Oshawa Daily Times, 19 Mar 1929, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ild- Om- nts the on= Awa On- eas, in 24] ake into as )sh- )29, ott, rge 6a) 18, 'nee ohn 6a) y of ella ssed ast, are ance ffer ther pyer we ly. 6a) y of Way, nily. 36a) y of dma 927. shed , at is lo ons, j6a) y of ster, ssed es, it, d, ong hers. 66a) re. Ee PAGE FOUR THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1929 | She Oshawa Baily Times THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) An independent newspaper published every after noon except Sundays and legal holidays, at Oshawa, Canada, by Mundy Printing Company, Limited; Chas. M. Mundy, President; A, R. Alloway, Secretary. Oshawa Daily Times 1s a member of the Cana- "eo Press, tho Canadian Daily Newspapers' As- sociation, The Ontario Provincial Dallies and the Audit Bureau of Circulations, SUBSCRIPTION RATES side Oshaws carrier delivery limits): in the Counties of Ontario, Durham end Northumber- land, $3.00 a year; elsewhere fn Canada, $4.00 a year; United States, $5.00 a year. TORONTO OFFICE ¢07 Bond Building, oa Temperance Street, Tele phone Adelaido 0107. H. D. 'fresidder, repre= sentative. REPRESENTATIVES IN US. Powers and Stone, Inc, New York and Chicago. Delivered by carrier: 0c a week. By mail (out TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1929 TEER A NEW INDUSTRY The announcemtnt made yesterday that the Farrwell Development Company, Limited, has pur- chased the property at the corner of Olive Avenue and Albert Street, and proposes to establish there a tool and die-making plant and general machine shop is good news to the people of Oshawa, It is true that the mew industry is not an extensive one, that it will have but a small beginning. Yet all industries have possibilities for development, and quite often the largest of them grow from a small start. It is to be hoped that this will be true of the new concern, To start with a list of between 25 and 50 employees means something to Oshawa, and the company deserves every encouragement in its efforts to become firmly established here. The aim of building up an industry that in time may employ between 200 and 300 men is a laud- able one, and anything that can be done by the city council or the chamber of commerce to help along this development should not be overlooked. Oshawa welcomes the Farrwell Development Company, and The Times joins in expressing the hope that its career in Oshawa may be of the most successful. ' THERE'S A DIFFERENCE The attitude of Mayor Schwab of Buffalo can be commended to the aldermen of Peterboro and St. Catharines, who voted themselves a salary without consulting the people who elected them to office. This year's city council in Buffalo thinks so highly of the services of Mayor Schwab that it has suggested that his salary should be raised from $8,000 a year to $12,000. But Mayor Schwab will have none of it, His reason is that when he was elected, it was on the understanding that his salary would he $8,000, and he does not propose now to break faith with those who voted for him. What can the aldermen of St. Catharines and Peterboro say when they were elected on the un- derstanding that they were to have no salaries, and then turn around and vote themselves re- muneration which the people had no idea they would demand? THE RESCUE FLIGHT The people of Canada have for the last week Deen looking with admiration on the heroic effort of Captain Roy Maxwell of the Ontario Air Ser- vice, to reach a northern oulpost where a mis- sionary's life was in danger, to bring the sufferer back to civilization where he would be given proper treatment, There may have been longer flights than that of Captain Maxwell, and flights which called for greater endurance, but there have been few which have had the same epic quality of greatness. Faced by wintry blizzards, beaten temporarily by mis hap and misfortune, he showed dogged courage and determination which carried him through to success, enabled' him to take a medical man to the aid of the injured young missionary, and, finally, to bring the patient back to a hospital in North Bay. The story of Captain Maxwell's flight should be written in imperishable letters on the record of the Ontario Air Service. Day in and day out, in all kinds of weather, the men of this service are performing noteworthy deeds, but they have in Captain Maxwell a leader whose example must be a constant inspiration to them, Captain Max- well lost an opportunity for glory, perhaps, when the minister in charge of the service refused him leave of absence for an attempted trans-Atlantic flight which later took the lives of two of On- tario's intrepid fliers, but he has lived to attain far more lasting fame than if he had followed Tully and Medcalf to their grave in mid-Atlantic, STILL THE BEST SELLER - The celebration of the 25th anniversary of the founding of the British and Fereign Bible So- ciety on Sunday last brought forth a keynote which is interesting. The day was featured by the announcement that the Bible is still the world's most widely published book, In these days of plethora of light and frothy literature which seems to have a wide appeal, the fact that the Bible outstrips all other books in . the sumber of copies issued is a cause for satis- faction. It shows that people recognize that the _ Bible. is, at least, a book worth having. One must express doubt, however, as to the extent to which it is read and studied. It would be encouraging to know for a certainty that it was read with as much enjoyment as some of the so-called popular fiction, but one can be pardoned for doubting that it is. Its influence on human life and conduct, of course, is entirely fixed by the extent to which it is used as a daily guide, and if the wide extent of its publication were only equalled by its use in everyday life, the world would be a better place. : INTERNATIONAL ROAD RULES Few people have a real conception of the wide scope of the League of Nations, and many were doubtless surprised to read that a committee of the League was dealing with the problems of automobile traffic, and discussing such matters as uniform road signals and regulations for automo- biles and other transportation problems. Yet this is only one of the many parts of international affairs which come under the attention of the League, There is a great work to be done in the unifying of the regulations and rules of various countries for the governance of automobile traffic. The day has come now when automobile transporta- tion knows no international boundaries, and the lack of uniformity in the traffic laws of various countries cannot but be confusing to motorists who travel from one country to another. What is more important, these different sets of regula- tions are very often responsible for many acci- dents, since motorists may find their methods of driving quite safe in one country and dangerous under the regulations of another. It would be a great boon to motorists, and to the public generally, were this committee of the League of Nations able to draft a uniform code of trafiic regulations which could be adopted in every part of the world. EDITORIAL NOTES The floods on the rivers of Ontario have been a great deal more easily curbed than the floods of speculation on the stock exchanges, \ Perhaps the habit of the French-Canadian people of living to a ripe old age, is responsible for Quebec's antipathy to old age pensions. Professors of the University of Montreal are to be retired at the age of seventy, If they lived in Ontario they would be retiring just in time to quality for the old age pension. Lloyd George's campaign platform is meeting with so much abuse from the opposing political parties that one naturally concludes that it must "be a very effective one for catching votes. British scientists contend that artificial sun- light does no more good than a mustard plaster. But the advertisements for artificial sunlight are much more attractive than those for mustard. The last war certainly did not do much to re- duce the cost of keeping up armies and navies. The six great nations of the world this year are spending five billion dollars more on armaments in 1929 than they did in 1909. ~ Other Editors' Comment ~ SCANT TIME (Quebec Telegraph) Considering how many years it takes a man to acquire sense, life seems terribly short, ALWAYS SOAKED (Border Cities Star) Of course, the public must pay for larger navies. But that's nothing new. When Admiral Noah built the first cruiser it was the humble tax-payer who got soaked. STOCK GAMBLING (Winnipeg Tribune) Speculation in stocks may be all right for the person who can afford to take a loss. But the man or woman with a few hundred dollars should think twice before flinging it into the market maelstrom, . DANGEROUS WEAPONS (Saint John Telegraph-Journal) Tariff wars are dangerous weapons in fimes of peace. They breed discontent, and are more or less hostile to the friendliest relations, Such | possibilities are seldom foreseen by those who de- mand fiscal changes, and the responsibilities and difficulties of government are thereby increased. WOULD LIKE TO KNOW (Kingston Whig-Standard) We do not believe the public is particularly in- terested in how much Officer Brien owed, The fact that he was pretty heavily in debt would seem to indicate that he was not taking hush money, at any rate, What the public would really like to know is whether the charge that Brien makes regarding interference with him in the discharge of his duty is true. BUYING AND SELLING (Windsor Border Cities Star) It is well that the United States should appreci- ate the fact that Canada does not intend to be "stepped on" in a business way. This country has plenty of financial weapons and it will not hesitate to use them. Level-headed American opinion appreciates this now. Reasonable Amer- ican business men see that they cannot expect Canada to go on spending $700,000,000 a year in their country and at the same time bar Canada's goods from the American market, That kind of game can last only so long. dt a Clance We surmise it's about time to warn the youthful participants in the international sport of baseball that windows are breakable and glass has not gone down in price in the least. . L] Ww - Helpful Hints In abeut anothvr month the weed catalogues will be ready mailed to prospective pur. chasers in this line, * LJ Spades, hoes, rakes and shovels are being dug out of the damp cel- lars at the town's best hardware stores, » > - Now is the time wo get that fence built to keep the neigh- bor's chickens out of the yard during seed-planting time. . . The cows may be allowed In the snow comes in the meantime, L LJ Ll Baled hay may be parchas- ed to rebuild that rapidly de- teriorating Jaymow. [J \d Country roads are beginning to succumb to that annual Spring in- fluence when the frost is coaxed out of the ground by the warm weather and sunshine. AM . » Blue skies in the morning at this time of year give way to showers and thunderstorms towards nightfall, so don't be too optimistic about hanging out the summer clothes on the line to ged rid of that moth ball odor just yet awhile, [J] = 4 Give Dad just about three more weeks' comfort before you start the annual Spring cleaning. LJ] LJ LJ] Red, black, bluv ana green enamel has remained steady in price during the winter and may be used as customary during these few days to ioe vamp the cid bus in the gar. age. - * LJ Use ingenuity rataer nan "di- vine right" in asking him for the price of a new Spring rig-out. . LJ] . Don't blame any ill-feeling on the weather for about two weeks; after that it's quite all right. . LJ] LJ] Don't start gassing about the fine season for golf for about a month, LJ LJ . Or what you played a round in last year, L LJ LJ Retire to the seclusion of your own room when reading the seed catalogue; the family is disinter- ested, judging from past experi- ences. LJ . LJ Don't take off the red flan. nels for a month at least; you know what grandma used to say. [J] " . Face the future cheerfully, whether you think there's still snow in the heavens or not. . LJ] . Make sure that the rungs on the ladder have wintered the past season successfully when celaning out the eave-troughs this Spring. Many a man has hurt his dignity through ill advice in this matter. » LJ LJ Waiting The sky is soft as pussy-willows, Gray and velvety; A dreamy langour holds the earth With all its subtlety, As tho' the world were hushed and still To await the call of Spring, And hides it fragrant glories yet For that sweet summoning. ~--A, G. Lee, Oshawa. - Bits of Humor - Don't Tell All You Hear Keep a watch upon your tongue, and see that the watch isn't a re- peater, Overheard in Honolulu First Man (obviously musician)-- Kreisler is in town tonight, Wanta go? Second Man--Naw! These automo- bile shows bore me.~The Etude. Logical Guess Teacher--"What can you tell me about the Tower of Babel?" Pupil--"Wasn't that where Soloman kept his five hundred wives?" It Mother -- "I'm afraid Robert is burning the candle at both ends." Father--"Huh! That boy has cut the candle in two and lit up all four ends,"--Fun, Whoopee Electrician -- "But your radio set - + Bits of Verse - - A SURPRISE (Written by Jack Sheriff, 636 Brassey Street, a i twelve year old pupil in South Simcoe School) As alittle child one sunny day, Was eating up his milk and whey There came along a robin bright, As straight to him as an arrow's flight, The robin sat on the end of his dish, And said with his eyes, "Pléase let me fish For I would like some food for myself." Then said the boy, "You selfish young elf, Why did you come for food to me?" "I came," said the robin, '"cause I could see That you were really not so selfish, As that other boy, young Tommy Gish, With all the cakes his mother makes, And also the ones the baker man bakes, And the ones that sometimes young Tommy steals, I often wonder just how he feels Inside his tummy when they are gone. But him for kindsess you've quite undone, So you shall have more than he to eat, Of cakes and good things delicious and sweet. perfectly in order, madam." Lady--"Yes, but it wants adjust- ing. We'd like it to play the dance music much slower." Earning a Living "You wish to earn your own liv- ing?" "Yes," answered Miss Cayenne. "Your tastes are luxurious." "There lies the trouble. I don't be- lieve that I could be content with the sort of living I'd be able to earn." ' THE WAGES OF SIN--The joy of our heart is ceased; our dance is turned into mourning. The crown is fallen from our head: woe unto us, that we have sinned!--Lamenta- tions 5:15, 16. . PRAYER--Blessed is the man whose transgression is '© forgiven, pasture in about three weeks if no | bod That Body of | Pours By {reo W. Barton, M.D. YOUR MARGIN OF SAFETY You are not feeling very well and discover that your heart is beating faster than usual, and the clinical thermometer shows a rise in tem- perature, Now this is not conforting in one sense any yet Nature's method of Sighting trouble is to. increase your heart beat and raise the tempera- ture. It is the fight Nature is put- ting up for you that causes the heat. There is an immediate increase in the number &f white corpuscles in thie blood to fight off the harmful organisms that have got into your ly. In fact your doctor: knows how severe the trouble is by the amount of increase in the number of white corpuscles in your blood. Now although Nature does this for you when you are not well, it is really only what she is doing for you all the time even when you are well, You have two eyes, two nostrils, two lungs, two kidneys. You have not two stomachs (for- tunately). Although you only have one heart and one liver they are both capable of doing many times the ordinary work required of them when an em- ergency arises. r. Harvey Kellogg, reminds us that the organs of internal secretion, such as the thyroid, can do fifteen times more work than they are do- ing. should it be necessary. he kidneys can do ten times as much work. The ordinary work of the skin causes a prespiration that you do not even notice because the skin may not appear to be even moist, and yet an ounce of sweat or prespiration is be- ing manufactured every hour, During hard work on a hot day of in a heated atmosphere the amount of prespiration may be increased thirty to forty times. Nature's care for us by giving us this "margin of sofety" is not to en- courage us to be extravagant or carc- this "margin of safety" is not to en- able us to overcome emergencies that may arise, The thought then is that you were given a body capable of doing extra work when necessity arises, You have only three things, and three only, to watch, to preserve the mar- gin of safety. These three things are food, rest, and exercise. Your meals five to six hours apart, with fruit and veget- ables every day and eggs if they agree with you. Meat if you work hard. Meat and eggs are the best builders of tissue when tissue has been used up by work or exercise. (Registered in accordance with the Copyright Act.) Daily Lenten Devotion Prepared by Rev Clarence. Wilson DD, Rr Commission on Evangelism of Feder] Council | of the Churches of Chmst in o Amemcas 2 | Copynght1929 1 Topic "LENT AND MY GOD AND FATHER" Memory Verse for Tuesday "I will say of the Lord, He is my refuge and my fortress; my Godin whom I trust," (Psalm 91:2). (Read: Psalm 91.) MEDITATION; This thought is of frequent recurrence in the Psalms, In those stormy and perilious times the devout souls sought refuge in the un- scen Presence' So when my cup of bitterness is full, when every human resource is exhausted, I take flight to God. In the last emergency all flesh comes to Him. Is this making of God only a last resort? Perhaps it is. But from this extreme experi- ence I may learn to make God my first and my constant resort. "We do not trust Him as we should. So chafes weak nature's resless mood, To cast its peace away." This lovely Psalm has some lum- inous words -- "dwelling," "abiding." To be at home with God is to be in constant security and peace. PRAYER: O God who art my ref- uge and my strength, teach me the humility that belongs with my ig- norance and weakness, that I do not vainly seek to fight my battles alone or to bear my burdens in my own strength, Amen, FORESEES TROUBLE IN SOUTH AFRICA Cape Town, South Africa, Mar. 19.--Signed by the archbishop of Cape Town, an ex-chief justice of South Africa, twe former minis- ters of the crown, and a number of lawyers, clergymen and other prominent 'people, a wsanifesto has been issued appealing for support against the government's proposals for native representaion in parlia- ment, which, it {is contended, gravely menace the peace and or- der of South Africa and contain the seeds of serious trouble for the future. DEPUTATIONS WILL TALK CONSERVATION Toronto, Mar. 18-----Deputations from Peterboro, Algoma, and per- haps other sections of Ontario in- terested in fish and game conserva- tion will appear before the fish and game committee of the legislature on Wednesday morning when the whole time of the meeting will be given to a discussion of this sub- GERMAN INTEREST S SECURED BY GENERAL MOTORS Will Co-operate Financially and Otherwise With Opel Company New York, March 19.--The Gener- al Motors Corporation today announs ced that it had taken a substantial interest in the Adam Opel Company in Russelheim, Germany, at a cost of approximately $30,000,000. The an- nouncement was in the form of a statement by President Alfred P. Sloan, Jr.,, who is now in Wiesbaden, Germany. The negotiations were re- ported several wecks ago. In his statement President Sloan said ; "The Opel Company will continue to be operated as an independent or- ganization by the present manage- ment, General Motors will contribute engineering, manufacturing, financial and managerial co-operation to the end that, it is believed, Opel's already high efficiency can he still further en- hanced and its business rapidly ex- panded." NOVA SCOTIA MAN IS WILLED $5,000 Woman Remembers Son of Mean Who Married Her Bigamously New York, March 19.--To the son of a man who married her while he had another wife living in Nova Sco- tia, and whose whereabouts are now known, Miss Anna C. Bishop, whose estate is valued at more than a mil- lion "dollars, left a $5000 bequest, it became known as her will was fyled in Surrogate's Court, Alfred Percival Mills, who came from Nova Scotia, married Miss Bis- hop in New York in 1921. Later she learned he had a wife living in Nova Scotia. She fyled suit for annulment of her marriage, but the case never came to trial. The $5,000 bequest was left to Murray Mills, of Elmsdale, N.S., his son. Miss Bishop's will leaves the resi due of her estate to her two brothers, John and Arthur Bishop, both cf New Brunskick, N.J., after providing for bequests that total about $50,000. IMMIERATION SEASON OPENS Steamer Arrives at Saint John, N.B., With Over 800 Passengers (By Cgznadian Press) Saint John, N.B.,, Mar, 19.-- Bringing the largest number to ar- rive at this port this season, the S. 8S. Montrose, arrived here today form Liverpool, Belfast and Green- ock with 854 passengers, consisting of 74 cabin, 213 tourist and 567 third class. The first British farm laborers for Eastern Canada under the 10 pound sterling scheme arrived and will go to Nova Scotia. There al- so were 35 others destined for the West, as well as twenty domestics. The first family under the 3,000 family scheme to come here this season was on board, destined for British Columbia, BANDIT KILLED BY CHICAGO CONSTABLE (By Canadian 'Press) Chicago, Mar. 19 --Four hun- dred persons looked on last night as Policeman George Schert and an unidentified robber shot it out at a busy North Clarke Street intersec- | tion. Nine shots had been fired he- foret he bandit fell dead. The man had been caught after robbing a restaurant, and the officer was at- tempting to disarm him when tne shooting started. TWO KILLED AS AIRPLANE CRASHES Cape Town, Union of South Af- rica, Mar, 19.--One of four Royal Air Force bombing planes crashed near Gwalo, Southern Rhodesia, yesterday, and both occupants were killed. The planes were returning from a semi- annual training flight from Cairo to the Cape and back. It was the first mishap to any. plane in the four years' history ot these flights, Eye Care and Eye Strain The relation of Defective Eyes to Health, Part *'17" Copyright 1928 By C. H. TUCK, OPT.D. I will not fully cover here the duty that parents owe their chil- dren in regard to the protection of the child's vision, but it is a hard thing to have a child point out in later years a negleet of his own «childhood. When I have seen cases of cross eyes where glasses absolutely cleared up the error and made the eyes work in harmony. Personal dislike of the one who gave the 'advice and workd the remedy caus- ed the parents to discard the glasses in spite of the correction manifested. Perhaps it was the irony of fate, but in spite of the petty differences nature asser.ed her will and when the child was old enough 'to. speak of its own troubles the correction had to be again sought and worn. It may be too late, these things should not be neglected, but we are only human after all, and I suppose weak because of it. Much harm can also arise by lis- tening to the advise of those not qualified to give t. Where you have confidence that you are get- ting the best service profession- ally accept the advice and abide by it. (To be continued next week) SCHOONER WRECKED; CREW OF SIX DROWNED y-- St. John's, Nfld, Mar. 19.--The six members of the crew of the schooner Russell Lake lost their lives when the vessel was wrecked last night near Burgeo on the southwest coast, Four bodies have been recovered, 'lie schooner was owned by Clyde Lake, minister of fisherics in the New- foundland government, HYDRO DEAL HALTED BY AN INJUNCTION Southampton, March 19.-- The battle between the Foshay interests and hydro supporters here has not been lost and won by the ballots cast on Monday last, but will be ta- ken to the courts, Rumors of legal proceedings took definite form yesterday afternoon when Judge Owens granted an ap- plication for an interim injunction restraining the Southampton coun- cil from taking any further steps to- ward sioning the contract with the Hydro-Electric Power commission. On Monday next an application will be made in Toronto for renewal of this injunction pending trial of tne action, MAN COMMITTED ON A CHARGE OF MURDERING WIFE Frank Abramo Appeared Before Magistrate Jelfs This Morning Hamilton, Mar .19.--Frank Abramo Italian grocer, was committed for trial by Magistrate Jelis yesterday on a charge of murdering his wife, Mary, on the morning of March § at their home, 572 James Street North. A coroner's jury on Saturday night re- turned on open verdict, but Crown Attorney Ballard this morning swore out a warrant charging Abramo with the crime, Mrs. Abramo was found dead by her husband after he had returned from the market and he called the police; He stated he had left her sleeping when he went from home and that he believed she was killed by some person who entered while he was absent, and that this person had ransacked the house in his . scarch for money. Glasgow Man Leaves Huge Fortune To His Former Housekeeper Montreal, Mar, 19.--"In ap- preciation of kindly service render- ed in the course of a number of years" a Glasgow man has left a foriune to his housekeeper, Mr, Waddell followed no 'pro- fession or occupation ,and took no part in the public life of the city. He was a lover of books and birds, and an enthusiastic anti- quarian. He had relatives in Can- ada, where he spent some time in his youth, and bequests to these re'atives appear in the will, The fortunate woman {is Mises Janet Ormiston, who was for a long time in the service of Mr. James Alexander Waddell, who died last April at the age of 76. Mr Waddell's estate amounts to $1,507,050, and the residue, after death duties and certain legacies have been paid, will go to Miss Ormiston. COL. FITZMAURICE PLANS IRISH AIRPORT Dublin, March 19.--Col. James Fitzmaurice, co-pilot of the first westward trans-Atlantic airplane Bremen, said here that he was pre- paring to go to the United States shortly in connection with a scheme for establis'ment of an airport -at Galway on the west coast of Ireland. The port would be for shipstoshors planes as well as a possible future ocean airplane port. $6,000 for accidental death. Age Rate rsemrivsys 33 25.05 EXCE I HEAD OFFICE -- My age is INSURANCE WITHOUT EXAMINATION For "select male risks" from 15 to 45 the "Excel" policy gives exceptionally all-round protection. «=BENEFITS-- $3,000 for death from natural causes. #30 per month and $3,000 at death for total and permanent isability--no premiums payable during disability, SPECIMEN RATES FOR §3,000 INSURANCE Ll FE COMPANY EXCELSIOR LIFE BUILDING, TORONTO MAIL THIS COUPON TO-DAY: H. A. MacDonald, District Manager, Oshawa, Ontario Send me full information about your "EXCEL" Policy. Age Rate 23 crrersesmerstrosssasssesses $38.14 35 creme isissmminris 70.23 \ ; Soe 110.85 SIOR Name. Address, StoBIE-FoRLONG s@ asad Once Betord puning" S. F EVERSON, Local Manages Private Wire System 11 King Sest East, Oshaws Phones 143 and 144 = Above C.P.R Offise Whose sin is covered, ect. : fr / I 5 oh Yr; E72, a Ty y The one t\ooy 71a harmonizes Win lala] [X06] Fi LENA

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy