APRIL 18. 1951 .In an interview at the 1 British Auto Show held in Montreal re. ccntly. Mr. W. 8. Kickley, Pre- sident of Toledo Motors Limit- ied. Montreal. and of James L. .Cooke Co. Lid.. Toronto. in- troduced the 1951! Morris Minor 4-door sedan (photo above). "The manner in which Can- adians have accepted the MORRIS cars proves that a large section of the public now looks -upon individual transportation - in a practical way. Every year. more and more people are ask- ing themselves: ”How much am .I getting for my tranmoriation dollar? -. "This trend of thinking was a challenge to the designers oi the Morris cars. Their answer was a new design. offering real eco. nomy along with big car fea- tures. This may sound simple enough but it took years of re- search to perfect every detail to the point where we can say the new Morris 4-door sedan shown here is the roomiest small car on the road today." Mr. Kickloy Dointed out that the makers of the new Mor- rls 4-door sedan have i - sled along with the economy 811810. mace. comfort, safety and performance. In spite of use low price tag on the cars, no sacrifice has been made in de- sign or finish. A few of the main features mentioned by Mr. Kickley were: the rugged con- struction with all-steel mono- construction body; torsion bar independent front wheel pension for greater smoothness in riding. the pleasing stylish '4 Highway Competition. . Railways' Big Problem OTTAWA, April 17 - ((2) - Ipgnaid Gordon, Canadian Nation- all Railways president. said highway competition is the rail- ways' big problem but he does not think they should try to meet it by stifling the opposition. Instead. he told the Commons railways and shipping committee. "ii. is up to the railways to improve their service and try to work out tome arrangement with highway totierators, that will enable each carrier to do its Job. "In the committees annual exam- ination of the C. N. R.'s affairs, Mr. Gordon said the railways have been -' many millions of dollars to their road competitors. They were Clireatened with being put out of vbrdeiness 1:: some sections of the -country. - elf railway service was to survive In these sections. the C.N.R. would neither have to go into the highway holiness or work out some sort of Ico-operation with highway trans- .port operators. In an all-day qution-and-am filter session that ranged through many phases of, railway matters, Mr. Gordon also said: 1. me boxcar situation is im- proving rapidly as Canadian-own- ed-cars returning from the United states cut down the Canadian shortage. 1 2. The C. N.R. does not yet know how bit! a freight-rate increase will be asked to meet the coat of the new 40-hour week going into effect June 1. 3. The company's potential rev- l'lluCl from a five-per-cent rate in- rrease application, heard by the Board of uansport Commissioners in January, and on which no de- cision has yet been given, would be about 31,100,000 a month. 4. If the company gets authority to impose penalty charges on ship- pers and conaignees to increase utilization of freight cars, it will "it loses that these are imposed as equitably as possible. 5. The general reil strike of last August cost the C.N.E. 03,300,000 in lost business. 0. The O. N. R. does not propose '0 80 into the pipeline business. It in-ls there would be no special ed- y vantages in its operating a pipeline get into that traffic. it would be better to have it handled by a sep- arate government company. '1. There is no immediate pros- pect of cutting the C. N.R.'s run- ning time on transcontinental trains. 8. The two-per-cent jump in the sales tax-under Finance Minister Abbott's new budget will cost the Canadian National between s2.000,- ooo and 111500.000. Blind Man Wills Bowling Award The bowling award given by the Charlottetown firm of Moore as McLeod Ltd. to the blind man or woman showing the greatest in- terest and ability in the regula- tion candlepin bowling, was won yesterday afternoon by Mr. Rus- sell Jenkins of Kent Street. Dur- ing the ca.ndlepin bowling match at the Roll-Away Club Alleys, Mr. Jenkins made three spares during the four games and G. E. wood made two spares. These bowling matches had been organised through the local office of the Canadian National Instituie for the Blind and are held every Monday afternoon through the courtesy of the Roll-Away Club and the interest of Moore as Mc- Iaod Ltd., and the scores made by the slghtleaa sports enthusiasts in the four games of regulation 1 candleplns were: Miss Ida Alchorn Mr. Mr. M. I. Warren....38 as M 43 Mr. G. E. Wood ...... ..54 27 68 64 locusts Blight Souihemhan Tlll-iR.AN. Iran. April 16-(AP) -An American DC-4 transport arrived here today carrying two light planes and three tons of poison with which to fight a locust invasion in south lren. About 130,000 square miles are be- ....3a so 'oa or ing blighted by the swarms. y and. if the government wants to i i raised to iz.ooo lbs. I DEPT. OF PUBLIC W0lll(S& HIGHWAYS Effective midnight 16th April. I951. gross weight for vehicles on paved highways ls .. y 0 Dept. Public Works and Highways. e. c. WI-lI1'E. Deputy Minister. ereand Engine tune-up a specially. In Stratton engines in stock. and fishermen. to motoninstock. i ll " i EXPERT REPAIR WORK Expert re re tovMegnetoes, Carburetors, speedomet- automobile electrical units. roan ii mine iiiiiini Charlottetown 5115- 1 lines, the wide range of colour selections available. the beauti- ful genuine leather upholstery inside in colours to match the in- dividual cars. ash-trey: front and back, ermcrests and interior lighting. Russell Jenklnsos '10 58 46A 0 The entle wash- ing act on of new Peerless Heavy Duty Motor il keeps de- poslt- ormlng ma- terials dispersed, avoids fouled piston assemblies, maintains full power and assures low oil consumption. Tllli BRITISH liiiiiucin 01L COMPANY LIMITED The Largest (31 Company Owned By Canodlam . A rm: GUARDIAN. Cl'lARLOT'lTETOWN- . I New "Economy 'Car With Big Car Features Canadian.,'Divorce Rates Show Sharp UITAWA. April 11 - (G) - Canadais martial ship of state is sailing smooth seas nowadays - in fact has been for the last three years. The Bureau of statistics today issued the annual divorce report for 1950. It shows fewer ivorces in all provinces except Nova scotia compared with 1949 and a continuation of the decline in the number and rate of cases which began in 1948. in the three years the all-Cam adlan rate has dropped from 65.3 to 37.7 divorces per 100.000 popu- lation. The 1950 figure was 5.206 div- orces. down from 5.934 in the pre- ceding year, 6.81 in 1948 and the 194'! peak figure of 5.199. But, as the bureau pointed out. the 1950 total still had a long way to drop to reach the level of the years before the war. In 1940 there were only 2.360 divorces. excluding Newfoundland which then had no divorce facilit- ies. Newfoundland. joining Confed- erallon in 1949, still has no divorce court and like Quebec now sends cases to par” for decision. 9 ? Hydraulic valve I fter mechanisms cannot tolerate an'y' ” build-up of- ummy carbon or slu ge.New case. Peerless Heavy Duly menls Motor Oil kee these moving parts coming sluggish or sticking. fnl con The same principle applies to Peerless 'HeayyDuIyMoIor0il. 0 Varnish and gummy carbon ae- eumulatlons in crank- rocker-arm compart- operetlon. Peerless Heavy Duty Motor Oil disperses these harm- iemlnan Decline All other provinces have divorce courts. Divorce in Manitoba fell to see from 411; Saskatchewan to 280 from 280. Quehecto 23-ifrom :50; New arunwicir to 194 ii-om 2012: Prince Edward island to 13 from Z). The total for Nova scotla was up to 199 from 101. Newfoundland had five cases in its first divorce year as a new province. British Columbia had the high- est rate of divorce per 100,000 population with a figure of 121.0 against 133.6 in 1949. Alberta fol- lowed with 59.7 compared with N.- 2; Ontario 45.7 against 54.3: Manl- toba 38.9 against 52.8; New Bruns- wick 3'1.2 against 39.1; Nova Scotia 80.2 against 38.1; Saskat- chewan 320 against 36.6; Prince Edward Island 13.5 against 21.3 and Quebec 5.9 against 9.0. The 1950 rate for Newfoundland was 1.4 for 100.000 population. j.,..m...m LONGEBT TUNNEL The world's longest railway tun- nel is the Simplon on the Italian- swiss line, running 12 miles 559 FAQ: savan " SPEEDY " mo eeuewieeo,-ric uosr iwsooranr wing. 10 ooivma A am 1 - .cAu.ou M .i'8it."-5.5.. 'i-Ab? BO HORNE Moroilgge,-..- ' 2 cm: vnoaer so oensuonlse sales .0 Service s Canadian National Railways. Speaking before the Commons . railways and shipping committee. C N R he called this taxation "discrimin- e e e etion" against the federally-owiied -.- -2- ime- READING. Berkshire. manna- O'I'I'AwA, April 17 .. icp) .. Mr. Gillie proiested'after 3ona1d (GP)-This town had a drive 2 Cla.rie Gillis (cor - Cape Breton Gordon. 0- N- R. president. told the save parpgn it inV'31V9d '”"'””"b South) complained today against committee the company pays Pl'0' ion 01 30000 Mina" VP" chased in Quebec, British Colum- bia and Nova Scotia. It also pays civic, sales tax in Montreal and Quebec City. Complains igains yards. provincial and civic taxation on the vincial sales tair on materials pur- habitants not to wast: pIP9?- ' Peerless Heavy Duty Motor Oil was especially developed the lubrication requirements of todayls high compression motors. New Peerless Heavy Duty Motor Oil contains special detergent- disperaant properties that keep slud ge, carbon and varniah deposits from forming on vital engine parts . . . contaminants are held in harmless suspension in'the oil. Peerless Heavy Duty Motor Oil actually "washes your molor while you drive”. 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