RATURDAY Pastor Receives Frank Opinions 0f Sermons NEW JERSEY. Jan. 11- Rev. Charles Brackbill. 30-year-old pas- tor of Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church. Elizabeth. N.J., took a rather daring initiative last Sun- day by handing adult members of his congregation is printed ques- tionnaire and urged them to tell him with "ruthless honesty" what they thought. of his sermons. some of them did. 01' sixty parishioners who filled in the list of thirty-eight. ques- tions in per i-rut said they had not understood -s-hat the sermons were about. Twenty per cent said the sermons were too long. Thirty-eight persons said Mr Brackbill was "convincing" five said he talked too fast. four that he talked too slow. and after th- ouestion: "Are there disturbing mannerisms?" One member of the congregation wrote. "Yes - chin pulling." Forty-four said they tried to change their ways after hearing a sermon. Only ten said they made no attempt to practice what. was prrnchcd. Other sample oiiesllons and re- plies by the parishioners follow: 'should .1 sermon be about mod-p crn times mid living?" Yes. thirty-J loin: no. iiinciccn. . "Do sermons make you think?" Yes. fiftv-loiir: no. three. "Would you like to stand up somc time to take issue or ask a ones- tion about what is being said?” Yes twciui-six: no. TWPHY)-lllll9 ”Ts the voice; Graveyard, Slllll-. s.-mg. moiioirnr. bclligercnt. harsh: . . . does it fit the subicct niattcr'l" Forty-three pcrsoiis thought M' l'3ra.cIrbill's fitted the siiblect mat- ter: two ans-sercd ”gravevard:" two said "licllirzcrcnt" Mr. Brack- bill told an liiterviewcr that his un- usual survey was to find out whe- ther the message contained in a sermon really "gets across” to rhiirchizocrs. 'Thcro are upwards of 6.tl00.00tl sermons pi-cachcrl every Sunday in the United States and Canada." he said. "The bl: question is: "What comes from all of this?" It is be- coming iiicreasinizly difficult to fashion the ancient. art of preach- ing into something practical and woith while. One of the reasons is the com- petition offcrod by radio. television and other media which tend to pre-digest cvervthlnz for the pub- lic. As a result. today's sermon must talk cold turkey. You can no longer scare people into religion or out of false ideas. Most. ministers havenlt had any coristriictive criticism since they were graduated from their semin- cry. We go on prcachiniz year af- ter ycar thinking we are getting our point across ”I think some of us are kidding ourselves." Canadian Army Casualty List L Tridai": Ilsi. brought. to 665 the! number of casualties so far sui- I Cuesiions Telephone Co.'s Expansion Plans O'l'I'AWA. Jan, ll -- iCP)-Bell financing plant-expansion program in On- tario and Quebec were questioned yesterday by the city of Toronto in opposing the company's applica- tion for a rate increase. stock. service charges on bonds would be lighter the city told the Board of Transport Commission- IT'S. G.cI. Richardson. Toronto ex- appeared after the concluded 2!-'1 days of testimony in its application for higher rates that would draw about 510,000,000 a year in new revenue from l.P.00.000 Ontario-Quebec phones. Mr. Richardson direct evidence late in the day and was to be cross-examined tomor- row by company expected to be the only witness for six municipalities in the two prov- inces that are opposing the rate hoists. Mr. Richardson took issue with the company's plan in flnance.P3'-it oi its 1952 construction by float- ing about s5l.500.000 in share cal?- ital. He said a considerable saving could be effected by borrowing ilrough bonds. For the last nine months of this year. he said. the cost of serving shit-h a stock issue would be 36,599. 9'33. after payment of income tax- es. and dividends. worth of bonds were sold at 4": per cent, the cost would be only s1.51a.ooo since there would be no income tax on the bond interest. The difference would be ap- proximately 55.000.'l00Ml:. Rich- ardson said. Mr. Richardson also siiglttlkd the impact of the construction of the company could he eased by enoiher Sl.8'l'.l.000 this of expense operating expenses . iturcs as pensions and benefits. Indonesia Still Torn By Strife JAKARTA. Indonesia. Jan. -AA?)-Gunfire and bloodshed helped create the Republic of In.- doncsia but the shootinil I139” stopped. p Two years afiier the nation's official birthday. a war is still Indonesian is fighting going on. p lndoncsxnn in the jungles of the KiOa:TiIll:. sipi'avi-ling archipelago and along its diisiy roads. President. Soekarnn won the re- cognition of the lndonesian Re- public on Dec. 27. 1949. Since the transfer of sovereignty, the In- fprPd M. Canadian troops in K0..,ldonesion army has been fighting can action. including 125 dead. 478 wountlcrl. 57 inliired, four missing and one captured. The list: Killed In Action Hull. Zlhlh Canariian Field Mrs. Mai':.-irci .-inn Hall (mot-hcri. B71 Gritlifllng Si. Winnipeg, Wounded In Action Cairierc. Leo Richard Joseph. Pic; 2nd Battalion Royal 22nd Regimeni; Joseph Carriege (fath- Rcninalri Archibald. Pt.c.:; Amhulancr:' armed Icfisls. Moslem extremists dissatisfied ex-freedom fighters. Amboincse separatists, Turk West- erlingls mercenaries and ordin- ary bandits. The Aniboinese and Westerling were defeated. The others remain. The activities of thousands of armed subversives are the main reason why Indonesia. one of the richest countries in na-itiral re- sources, is running into debt. A responsible estimate of the combined strength of lawless ele- ments is impossible. Guesses range from 5.000 to 20.000. Most observers agree the sub- versive ranks have slimmed since art. 700 Farm St.. Montreal. Gaporiauit. Jean Paul. Pic: 2nd. 22nd pecimont:l Rattaliori. Royal Mrs. Pliillas Gnbnriaiilt Parnliam. Que. .lourdaiii. John. Rcgimrni. 'RC.H.AZ Mrs. A. Eouvier iniothcrf. 255 12th Ave. Cnrhrnnc. it. MtirpIl'. liilliam Anthony. Ptc.: i. mothcri . 2nd Battalion, RC 11.: Michael .in.sPph liurrav ifallicrl, 2663 Coierainc St- Montreal. Mcl.caii, John ilugh. 'PLc.: 1st Battalion PP C.L.I.; singhamp- ton. Ont: Archibald McLean ifathori. 2'74 Mississagn St..' West. 0"liIlR. Ont, Paqiintic, Rolland Joseph. Ptc: 25th Caiindian Field Ambulance, llcnry Pnqiictte Ifathcr), Quarries. .')nt. Roy. Joseph Fernand. Acting Gpl: 2nd Battalion. 'R.C.R.: Al- aert. Roy (father), 370 Bond St.. sudbury. Ont. . ANCIENTWBLBGH The seaport of Montrose In Scotland. nrvir Aberdeen, received the government arrested thou- sands of leftists last August. There are leftist bands here. 3 in various shades of red. but they (;.,..4; gm; pmdi donit. make up the bulk of the anti-government guerrilla forces. Indonesia's Reds seek their ob- zvioiis objectives through political agitation and infiltration in nation's unstable labor unions. rather than armed resistance. One evidence of communist tac- tics is the red infiltration into the Darul Islam, an organization of Moslem extremist warriors which always has.been anti-Communist. The Darul Islam is the most In- fluential and most publicized of all Indonesian subversive organiz- ations. Their leader is a Javanese Mos- tain who proclaimed his own In- donesian Mos-lem state in tin: small west Java town of Ga-rut, in January. 1946. Darul llam activities. Kartosu- wirjo and his "government" re- its charter as a royal burgh in 1352. side in the mountains just out- side the town. Balance of our JANUARY CLEARAIICE ' WINTER COATS. SUITS. RAIN- OOATS and Crepe and Wool DRESSES. clearing of Off 2 Entire Stock of "Where Smarter The GLORIA . Women Shop" Telephone Company proposals for its 390,000,000-a-year through bonds instead of issuing pert on public-utility accounting. company had its concluded his counsel. He was procram one the current. revenues year is through charging up some items to CR?)liRl instead of ii. the lem fanatic. Kartosuwirjo. a for- mer anti-Dutch Guerrilla Chief- Gs.rut is still the hotbed of as...-.--..;-u Government Urged To Rovlse Federal Inheritance Laws OTTAWA. Jan. 11 - (GP) -'I'he revamping of Canada's federal iri- heritance tax set-up to place wives in the role of partners rather than that of dependents as far as their hurbands' estates are concerned. was one of the principal aims of a. delegation of women which met The city contended Bell could recently with Finance Minister save itself and its customers 90118135 Abbott- money by doing more financing The delegation. headed by Mrs. Alan Turner Bone. of Montreal. president of the National Council of Women, presented ii resolution asking that one half of a deceas- ed husband's estate be considered as belonging to the wife and there- fore not subject to succession duties. Further. the resolution demand- ed that only one half of the value of any gift from a husband to his viife be subject to gift tax; and that a woman's income from her husband's estate not be reduced by succession duties to yield less than s3,000 a year at the current rate. of interest paid on bonds. other resolutions presented by the group urged the removal of the 15-per-cent federal tax on re- frigerators. washing machines and stoves. and voiced strong opposi- tion against Parliament's proposed rcvision of the British North Am- erica Act to allow the provinces '0 levy indirect taxes. Mrs. D. C. Hamilton. of Ottawa. chairman of the Council's Econo- mics and Taxation Committee, and member of the clclczation to Ot- ,tav.'a emphasized the iuequalitv .of the status between men and If 345.000v000;uonien as federal inheritance laws stand at present. Quebec Law (Under present federal inherit- ance tax law. estates over s5o,ooo are fullv subject to succession du- ties. However. under Quebec's Community of Property Law and uliere no marriage contract is in- l'-lIV8d. the wife in that province considered as legally owning half of her husbandls estate.) The resolution against the fed- The" C0”Tlri-al tax on electric refrigerators sisied of a portion of such expend-i employee stoves and washing machines was drawn up by the Provincial Coun- cil of Women of Manitoba. The delegation felt that present taxes I'.C'El too heavily on young married couples setting up housekeeping and upon the housewives who rcr.-dsi modern equipment to do her vsork. The third resolution presented rpposcd the proposed revision of the B.N.A. Act to allow the pro- ii.-ices to levy indirect or hidden taxes. "fIhe imposition of an indirect tax at provincial level will do nothing to limit or prevent the Im- pcsitlon of further taxes at fed- .eral level. and the tax cannot be 1i.::garded as a siibstitute or alterna- tive to other forms of taxation." said the resolution. Such a re- solution would only discriminate against fixed-income groups with- out regard in ability to pay and would further boost the cost of living. stated the delegation. Other members of the delega- tion were Mrs. G. D. Finlayson first vice-president of the National Council of Women: Mrs. L. H Meng of Ottawa. corresponding soc- retary of the Parliamentary Com- .mittee of the Council; and Mrs. IW. A. Graham. Smith Falls, treas- THE GUARDIAN. cnaimorfarowu JANUARY 12. 1952' CROCKE S.T.l.l.'.lEkWATCII F ORX BARGAINS 'l'T Ia oa.a.AIl S'l'RE'I'Cl-IEIIS "Xiib STOREY LTD. CI nus-.- S250.000 For Iiarbor Maintenance In Saint John SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Jan. 11- (CF) - An expenditure of more than 3250.000 for harbor mainten- ance work at the port of saint John will be made in 1952, with Wtrk being started as early in the spring as weather conditions per- mlt. This announcement was made here Vilcdncsday by R. K. Smith. K.C.. Ottawa. chairman of the Na- tional Harbors Board. On capital expenditures at the port, Mr. Smith said a proposed extension of east. side piers and other port development are matters for parliamentary decision and ap- propriation. The board chairman said that ieiiorts which he has studied while in Saint John indicate that this ,xear's business will be greater than that enjoyed by the port in 1951 Today. Mr. Smith. members of the Board and its local manager conferred with the Trade Board's Port Committee on port expansloii. ion wliarfage and harbor dues and other subjects. and inspected fac- ilities here. He met. the common council Thursday morning to discuss grants in lieu of taxes on board properties and left for Ottawa in the afternoon. . Urges Ilse 0f llay Nurseries For Children TORONTO. Jan. l1-fCPl- Mrs. Arthur Deacon of the Wo- men Elcctors' Association said yesterday that many Toronto chil- dren would be better off in day nurseries than in their own homes. Mrs. Deacon was a member of a delegation which asked the Civic Welfare Committee for a revision of present day nursery rates to enable a wider apppllca- tlon of the benefits of day nurs- cry care and training. irrespec- tire of family financial condi- tions. ”Surely you are not saying we should take children from their izarcnts and put them in day nurs- ery centres." said Controller David Balfour. ”'l'he care of a mother is far superior to that of any in- siitution. . ." "I'm sure that is emotion rather .4 tlum fact" rciilied Mrs. Deacon. vi”?! of the committee. I l i AND SUN HEAD OFFICE MRS. DOROTHY ROGERS W. DTYOUNO. Til-lilB . THTNKTNG MAN sAyii-zs THROUGH lLlilFlE ASSURANCE THE lL.lllF1E 01: CANADA. MONTREAL PM iollowint lllnteuntauvss or the sun Life of canals In Prince Edward Island will be glad to discuss with you any matters relating to life ,lnuranoo or annuities. without obligation. ouaamnnowx J. A. MOORE R. C. SHEA. KINKORA. IUMMITRSTDI .. H. O. BOIIAKIIB - Unit Supervisor Charlottetown, P. E. I. . ., Returned lluns Had No Part In Red Trial WINNIPEG. Jan. 11 -- (CP) - Two Roman catholic Nuns who recently reached here from Hong Kong had nothing to do wit.h a trial of five other Nuns by the Chinese Communists. sister sup- erior of the Franciscan Mission- iiries of Mary said yesterday. She declined to state w-here the pair had been or give details of their departure from Red China. "We can't. see that it would do any good." she said. First reports indicated that the two were deported following the trial of five Nuns of the sacred Heart Orphanage in Canton on charges of murdering orphans. Roman Catholic sources in Hong Kong today said none of the five has reached Hong Kong. although three were to be deported. The others were sentenced to prison. Th two who reached here are known at Sister Edelberta and Sister Notre Dame Des Agnes. The Sister Superior declined to give their home towns or family names. Hamilton Man On Trial For Murder HAMILTON, Jan. 10 - (013)- Dr. F. B. Overend testified yester- day that Frank Kenyon. in ex- plaining his wife's condition. said "I filled her up with waler." Dr. Overend was called to the Kenyan home on Nov. 24. the day that Doris.May Kenyon died. Her ltiisband is charged with her mur- der. the crown contending he held her against a. kitchen tap after knocking her unconscious. ithc appearance at first of beina Cemetery Revises Rule Re Negros PHOENIX. Ar-12., Jan. 10-(AP) - A Phoenix cemetery announced a. change in its policy today to al- low burial ad a Negro soldier who was killed in action in Korea June .2. The body of Pro. Thomas C Reed. 19, was returned to a Phoen- ix mortuary on Nov. 28 and had lieen held there awaiting clearance on a burial site in Greenwood Memorial Park. owned by Arizona Lodge No. 2. Free and Accepted Masons. Private Reed's father asked that his son be buried in the veteran's section of the cemetery. Until re- cent months the section was lim- ited to white burials. The board of trustees of Green- wood will require in the future L only proof of military status of all veterans buried in the cemetery. Court jury that when he arrived at the home Kenyon almost ran from the back of the house to meet him. He quoted Kenyon as say- ing "1 think my wife is de'ad." When he entered the house he found Mrs. Kenyon in a bedroom "completely dlsrobed." She had five or six months pregnant. He could find no signs of life. when he asked what happened. he said Kenyon told him: ”she st.-wed out late. I waited for her. We had a terrible fight." When he asked how it happen- cd, Kenyon replied. "I filled her up with' water." Crown Attorney Harvey McCul- loch said the crown would at.- tempt to prove that Kenyon af- ter the fight held his wife against. the tap. filling the inside of her abdomen with- water. He contended this tore the dia- phragm, filled the cavity around Dr. Overend told a Supreme her heart and killed her. Ilew Paint Repellent To Barnaoles Tested BALTDKORI-'. Md.. Jan. ll- (AP)-A jazzed-up fly repellent gives promise of curing the age- old plague of ship barnacles. A compound added to the usual paint on a ship's bottom. it has completed a round-the-world test of 7 U2 months. Shipping officials were excited over its possibility of reducing trips to drydockl for scraping off the marine growth: and prevent- ing deterlorition. "It's certainly a great beginning at the least," said Capt. H. L. Houser. skipper of the test ship. Wednesday. "The experiment definitely prov- ed a success." said J. D. I-lolliday, representative of the Isthmian Inc. The Isthmlan Line's was raised out of the the Maryland Drydock Architect water at Company 5550 Horse Power Amherst Pays 01 For Old Airport AMI-IERBT. N. 5.. Jan. ll-(GP. --Am-herst Town Council is buy. ing the town's old airport-for 32 cash. Transport Minister Chevrler told Council the Airport. on Crown Land. will be transferred to the town for that sum. ' The town hopes to use the Air- porl; for sites for new manufactiir- i ing plants. p after the 17.000-ton ship finished a cruise around the world. Be- fore it started. a strip 25-feet wide had been painted with a compound to kill barnacles and other marine growths. The rest of the ship was painted normally. The strip was free of all such growths. The rest of the ship showed marine life attached. The new compound was veloped out of ar. insecticide re- de- FISHERMEN KERMATH Gasoline Marine Engines 7 V2 to 30 Horse Power For full information and prices I COVENTRY Diesel Marine Engines Write or call at: ' A. PICI(ARIl- MACHINERY LTII. Charlottetown, "P. E. I. pcllent. -uionorou ' All you do not receive a copy. . enquire at your nearest ' EATON'S ORDER OFFICE got mail coupon to IT.5AT9l5.5:.- SALE TIME IS HERE With the many low prices. EATO N'S JANUARY SALE DATALDCIIE WHICH IS NOW (BEING DISTRIBUTED Look to EATON'S Sale Catalogue for money- saving offers. Read) your catalogue . . . plan your shopping now and take advantage .ol ' rr.sAt.i2ii.c:.. ANADI IOIIOTOM ” deatlaneas ADDIIII ' CANADA Please seal no a can all the January sale Catalogue.