Oshawa Daily Times, 6 Jun 1928, p. 4

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| Oshawa, Canada, by Mundy ting Company, i Tinted: Chas, M, Mundy, President; A. R. he 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 Ofrculations, SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carvier: 0c a week. By mall (outs 'aide Oshawa carrier delivery limite): in the ' Counties of Ontario, Durham and Northumber- + land, $3.00 a year; elsewhere in Canada, $4.00 ' '| ® year; United States, $5.00 a year. TORONTO OFFICE 407 Bond Building, 64 Temperance Street, Tele phone Adelaide 0107, H. D. Tresidder, repre. sentative. REPRESENTATIVES IN US, Powers and Stone, Inc, New York and Chicago, SIE WEDNESDAY, JJUNE 6, 1928 ---- ; [3 TEN MINUTE PARKING | The City Council at Monday night's meet- ing acted wisely in expressing disapproval of two recent decisions of the Police Commis- sion, The Commission says the left hand turn at King and Simcoe must go. The Council says: "We do not approve and respectfully request that you reconsider this decision." The Commission says a ten minute limit is to be placed on the parking of automobiles in the business section. Council says: "We "+ are of the opinion the present limit of thirty minutes is satisfactory and recommend that the present regulation be enforced," The City Council has no authority over the Police Commission, It is just as well that it is so. But the Police Commission will no doubt be interested in knowing what the elected representatives of the people think of the acts of the Commission in a matter closely affecting the public, It is quite reasonable that there should be some restriction placed on parking privil. eges. If there were not some people would use the street as a permanent or semi-per- manent garage. But is not a half an hour plenty short enough? If the police believe there 'is too much congestion in the downtown area why not make some effort to enforce the present regulation? A few signs would help to keep traffic moving. An occasional prosecution of a chronic offendor would add greatly to the educational value of the signs. The situa- tion seems to be that the police have now all the authority they require to remedy the trouble. Then why pass new regulations that can only be a source of annoyance to shoppers and tourists and that surely no one really intends to enforce literally. The merchants of Oshawa ought to have some say in a matter of this kind. And so far as we have heard the proposal for ten minute parking limit has few, if any, friends, among the merchants and business people. The general opinion seems to bé that 8 half hour gives reasonable time for shop- ping or other business in one or more places, but that ten minutes is far too short and to enforce such a regulation would work a severe hardship on Oshawa merchants and their customers. NOW HE FACES THE WORLD " The week following graduation frequently 'Is a time of heart-searching for many young people. Many a conscientious young man gazing upon the beautifully lettered diploma asks himself rather gloomily, "Now that I have it, what am I going to do with it?" may be, perhaps, something of a disap- for the youthful bachelor of arts find the great world of business and every: affairs doesn't seem to realize he graduated and is ready to offer A college professor in a recent commencement address said, "It is not a convincing or an edifying spectacle if 2 man can display a college diploma and at- tach a degree to his name, gives the impres- that he has mno-idea what to do with The tendency to put dollar estimates upon £21. iH] | A What! Is the summer-time here in other callings. And always the worth. iest students have been those who sought CONFIDENCE AND CONCEIT ~ Efficiency experts and practitioners in the art of super-salesmanship lay stress on what is casually termed "self-confidence." To sell one's product or to sell one's self, they say, one must have confidence in one's products or in one's ability and talents, But there is a wide difference between legitimate self-confidence and stupid con- ceit. The latter quality, unfortunately, is to be found in many persons, in many dif- ferent walks of life, and when displayed to any noticeable degree at all, is insufferable, Beautiful women, that is, those who are naturally beautiful and do not have to de. pend upon artificial aids, often take on the air of having been altogether responsible for their pulchritude, They forget that fate just as easily might have made them hide- ous. And the same thing is true of the handsome youth who, realizing his hand. . someness, affects the role of having been al- together responsible for his good looks, Fate might just as easily have marred him, too. Conceit, however, takes its worst form in those human frames which lay claim to more than the average brains or intellectuality, and this applies particularly to professional walks of life, Even in the matter of brains or intellect, whatever gods there be obvious- ly are as capable of producing morons as they are of producing intellectual giants. The most beautiful woman, of course, is that woman who, although quite lovely, seems unconscious of it, And the wisest man is he who realizes that mortal wisdom, and especially his own endowment of it, has many limitations, ' Confidence is a quality of strength and ability ; conceit is the attribute of the in- curably silly. - Bit of Verse THE INGLE-SIDE It's rare to see the morning breeze Like a bonfire frae the sea, It's fair to see the burnie kiss The lip o' the flow'ry lea; An' fine it is on green hillside, Where hums the bonnie bee, But rarer, fairer, finer far Is the Ingle-side for me. Glens may be gilt wi' gowans rare, The birds may fill the tree; And haughs hae a' the scented ware That simmer-growth can gie: But the canty hearth where cronies meet, An' the darling o' our e'e, £ That makes to us a warl' complete: ok --Hew Ainslie y' 0, the Ingle-side for me! ROSES IN JUNE ---- Roses in June! Roses in June!. First of the season's blooming. 80 soon With roses the eve perfuming? : Ah, how they challenge my blind neglect, Condemning the musty study That taught me not how the noses decked The thickets in gold and ruddy. Roses in June! Roses in June! And two fair faces glowing, Two warm hearts that beat in tune, The roses on me bestowing. How have I merited gift so fair, Garnished with thoughts so kindly? Into what service with gold so rare Thus would ye surely bind me? Roses in June! Roses in June! Let us away to wander Far over meadow and field and dune Riving the crimson plunder. Any congenial pals as we-- " How better may friends commune Than down by the river to ramble free, Gathering roses in June? --W. Clark Sandercock LJ \ At a Glance : Wot? As soon as day to dawn The meadow lark starts singing. As soon as evening comes, a star The angel's lamp--starts-swing- As soon as T am in the tub The telephone starts es « +e Two ladies are in the race. If the pilots don't jump overboard from the effects of continuous talking on the part of their fe- male passengers the planes have a slight, very slight chance to reach their destination. When two women are in oppo- sition 'something generally hap- pens. LJ Anyway, we wish them luck. LJ . * By what we see, the only dif- ference in turning regulatipns at tie main corner is that the left hand turn is made quicker so as not to block the traffic. This should overcome the difficulty of traffic Plackades. - "Well," remarked a mar ried man after examining his friend's new flat, "I wish T conld afford a place like this." "Yes," sald the friend, "you married men have bet. ter halves, but we hachelors usually have better quar. ters." v LJ 4 Others may sing the song Others may right the wrong, Finish what I begin, And all I strive for, win: What matters--T1, or they? Mine, or some other's day-- So the right word be sald And life the sweeter made! --Pdrt Colbnroe Citizen, » LJ . The heighth of laziness-- preparing your bath at night so that when you get up in in the morning you can fall right in it, and thus wake yourself rather smartly, thus relieving you of taking exer. cises, LJ . * "His shirt convicted him'"-- headline. Many a man's shirt has gone to the wash, * . * These are delightful days. Warm, delici rain steeped in the lapels of one's cloth. ing. What could he sweeter? Ld LJ L Premier Ferguson has not heen well in London, Surely none of those Old Country Diplomats have been trying to amend his constitution., Dally Star. re Hickman, where, why, and when? v LJ * Wilt thou answerest? LJ] LJ LJ By Renrut. A LASTING INHERITANCE--A good man leaveth an inheritance to his children's children; and the wealth of the sinner is laid up for the just.--Prov, 18 : 22, PRAYER--May our children's children receive from us treasure rupt nor thieves steal. EE Amazing Laxative Rich in Iron and Phosphates Here is a marvelous new kind of saline laxative which enriches the blood instead of depleting it! Im Salzo, irop is amalgamated with the - {phosphates of sodium and potas- sium, thus stabilizing the blood's mineral content. Salzo brings about 2 complete, healthful, natural tiushing of the 'bowels. Positively oot babit-forming and won't cause piles. Ends constipation. Salzo is sold at all drug stores. Miladys Laxative SALZO ~--Advertisement. 9 ROOMS--NEW---HARD- wood trim, Oak floors, open fireplace, French doors, large cupboard:. Built fn bath with shower. Many other exclusive features. . Connaught-Mary district. A . real home that. will pay dividends. 10 ROOMS--BRICK--NEW Modern. Will give you a good home and sufficient rents to pay for it. Only $7,000--$1,000 cash. terms. $ ROOMS--SIMCOE ST. 8. A real soap, $1,700. Name your terms. ; " 4% ACRE LOT, $200. % acre lot, $3090. Just across the road from the city.) Easy terms. DISNEY King St. E. Disney Block Phone 1550 |So it which moth and rust cannot core What Others Say 0 ATIF AGAIN aT (London Answers) She: it you tell a man anything it goes , in one ear and out the other 3 » e: And if you tell a woman anything it goes in at both ears and out of her mouth. _ ENGLISH SCENERY (London Sunday Express) The Maharajah of Rajpipla that there is no scenery like Ee) lish scenery, and that nowhere will you find such green. The mahhrajah is right. There is no countryside like the English countryside, and we who live in London are fortunate becuuse transport has much improved since the day of Thackeray, who wrote, "It 18 worth while living in Lea- don, surely, to enjoy the country when you get it." A BACHELOR'S WEEK'S WASH (New York Evening World) The man-about-town has more expensese than ome, A bachelor Jliving at a fashionable Park Av- enue hotel had left the city for a few days and his laundry bill for a week was presented to the mana- ger of the hotel the other day when I happened to be present, "You see what it costs the well- dressed man to keep that way," he said, handing me the bachelor's laundry bill, I looked at the total, Sixty-five dollars, for a week's wash, EMPIRE PREFERENCE (Toronto Mall and Empire) The several States of the Em- pire should be pulling together as a mighty team to hold its own against foreign countries whose markets exclude staple products of countries in the British, Empire and who raid the too open markets of Empire countries under the British Crown is bound to prove one of the greatest Empire-build- ing instrumentalities that have ever been applied, It can be so adjust. ed as to foster industry in each of the countries of the Empire by conserving their internal markets for themselves, and treating for- eign countries as foreign countries treat the British world, HIS UNCANNY MANIA (Boston Globe) A man with an uncanny mania for juggling with figures placed a pad and a pencil in his friends hands, and said: 'Put down the number of your living hrothers, Multiply it by two. Add three, Multiply the result by five, Add the number of living sisters, Multi- ply the result by tem, Add the number of dead brothers and sis. ters. Subtract 160 from the re. sult, The friend did as directed, "Now," sald the other with a cun- ning smile, "the right figure will be the number of deaths, the mid- dle figure the number of living sisters, and the left hand figure the number of living brothers," was! THE FAMOUS MARY (Hamilton Herald) Many a Mary has been celebrat- ed in deathless song--Burns' High- land Mary, Mary of Argyle, the "three Marys," who were compan- fons of Mary Stuart, and scores of others. But none ,of these--nor any other heroine of ballad or song of Kirkconnel, nor the Sweet Alice of "Ben Bolt," nor "Kathleen Mavourneen"--has heen so well known and loved as Mary who had a little lamb, One thinks of the simple poem about Mary and her lamb almost as an old folk song the origin of which is forgotten; but the poem is comparatively mod- ern, and one is surprised to learn that the little heroine herself Is still alive, mow a lady who has just celebrated her 88th birthday. She is Mrs. Mary Hughes, who was born in the beautiful English val- ley of the Dee, and lives there still. The poem was written by Miss Jean Burl of London, an old- er friend of little Mary, Not many weeks ago the origi- nal manuscript of "Alice in Won- derland" was bought at auction for a fabulous price from the own- er, who was the original Alice for whom it was written, Possibly the first draught of "Mary Had a Lit- tle Lamb" is in existence and we shall soon hear of some rich eol- lector bidding high for it. WOMEN AND THE CHURCH (Hamilton Spectator) The Anglican synod of the dio- cese of Toronto has made an im- portant change in the canons, which will have the effect of permitting women of the congregation to vote | it 5 i HH H 1] tes a'tached to the idea of gi i TT rs in the deliberative dee 2 2oming bodies. c ECZEMA (By Jas. W, Barton, M.D.) (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act) For a number of years now it has been agreed among skin spe- clalists that sugar seems to be a factor iu the causation of eczema, persistent skin ailment that afflicts 80 many. By cutting down on sugars and starches which are changed into sugars in the body, there was often a clearing up of this skin ailment. Drs. Rabinowitch and Usher of Montreal have found that a form of sugar is thrown off in perspira« tion, They found that in cases of ec- gZema, there was more of this sugar in the perspiration than in that of normal individuals. . Their thought is that the blood does not take into itself a suffici- ent amount of this sugar, and it is therefore thrown off in the form of perspiration. } They therefore feel that there 3s a direct relationship between the amount of sugar thrown off by the perspiration, and eczema, During the big marathon swim at Toron- to, in August, 1927, sugar in vari. ous forms, candy, chocolate, taffy, was eaten by the contestants to give warmth to the body, and to feed the muscles which were work- ing so hard and steadily, Sandow, the strong man, used to eat taffy before his perform- ance of feats of strength, Our football and other athletic teanrs now eat candy at the resting per- fode during a game. Research men at Harvard, experimenting on the runners of the Boston Mara- thon race, (ell us that sugar was a great factor before and during the race in sustaining the strength of the runners, In an experience of athletes, cov- ering a number of years, I have not- ed the tremendous amount of candy consumed by athletes and yet there was almost a total absence of ec- zema amongst them, What is my thought? That if athletes eat much mere of sugar than other fellows, and yet have less eczema, there must be a reason. ' The reason is likely that as every time mruscles are used they con- sume so much sugar, therefore the blood must carry this sugar to them, and as the blood thus holds more sugar within it for this pur- pose, the sugar is used up instead 4 Pe. Established 1871 Oshawa Branch T. W. JOYCE, Manager 5 CR A.L. HUDSON & Co. ' MEMBERS § NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE WINNIPEG GRAIN EXCHANGE . STANDARD STOCK and MINING EXCHANGR NEW YORK PRODUCE EXCHANGE (As'ts) NEW YORK CURB MARKET (Ass'te) : - \ OFFICES AT: DIRECT PRIVATE TORONTO, ONT, | WIRE CONNECTIONS BUFFALO, N.Y, : TO ALL PRINCIPAL i OSHAWA, ONT, MARKETS bu SARNIA, ONT. 3 OUT CANADA end i OWEN SOUND, ONT, UNITED STATRS "= » Oshawa Office Times Bullding Telephone 2700, Resident Manager: C, N. HENRY of being thrown out as part of the perspiration, therefore, for those with a tend- ency to skin ailments, to take a C. W. Mealing, C. L. U. District Representatives . Just another little suggestion, |little more exercise. § « over into domestic life the "long look", --the practice of looking and planning ahead, which has proven the secret of every successful business enterprise." college days ahead, clearing off the mort- Liihpiog hy phil r the supset years of life--all can be planned with definte assurance of happy consummation. ibution of modern life wiih vo § pe sig ol spd "reduced premium" idea are built for the purse of the average family man. 'exon 8. man age 30 can pur: yet all the while steadily mounting and the protection | is always there. Ask any of ous representatives for particulars. / A ------ J. C. Horton 14 1-2 King St. E. Oshawa ;

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