Oshawa Daily Times, 28 Nov 1928, p. 4

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Ballding, Temperance 2 REPRESENTATIVES IN 0.6 Powers and Stone, Inc), New York and Chicage, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1928 TEE ' HEROISM Conduct in emergency, most persons will agree, is beyond the control of the individ- ual, Not until the actual emergency occurs can the individual be certain what his con- duct will be, He may keep his head, ac- complish his task and face death with a sub- lime courage, He may exhibit powers of which he himself was hitherto totally un- conscious, Such a person the public wor- ships as a hero, Or he may lose his head and fail to grasp the great possibilities of the moment, A few perhaps will call such an individual a coward, but the more judi- clous will regard him with sympathy as be- ing a victim of unfortunate circumstances, Conduct in the ordinary routine of life calls for no heroic quality, It needs only common sense, strict attention to duty, a modicum of foresight and self-discipline that is within the reach of any intelligent and conscientious individual, Failure in such conduct which leads to a disaster admits of no excuses, There is no sympathy, but enly scorn and contempt for those guilty of such conduct, : Like other wrecks at sea, the sinking of the Vestris produced evidences of both the heroic and the cowardly, But let not the landlubber judge this conduct, The quicks est to condemn cowardice often proves the most cowardly when put to the test, Only those who went through this sea tragedy are qualified to judge the conduct of their shipmates, True heroism is deliberately facing a known personal danger for the safety of an- other, Under this definition there may not have been many heroes and heroines aboard the Vestris when she went down, VOLCANOES * The terrible eruption of Mount Etna in Sicily does not sustain the scientific opinion that voleanic activity is ceasing anf that the vast populated areas on the earth's surface have nothing more to fear from this source, but rather demonstrates that considerable damage may still be done by these lava- belching leftovers of a molten world, Constant guard is maintained over active craters by sensitive seismographic instru. ments, reducing to a minimum loss of hu- man life, but warnings did not come soon enough to save the 80,000 lives lost in 1902 when Mount Pelee blew off its top destroying the city of St, Pierre in Martinique, Warn. ings came from Mount Etna, but not in time to prevent sll loss of life, Few know that more than a quarter of the known active volcanoes are in U.S, ter- ritory, There are more than 600 smoking peaks in Alaska alone, and Mount Lassen, in California, is in frequent eruption, The vol- canoes in Arizona would be active, scientists claim, if water could reach them, The United States has more to fear from earthquakes, floods and hurricanes than from volcanic activity. Of those four kinds of disaster, the volcanic eruption seems to be the most terrifying, but while it causes per- manent damage it does not spread havoc over so large an area as the other three have been known to do, UNIVERSALITY OF BOOKS "Everywhere more books are being resd, according to the reports of publishers, book- sellers and libraries. It is said that in France the circ¢ulation of a successful book 227% HH i FEY + qi in! SPH thE § the fuller the outpouring of books of ques« tionable worth, TOURISTS DISCOVER CANADA One of the most pleasing features of the post-war period in Canada has been the steadily increasing volume of tourist traf- fic with its large revenue, which this year is estimated in excess of $300,000,000, Tourist travel is a seasonal activity loom. ing up in ever-increasing importance and greater potentiality, Spontaneously gener. ated and for some time permitted to develop largely of its own accord, this holiday and vacation travel from the United States and other countries has now come to rank as a major source of revenue, taking a place in this respect with the dominion's greatest natural possessions, Every province of the dominion is sharing to some extent in the benefits derived from this travel, since each has its special appeal and attraction and new sections of the coun- try are continuously being developed and popularized by those in search of recreation, new and strange lands, and scenic wonders, 'Each province reports that its tourist busi. ness increases each year, While travel is naturally greatest in the more densely populated eastern provinces adjacent to the states of greatest popula- tion, the beauties of the western provinces and their peculiar attractions are drawing tourists from even greater distances, The tourist crop of Western Canada is sec-, ond only to the wheat crop, and the domin- ion's favourable balance of tourist traffic represents an invisible export exceeded in value only by Canadian wheat and news. print, EDITORIAL NOTES The man who gets by on his looks doesn't go very far, The man who waits for something to turn up is usually turned down, It is estimated that not enough people are saving for vacation time, Instead of having cigars named after them now our famous men write their mem- oirs, Bit of Verse THE SMALLER JOYS Give me the simple joys; the wild bird's song, A rose or two to cherish as my own, A dwelling small where constant loves is known, And I'll not murmur that life's way is long, Give me a sheltering tree, a patch of lawn, A few good friends to share my merry hours, ~ To walk with me and bend above my bowers And I'll rejoice to greet the coming dawn. Give me some tasks to do; not leadership, Nor brilliant effort with its larger gain, hc which serve a need and soften And I can face the world with smiling lip, Give me this small success: to play the friend, To hold my post with courage, and to be Free from the chains of pomp and luxury And I can walk, glad-hearted, to the end. --Edgar A. Guest #1 fi ABBE 1S ASKED T0 EXPLAIN TALK ON LOST GIRLS Immigration Department De- sires Evidence to Uphold Charges of Chaplain ---- osm, Nov. no eT Abs Casgrain, Roman Catholic al attached to the immigration ser- vice at Quebec City, was yesterday to a hp ER ment to present evidence in connection with his charges that young girl immigrants to Canada sometimes fell into the hands of persons of fll-repute and mever reached their proper detinations. In an interview at Quebec Mon- day, Abbe Casgrain sald: "The sys- tem by which young foreign girls are brought into the country is not perly organized migration, it is fat trafic.' He has also been ask- ed to explain what is meant by "traffic." Officials stated that there had been cases where girls had mot reached intended destinations be- cause they had been taken care of by relatives and friends who inter- vened. Social Montreal, Nov. 28.--Unanimous denial of the charges made by Rev. Abbe Casgrain, of Quebec, as to the disappearance of jmamigrant serv- ant girls, is voiced by workers in the Y.W.C.A., Travellers Ald, and other such organizations here, It was pointed out that the Tra- vellers' Ald organization 1s given a list of all immigrant girls who came into the country, and by means of thelr connections through such societies as the Daughters of the Empire and through the work of their own officers in co-opera- tion with other bodies of like na- ture, they are able tn follow up every foreign girl that comes in- to Canada as an immigrant for do- mestic service, Ahbe Has Names Agencies Deny Quebee, Nov. 28.--'Unfortunate- ly very little comes out of these in- vestigations," said Abhe Phillippe Casgrain, Catholic Immigration Chaplain of the Port of Queheec. "The appalling truth remains that a considerable percentage fail to re- port at all; they are lost on the way." "Any investigation that may he made should he thorough. Atten- tion should be focussed on the in- dividual cases of girls who are missing. Their names can he known." HANGMAN UNABLE 10 AGT IN LONDON Sheriff Grows Nervous as the Time for Murrell's Death Approaches London, Ont.,, Nov, 2§,--~William Murrell, under sentence to be hang- ed on December 17, and Sheriff D, M, Graham, who must hang the prisoner if no one else is available, both approach the last three weeks with trepidation, Hangman Arthur Ellis, the only man in Canada who follows hang- ing as a business, will be in Van- eouver, Therefore, according to his notification to Sherift Graham he will he unable to accept the sheriff's retainer here. Just what can be done ahout it is a matter of grave concern at the court house, The law holds that the sheriff per- sopally is responsible for carrying out the death sentence, The hang- man has no official status and no official appointment, He merely makes his services available to needy sheriffs and the Department of Justice keeps sheriffs apprised of where he may be found, The hope of Sheriff Graham ahd all his staff lies in the proceedings from which Murrell likewisé hopes for relief. The Minister of Justice may extend the time till Ellis comes, but the greater hope of Murrell is that the recommendation of the trial jury for merey will he accorded, SUGGEST NAVAL PARLEY IN CANADA Washington, D.C., Nov. 28.--A joint meeting of the House Naval Affairs Committee an a committee from the British Parliament, has been suggested by Chairman Brit- ten of llinois to Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, to discuss equal- ity of sea power between the Unit- od States and Great Britain, on all classes of war vessels, not affected by the Washington Arms Confer- ence. The meeting was Rroposed in a cablegram made public today to the Prime Minister from Repre- sentative Britten. It would be held in Canada after March 4 next, an dthe committees would re- port with recommendations to their respective Governments on the re- sults of tEPIr discussions in a man- ner similar to the methods used by the inter-Parliamentary Union, THE LORD OUR MAKER -- [, even I, am he that comforteth you; who art thou, that thou shouldest be afraid of a fan that shall die, and of the son of man which shall be made as grass; And forgettest the Lord th aker.--Jsa. 51:12 and 15. PRAYER--If I forget Thee, O Lord, may my right hand forget its cunning. Madras, India, Nov, 28--Pro- posals have been made to estab lish am air route from this city to Colombo, Ceylon, as the latest step in India air development. important Mak in air vate flying has com crease in' popularity rec ; the establishment of several avia- tion centres. NEAR AGREENENT ~~ ON NENSPRINT Final Touches to Be Put on at Quebec Conference Today Quebec, Nov. 28.--Final touches to the newsprint paper agreement started at Montreal last Friday with mill representatives. meeting Premiers Taschereau and Fergu- son, are looked for at a confe here today between the Qu Premier, A. R. Graustein, p ent of the Canadian International Pa- r Company, and other delegates rom the industry. From authoritative sources it is learned that negotiations in Mont- real reached such a point that something definite may be expected today. Apparently Premier Tas- chereau lias been in touch with Premier Ferguson and all is set for the last phase of the conference, A cabinet meeting has been call- ed to follow the pulp and paper con- ference here and it is possible that some official will be forthcoming, PASTORAL LETTER GREETED BY JEERS Police Called to Catholic Church at Central - Falls, RJ, statement Central Falls, R. 1., Nov, 28.--A demonstration by more than 600 parishioners of Notre Dame parish against the reading a pastoral letter of Right Rev, William A, Hickey, bishop of Providence diocese, re- sulted in police reserves being call- ed to guard entrances to the church during services Monday morning, The communication of bishop set forth conditions under whieh the ex-communicated followers of EI- phege J, Dalgnault, anti-digcesan agitator, may galn reinstatement in the Roman Catholic church, The erowd which hegan colleet- ing in front of the church as early as the six o'clock mass, grew In numbers until more than 6500 had collected for the last mass at 10:30 o'clock. A visiting clergyman and his escort were jeered hy the gath- ering as they left the edifice accom- panid hy Chief of Police James McCarthy, after celebrating nass, No violence, however, was reported at any of the masses, A detail of 12 patrolmen were nn duty at the church from six o'clock until the noon hour, A 'spokesman for the dissenters stated that the protest against the reading of the letter was staged he- cause there were on ex-communi- cates In Notre Dame parish and the publishing of the bishop's letter in that church was considered unneces sary. The pastoral was ordered read at all the masses in every church of the diocese by Bishop Hickey, GUELPH PLANS RECEPTION FOR FAMOUS NATIVE SON Guelph, Nov. 28,--Arrangements for' a eivie reception to he tendered Edward Johnson, Guelph's famous tenor and leading memher of the Metropolitan Opera Company, on Wednesday, December 65, were completed by a committee of the City Council today. The program calls for a complimentary banquet, which will be limited to 250 guests, and a reception and dance in the Armories, at which between 4,000 and 6,000 citizens are expeect- ed to he present. The speakers at the banquet will he Hon. Hugh Guthrie and Mayor Beverly Rob- son, At the reception, an fllumin- ated address will be presented to Mr, Johnson by the city, while » life-sized portrait of the eity's dis- tinguished son and a record hear- ing the first recording of his voice in a Canadian studio will be pre- sented the city by the Victor Talk- ing Machine Company. BALDWIN LVASIVE ON ELECTION DATE London, Noy, 28,--All relevant considerations will be borne In mind in*¥ixing the date of the Bri- tish general elections. This was the statement made by Premier Stanley Baldwin in the House of Commons in reply to a meprber who asked if the Premier was aware that the uncertainty sur. rounding the date was an adverse factor in trade, He was psked whether he could make sn early pronouncement on the subject, but the Premier refused to be drawn further, WEST LAMBTON M.P, ILL CONDITION CAV Vimy Safuls, Novy, 28. -- AN was here oncoming the condition of W. T, Godison, M.P,, who is in hospital at Cleveland, where he underwent operation for Eoitre on Friday. this morning were not v, reassuring, but this AMisrnoon it was some improvement had t place. The ion was success- ful in itself but left the member for West Lambton precariously weak. # QSHAWA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1920 PETERBORD GUNS STILL CONTINUES Mayor Claims War Trophies Were Not Thrown in Civic Peterboro, Nov, 28. -- Mayor Penn's explanation of the removal of the captured German guns from Confederation Square, has failed to throw oil on the troubled waters. The battle of the guns, other mem- bers of council declared, will be fought out when council meets on Monday night. "Sometime ago the City Council authorized representatives and oth- er members of the war memorial committee to clean up and beautt- fy the Square in connection with the erection of the memorial," the MMayor stated. "The gy in the way of this work. meeting at the = square at which three of the coun- ells representatives and other members of the war memorial committee were present, it was de- cided that it was advisable to move the guns to another location. A discussion at a meeting of the war memorial committee showed the sme consensus of opinion. At a meeting of the Board of Works of the City Council the subject was brought. up, and another location was not decided upon. "Col. C. H. Ackerman is a rep- resentative of the council on the war memorial committee, and a member of the Board of Works, but he was at these meetings. "I saw Col. W. G. Hall, command- At a ing officer of the regiment, and asked permission to place the guns in front of the armoriessand he refused consomt. 1 asked Capt, Abraham, president of the Peter. boro branch of the Canadian Le- glon, for permission to place the guns on the legion hall grounds, but again consent was not given, "Instructions were then given to move the guns to some temporary place until Confederation Square was fitted up and a permanent lo. cation for them decided upon. For this purpose they were taken to the east end of Simcoe street( not on the dump which is farther south), and there they would have remain ed until the work on the square was completed and most suitable site for the guns decided upon." Meanwhile memhers of the coun- ell who were kept in the dark as to the removing of the guns, are frank in condemning the action of their colleagues, "A.L. HUDSON & Co. uns were' That Body Beginning on Saturday The Oshawa Daily Times will publish daily Health Hints By Dr. James W. Barton These articles deal with the care of the body: how 19 of Yours keep in perfect health; what food is suitable, and treatmen of various ills and how to avoid them. Dr. Barton is a member of the College of Physiciand and Surgeons of Canada and Medical Director of the Can: His articles are interesting and of adian Health Institute. service. IN THE TIMES--Beginning Saturday, Dec. | Private Wire System Phone 143 and 144 Sroste ForLong 8G 8. F. EVERSON, Local Manage 11 King Street East, Oshavs w= Above CPR. Offs 4 # District Representatives - Her Monthly Love Letter The first day of the month, and every month comes this love vto her. For overtwo years now she has receiving it, and it will come with the same regularity as long asshe may live. was 8 loving hus- and and father who made this smangement. His love letters feally come from Beyond to the ittle family, for by a provision: years before he died, The, 'Life was to send his, wife $100.60 a month as long #0 she live, Amore beau thing wasnever are ged, Both wile a ee eh home necess ; the mother's love and Ero ' on Ls Th and every opportunity in life, ger ing oetre0 An snail tir Have Tehre M when he was 30, accom. oar Incomes. mation et Ie obligation, SE Ben b ¢ --------s Mondon Life | Insurance Company | | "Canada's IndustrielOrdinery Company" HEAD OFFICES, » LONDON, CANADA 4 fo > ur Yew 1 od i] A) a av PRE = J +3 pra ci ta ve EE is a % hg 2 Py av v aft nh ey 2 rd hd 2 i ie ? n { »w a % * "i ~ wy "> Le ot LE _ J.C, HORTON . . WALTER FOY 14 1-2 King St. E, Oshawa ~~ = BAR KID wl Heb

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