admission to Adam's | house under pretense of friendship and assassinate him. They dM [their work with Mrs. Adams look- [ing on; Birger, to make her torture i double, had previously tefy:phoned to her that her husband was to be | killed. Birger is under indictment for two other murders--those of a policeman and the policeman's wife. It is' disgusting .to find a cow: ardly assaBsin talking about his family and his war service. Bir- | cer's conviction js a bright spot op a dark part of America. No won- der the peopl, at a Harrisburg bal |game rose and cheered when they | learned that their fellow townsman {was to be hanged. [ STANLEY BALDWIN (From the Ottawa Journal) Mr. Stanley Baldwin is the first Prime Minister of England to visit {Canada while actually holding that |oMiece. In that capacity, of course | he will be welcome, althoguh the homage that will be paid him will | BO deeper than that. For Stanley ( Baldwin, apart altogether from the trappings of his office, challenges regard. Ten years ago he was | practically unknown. Entering the | House of Commons in 1908, he was {for eight years ome of those anony- imous figures that flil the back | benches of Parliament. It was not | untst 1916, when the war had beep jin progress two years, that he {emerged from obscurity. Mr. Bon- ar Law made Baldwin his private secretary. Five years later Baldwin was Chancellor of the Exchequer, and a year later he was. Prime Minister. Never before im British history (not epep in the case of Lloyd George) had there been such an example #8 a man suddenly emerging from obscurity to the summits of power. Yet Baldwin is anything but |spbetacular. He has nothing or Asquith's massive oratory, is be- reft of the brilliance of Birkenhead thesis of Lloyd George. fact, the typical English gentleman farmer. He is happiest, he says. when at home with his Worcester- shire pigs. But if he is not a great practical He is, in EEFES HI aluiost pur, poetry, It does not | antl Churchill, and is the very amti- | od body of clkasionl. seholars, He humbly lands Asquith and Curzon and others' @s great orators, but in doing su he uses language that is and that re- veals him as a master of English. His published addresses are tne rarest gems of eloquence undefiled. Not the sonorous eloquemce or the mighty mareh of Asauith, but sim- ple English that enthrals with its beauty. Who remembers when a girl could wear a sash without hiding her skirt ?--Life. Heaven, to a movie actor, is a land where everything that your press agent said about you comes true.-- Life. That B Jones W, Berton, MA HE HEART AND OVERWEIGHS You have frequently noticed that many of the individuals who drop dead from heart failure are very much overweight, That th, excess weight had some- thing to do with the heart condition is usually taken for granted. This )erhaps is just as well, because it has the effect of warning others ihout the dangers of overweight. Now does the overweight cause the heart failure? Well, the excess weight is always 4 burden to pRhe system, It not only means that it has to be carried around, but the fatty tissue actually gets in between the organs, and also hetween the cells or fibres of the wgans themselves, thus interfering with their work. Thus you can see that if fat gets ibout the heart, and in between the strength of the heart's stroke wild be weakened. However, Dr. W. D. Reid of Bos- ton makes a suggestion regarding the relation of overweight to heart, disease and appeals at ouce ww our common sense. He points out that these over- weight people live on an ill balanc- ed diet, and live in an unhygenic manner also. That is, they eat two many meals, too much starehy stuff, sleep or lie around too mueh, ana take lttle, if any, exercise. Often in these heavy Inatviwuan inflamed, and chalky uepusits cane the place of the natural elastic wn ing. heart toc pump the blood through (fibres of the heart muscle, that the | the lining of the blood vessels gets | It is naturally harder for the | Mw that have lost oof" hue of thely elasticity. Therefore it is frequently happens that a stout individual will blame his "shortness of breath" om kis extra weight, when as a matter of faet * is the hardening of the larteries from his "soft" manner of living that has caused the trouble. However, being overweight is al- ways a liability after forty years of age, and the insurance companies simply advance your age three to ten years, and you have to pay the ex- tra premium thereon. However, th, stout individual who |i active and does not eat too much, has naturally a Letter chance to {avoid heart disease, high blood pres: sure, and diabetes, which so often accompany overweight, than the one | Who overeats and underexercises. Unexcelled Quality 62 King St, East Phone 871 ® wie J. H. B. LUKR Oshawa Manager Conger Lehigh Coal Co. Lid. Yard--Athol St, East Phone 931 Music on the new Orthophon so real--that y enthusiastic « lormance whic sili chod iched popes IS at musicians like the con- ductor id the famous Philadelphia Orchestra impels En who hear it unawares, to mistake it for the musicians themselves. unattamnable--such results arc due to to i "smooth flow Stihaph Victrola Wheto Talking Machine Company of Canada Limited, Montes! . Sold in Oshawa By ~~ D.J. BROWN E110 King St. N. sound" ---a principle home music. ie Victrola is Wer ts per- h constantly small additonal cost. --the Victor and Muted instruments. " Voice" Dealers to $115. Demonstrations convenient terms from' all Prices are from 8775 down Woo chievement ~of deep significance to all music' '--is the great Leopold Stokowski's tribute to the performance of the marvelous new Orthophonic Victrola which revolutionized Easy to hewn to. these wonderful new instruments are also easy to operate. Electric motor to eliminate winding, if you wish, at Possession of any of the exquisitely designed is also easy--on "His Master's Hear given daily. these instruments and select yours today. [ Trade Mark Reg'd onic Made only