I» floral - Prim-a .. v.2... . uxyattx-tey liiqFfllll" The Charlottetown Guardian rfesillnlll. LleuL-Cfll W. Chute:- l. labile \..-._t-r=..i.i.-..t, 4. n. ism-ms. I- J- l- ‘Nrmflr, lilnul. (ul U. A llneklnnon, l). l. 0. u p. Ettilntfttllliillr‘ miiii-iiin. l mull \\ ll-nfll All! U. l. Cunt I , .........i.-.. nun. rel-w on n» (In 81'1"" dunflm u tin Rib-AU v.1 yeiu an mlvnnup nailed In Luna... i..i.n.u $9.00 per you (in dunno) nailed ln \JLI.AHII anu untied UIIIII slriiitulfx. MARCH, 2o, m‘: lfifCimlsiltz-icliorti ICJrepa rations Ida‘. it: _ pfivgi J. jg l .¢_§.U<»\").(=l'\O "lrml lit; .‘ iay its general election a z. itcccssary. A late May .. aitcr the road programme i tut-rs rtrc put at work m "edictcd by the. Ottawa .. ldll _ _..i__.____-_ In‘ inn-cm: J. H. Burnett. I. J. l for a road-building. MACKENZIE Kmo Gov-l ‘l1! liovernmctit uf British, lCilllVCl‘ Province, who. stated that fees which should have been collect- ed and accounted for are the subject of the in- vestigation. a u a Mayor Turner’ and Mayor Robinson are to be congratulated on being elected by their fel- low mayors to positions of responsibility on the newly organized Federation of Mayors and blunicipitlities. ~ x w w The greatest drive of prospectors since its discovery is anticipated in the Great Slakc Lake mineral area in the far north next slimmer by Don MacLaren, flying prospector. MacLaren is the co-discovercr of the Gordon Lake gold field. Cre\vs have bt-cn sampling the field prepara- tory to establishment of permanent cantps. i Ill ‘F The threat of “sit down strike" by the Can- adian Mayors if thc Iictlcral Liovt-rnnicnt re» fused to take o\ er the whole cost of relief quick- ly subsided. It looked too much like what the nuvniad- ...~. a .. _ HE CHVARLOTTETOWN notes by ‘the Way Max Schmelingf ex-heavyweighl. champion and now a challenger ior that title, had been signed to fight. Braddock only to rind, somewhat .al.ci. that. Braddock was going to .a.<e on Louis instead. Now Schmel- ing has arrived in this country to "protect lus rights.” Naturally he is full of high moral indignation. S0 much so, indeed, that I think his anger has cruised him tn lead with his right in the opening rotuid. For the firsr thing he is reported to have. said to his American inter- VIBWCIS was: "Can such a thing be A contract is a contract!" Ccining from a subject of a Fuelirer who is alwayls bidding the German people to cheer for the destruction. oi.’ promises, the obliteration of pledges and the scrapping of treaties, this - is a surprise. My guess would have been that when told that a contract hml been broken the loyal German far front exclaiming “Can such MQECI? 2°- 1937 your: .1151...“ IKBdIQmMD. PREVENTING GALL STONE FORMATION althqtigh u. is azreed that 38-1 clones exist in not less than 5 P91“ cons in every 100, or 1 in ever)’ 29- there are a great. many 0f the“ ' who never know they have them 0r | stiffer very slight. discomfort be- ~ cause of them. Of course when an Bimck 01 col1c-—biliary collc-—occurs with its agonizing pain in the aillpel‘ 118m side of the abdomen, omen extend- ing over into right shoulder, lasting usually from 3 to l2 hours" but PUBLIC FORUM ‘Ihll column la ODII lol- lln discussion . by correlpindonfi fll quutlonl nt infant. The Charlottetown Guardian doc! not uoeullarlly endono llu opinion- o! oorrolpnndentl. l T00 MUCH xo-r ENOUGH I Sir,--Readlng the reports of the ; astounding amount of rum sold i under Government Control I am l reminded of Sam Sliek‘s remon- strance with an Indian for drink- ing too much rum. Sam did not succeed in convincing the Rad - man that. rum was not good, for the latter replied. "I know too much somethings no good, but too much rum. only jist. enough.” As our government improper would faln gel; another brewery horse it. looks as if their estimate of the value of rum is even better than that of 50's. for they believe Owing to increase in lead advanced January First. We are now advised prices will be further advanced BATT 8. —HART & WILLARD BATTERIES\_ a-i Ball"! Season ls Nero Again! Is your battery ready for this year's service? Have us call and check it up. — Play Safe __ Prices. battery prices were. ~ May First. MacRAE things be " woud have instinctive- ly raised his right arm in salute 171 Grafton Street lllllllgi’ with Fcgard 1°. majority of municipalities have been doing all gllflnlsflgjglogprlsgglfirfcligxyltfi ysraglailyzglyllgl", ‘ Phone 437 , LOIIZEIIIIIBS much longer there is n0 is been reached \\‘llll, ' all ellliy l: ' ‘ l" ‘i along, lying (lown on their job and letting pos- and cried "l-Ieil!"—Winnipeg Tri- l “um that the 3a“ “on” ‘m’ M‘ I S- to a e i r n l\ll<. l’.\'l ll. I ll pally friends who have; terity. or the bond holders, look after ihcni- l-lllllfi- . ANITII-IIQPDCILACY We S n’ Ce Eve uthing We Se" ..i" l‘.'.lll~1>[ to assist m re-, Sch-es, ‘ ‘ _ “ndhfiihm i ilouevsr before the attacks of Teachers in public schools who ~... a... _.n¢ g,..,,,__‘,,,@. _ ..:_=?,~uxu.a_ nrriii-pgq >5.___'°§ ' motley, of course, is the 'l"he Government . 'r_v and the public according: to the . ion-d, with more money the New “cstniitlster ".\" not occur nnlil next year. " he zidds, "to say that the sight of a $200,000,000 ages of over $12,000,000 in the British Columbia wxh licld by Liberals, next which had sevensup- . elcctlOil. but now has only ions and the establishment mp. the Construetionists. . ltlHlVllI. Xon-Partisans, two ' » lztlloi‘ man and a single Un- ~ tiller-s is the big improvement i=1 \ rich the Conservatives .1. the eve of the general elec- iirzg. when few candidates ~~inciically none were hope- ~ ‘onty of aspirants of good ~ '. 1dr r, DR. F. P. PATTER- .- its last meeting discuss- " rs and reached the decis- lates in every riding, [rlilnm-g ring The Agreements .§ l . ivarliantentary‘ reports HON. . .\..'s warning to the British ~: Fillllfllfil‘ against the imposi- e : Llkltllfl. restrictions upon Can- ;.n~l (lairy products, and RT. l Us wmparisoti 0f favorable n. l J.li.‘lll.‘l from within the Em- ‘.<- t»: ~l'l.\'l!l\' til the tariff policy of ‘ nan-ed a sitting of the l.‘ '\\ and .\ll:ul5 dealing with ‘urn (Qzur la and Britain, hank-iv. tlfl the Minister . ‘ ll|"..\.\l r1" pressed for it'l- i-i MK pm-iblt: .'ictii)u regard- aw-l egg. and poultry, “that l t w :_h.- ‘MBSI-lllllbv of quantitivc t wnillioditit-s. and l toll! the 9.1 i. t\t"'l.l.'llll 'l'ln:_v are well aware 0f tin: vow. l»; lanadizm (ioveriunent in .» p, _v 1,. ill. lllt’ that nglva." \\i1-n I .l‘i'..lli\‘t‘. came to Article 5 of {he 1!: p .._ din]. (‘llllifllllfi Britain's under- taking at z ' . n it» the slllpillClliS of Canadian cattle. Kilt, l‘. ~.;.i ;'|' pointed to the great dif- ficullv c -- 2- the (‘zmadian cattle raisers and the l vi -.'..-'.i n; illllllSll'_V. He re- nlllllll"l 1U‘ l7" tllfl‘ <~ that tlit: Ifnitctl States ll'.".lll‘ l.'- .: _~ .-..l1..it:i-:i1nl lucrative mar- lwl for l . l -Wi»_ the. result being that plflictlcrlliy . - i l i'il‘lv \\'l'lll over lllf: bor- der la-i wit.’ in |'.rit'.iil1 diniinislt- ed zlhul» . = -i-_>" point. lil‘ll'i.l'. " " n u the zigreetneltt, was fairly .i l i wll Willie ‘Qvllcmtlsly if 3. [cf ‘ > l ~ - -. v...- lil'lll>ll market could ho . . t ‘ i ' We bnilcll States was l'l‘(ili\ in t i - li'ill.~ll tinllcrlztking was usrl. ‘“'l‘l~» i‘ . .. ~ i illc lliilili tilarkct as a wll Illz. llizxivarr, “and CUll\l i" i". ' "zinc as the market that serves -~ n \\'h<-n you find some 1 ~ r»; tariffs or otherwise, you ' h iivwrlwi. but yOtl give them no coii.i;..,.~_- . l p will no certainty of supply and that i: " a. lv- thc most ruinous thing that can haplr-il." “I hope 1h »t ll‘ dvr (‘llilll/Tf‘ conditions," con- linucrl the <1.» -t"\":i‘i\"<- lt"lllf‘l', “we will con- tinue lo l" w 1* ‘ti. nrcl-ss to thc United States npqrkrl, '| l i| ..~ rv-vllilllr: in be the case dur- ing um t. r... n. lln~ ll."lllIl(‘l'llllC party, but you mud ]....l.- _-. fibril lltill further ahead than that. (t is nr-t a m |ll('l' 0f five or six or eight or ten years. you mud iala- the long view of it." f Editorial Notes I‘ General lmrli died this dale 1929. =l< i l- Vocilcroilslv the 5t. Peter Roadites seem to be putting it a]; rivet‘ the 48 Roadltes. t 4< Ill i ‘Sn the lfioi-iw-iinrllcneral is coming to the blaritinv-s in _|u-n~ after all. If to Fredericton, why not t». t harlottl-llnvll? it N‘ i Prfiklilj- l'r'nu- .\linistcr King is contemplat- ing in ~=i Prohibition (lcorgia what he should 11-. w. i...’ t. ~11 0f 4hr railway strike material- Ill 1n lln~ \\'lIlHI\ m‘ fu flit: COIOIIBIIOTI. 1k 1k i A felt-ml gmi-itnncnt investigation ls being made into align] irregularities in connection with nne w.‘ zln» branches of the federal agri- cultural lirpflfllllfull in Charlottetown. It i5 l ‘Lin; Van- , pandent, Ilritislt Columbia's j ‘ ixwocx) as soon as the.‘ i: n: i: , ‘Dublin reports that nearly 1.200 Irishmen are fighting in Spain. the majority under General O'Duffy with the insurgents, and the remain- der, led by Frank‘ Ryan, former Irish Republi- can journalist, with the Government forces dc- fendittg Blarlrid. Spaniard fight Spaniard and, Irishman fighting Irishman! lt is in truth an’ unbrotherly war, says _\Iullll‘(‘."tl Gazette. i i i ‘ Fish meal in concentrated mixtures has been fed to dairy cows with satisfactory results dur- ing several experiments in recent years, reports the Department of Dairy Husbandry .at Wash- ington State Collegc. Some experiments show- ed a lowering of the butterfat test, but in no- cases were ‘off-flavors or odors detected in the milk. a u a While playing "parlour rugby” with his five year old son Peter, Premier Hepburn, Ontario, broke an ankle. \Vhen the doctor told him of the injury, the bold Premier immediately laid the blame where it belonged. “It was Peter's fault," he said. “He tackled me from behind and as I fell to the floor my leg thumped against a table." i i I The predicament of the Maritime Liberal Governments and Boards of Trade which have been petitioning the Senate to amend the Trans- port Bill in their particular interests, must now be that ‘of the old-time- parson who petitioned long and fervently for a change of weather, and when he unexpectedly got ntore than he bar- gained for, ended up with—'“l3ut Lord, this is fair rideeklous.” x a 4- Beeause British postal regulations forbid post- masters to affix stamps to letter for collectors, Pan American Airways, through its San Fran- cisco office, will handle air-mail covers for stamp collectors on the first eastbound trans~ Pacific flight from Hongkong and Macao, it is announced by the U .S.A. Post Office Depart- ment. For the convenience of collectors, the company also will handle. covers on the first \vest-bound flight from Guam and Manila to Macao and Hongkong. The first flight from San Francisco will begin April 2t and the re- turn flight from Ilottgkotig on April 29. I Great Britain continues to prosper having had 824 millionaires in i936, forty-nine more than the year before, a report of the Inland Revenue Cotntnissioncrs reveals. In Britain, a man who has an ineonlc oi more than 30,000 pounds ($150,- 000) a year-the income at 5 per cent. from $3,- o00.ooo——is called a itiillioilaire. Millionaires in» eluded sixty with incomes between 75,000 pounds ($375000) and 100,000 pounds ($500,- 000) a year, and sixty-nine with inconlcs ex- ceeding 100,000 pounds. ln 1935 there. were but fifty in the. fnrnlci" class and sixty-fruit" in the latter. i! l! >il l? * The l\’c\". litlward i\. Mclirzitll. 5-1., ilhfllfilillli professor of philosophy at Blarqtiette Utiivcrs- ity, finds himself a member of the Burlington (\\'is.) Liars Club because he said its members weren't liars. During a recent ethics lecture Father McGrath argued “the essence 0f a lie is to speak seriously against your mind. "flies." Jurlingtoit liars," he continued, “are not seri- ously stating anything against wltat they know to be the truth. Therefore they are not liars." The club believed this to be one of the best “wlioppcrs” reported and promptly elected him to membership. llii There is nothing like going to the fountain head to “verify allegations". Cecil Francisco and Robert G. Monroe wrote to President Roosevelt; that Cecil said the President never had milked a cow and Robert thought ltc harl, and would he please let them know. Mr. James Roose- velt, the President's son and secretary, replied: “Dear Cecil and Robert: The President has ask- ed me to answer your letter of March 3 and to tell you that he has milked a cow, having learn- ed when he was a small boy. However, he would like to emphasize that he tievcr claimed to be an expert at it and is considerably out of practice. Iliope this scitlei your little dispute.” I The Alberta Attorney-Generals Department has filed notice of appeal against the judgment of Mr. justice NV. C. Ives declaring the Pro- vincial Securities Interest Act uneonstifutional. judgment declaring the act ultra vircs was hand- ed down February 23 following hearing of ac- tion of the Independent Order of Foresters against the Lethbridge Northern Irrigation Dis- trict. The decision was in favor of the plaintiff and awarded $5.430 sought in the action. The Alberta debt moratorium annrrnced February g3 does not apply to mortgage debtors residing outside the province even in cases where the property is under cultivation of Alberta ten- ants, Mr. Justice T. M. Tweedie ruled in Su- preme Court chambers in granting an order for forced sale of a property. have been going nits the question declare tlia: too many boys are up at night until 11 and 11.30 o'clock. In one class it “astound that 52 per cent. had been out four nights in one week. The teachers maintain that the children cannot do their work properly unless they are in bzll 11y nine o'clock. In looks as if the parents, hatl a responsibility in the lllil.'.t£‘I'.—-$i\lll[ Star. Some politicians and mawspopers are still trying to focus the spot- light on the Duke of Windsor. They are doing service to nobody-and least of all to the Duke, who mode his decision. desired privacy and sought it. The Duke has retired into private life. Let his life be veiled under the anonymity which ls the lot and privilege of every other pri- vate citizen. Surely these are times when we must. look ahead-mot be- hind us. -— Manchester Sunday Chronicle. When the present Prime Minister entered Parliament in i908 the net debt of Canada was but $277,960,860. Now it is $000,000,000. The populg. tlon has grown in the same period from approximately 7,000,000 to 11,. 000,000. so that the net debt per capita has increased from $42 to $275.-Ex. _ The British Government ls await- ing the report of the Commission which. under the chairmanship of Lord Peel, lately inquired into the COHCIIUOIIS OI Palestine before out- lining the policy to be adopted there. It is not impossible that the report. may fail to please exwem- lsis of both sides. but the Govern. merit must. decide on the line of policy which it considers best in the general int/crest. It ls clear, at My Pate. that the possession of col- onies involves drawbacks as well as benefits and the exercise of control over them ls not always a. smooth and easy mutton-Belfast Tele- graph. A writer of ‘great. plays must, my; lived. gone through most of the val- . leys and over most of the hills of experience. Men can do that; bug women cannot. — John Golden, playwright. A fine act is noticed officially by the inclusion in the Honors list of the name of Bcgam Ashrafunnissa. of Hyderabad. Deccan. The brav- ery and coolness of mind by which she won the Medal of the British Empire Order were shown in ter- rlble circumstances, in a. fire that cut. ofl exit from a cinema. With her sari she lowered five women to safety and worked so long to help others that; she had at last. ho Jump from a height herself, injuring her- self in doing so. Rarely was an honor better deservecL-Calcutta salesmen. The announced Royal Commiss- ion (or. taxes) will not get very far if it has to go about the country asking on.y its own questions. Bust- ness men and business associations should at; once begin to 11nd out where municipality anddupltcatlon or . t. xation, overlapping services and d._.llcate public authorities af- iec. then‘ businesses, their indus- tries or 1L-..‘ profdssion-s. With this lnfoi motion aviflable, views can be aired and rcprc: ltations made be- fore the QT/lllllliqéltlll that will place ttztlunl on... in the proceedings of the Commission and ln the minds of the taxpayers-Canadian Busi- ness. - The beginning of a. race is nearly as thrilluig as its close. Many a horse dashes ahead to lake an early lead. only to lose it. before the race ‘ is finished. But. rarely does the last horse off gain‘ a later advantage. Those that. gain the early lead—t.he ones that, greatly begin, however, have the advantage-Ex. The soldiers who take the King's shilling are going ID get all the shillings they earn, instead of about a third of them. The Lords of the Treasury have decided against the stoppage of pay for haircuts, wash- ing and renewal of equipment. 1t. is hoped to bring more men into the army; probably it will. "The sol- dier," said Napoleon, who knew how to write as well as fight, “ls to be treated as a citizen under arms." The British War Ofllce has now begun to act on that wise plan.- London Daly Express. War isn't the gmtlemnnly game that it used to be, according to the novelist, Ford Madox Ford. who gives a quaint illustration of how the British and French fought each other some 300 years ago. The French, he writes, sent It protest-to the English about the way a certain British artlllerlst. was performing. Instead of firing ordinary cannon balls. he was loading his guns with broken bottles. bits of chain and old junk from the armorers’ shops. These. it. was protested, lnfilcted grotesque and painful wounds, and lt. was all pretty unfair. The Eng- lish high command promptly court.- martlulled the ardent artll erlst on charges of playing the noble game of war ln an unsportsmanlike man- ner. That was what war used to be; gall stone colic occur, there are usualy symptoms of distress and indigestion. inability to eat fat foods and coarse vegetables, a great amount of gas in the stomach and intestine, stools light colored (clay), and sometimes nausea and vomit- ing. , The formation o! gall storm is believed to be due t0 (n) M19050“ from elsewhere in the body which lnfiames the lining wall of the gall bladder and thickens the bile; (b) to stoppage or slowlng_up 0! the movements of the Bill bladder lhllfi interfering with if. emptylnk FWD; erly or promptly- $116 "ihmkened building up the stone: (c) Puke‘ faction of waste matter in intes- tlne-constlpation. ‘Phus in ‘the prevention of gall stoneé. the 51ml now ls tp prevent this slowness. stoppage, (stasis as it is called) by keeping the lower bowel active. l0 that, there will be no P855589 up‘ wards of organisms from the 1'9"" bowel to the liver and gall bladder. Anything that. will keep the bile more liquid and fiowlnB freely mt” first. the small and then into the large intestine will prevent gall stones. Bile is Nature's Fugitive? if it flows freely there should be no constipation and no gall stones. There are two methpds of makink the bile flow freey-eaiirlg the proper foods. and squeezing the liver and gall bladder by means of exercise. particularly bending ex- ercises. The proper diet ls that containing plenty of rouBhBBB-Oelllllwe- found in vegetables and fruits, cut- ting down on fats (except the small amount. found in milk). As a little fat. or oil helps to empty the 8811 biadder. olive oil is often recom- mended. ' The exercise treatment consists in exercises in which the body is bent forwards. backwards. 0!‘ Side- ways from the hips, knees kept straight. ! AN OLD WOMAN OF THE R/OADS Oh, to have a little house! To own the hearth and stool and all! The heaped-up sods upon the fire. The pile of turf against. the wall! To have a clock with weights and chains And pendulum swinging up and downl ' A dresser filled with shining delph. Speckled and white and blue and brown! I could be busy all the day Clearlxgg and sweeping hearth and oor, And fixing on their shelf again My whgre and blue and specified s el I could be quiet there at night Beside the fire and by myself. Sure of a bed. and 10th to leave The tlckinglclock and the shining delphi _ Och! but I'm weary of mist and dark. And toads where there's never a house or bush. And tired I am of bog and mad And the crying wind and the 1on4» some hush! And I am praying to God on high, And Idem praying mm night and BY. For a little house-a house of my own- Out of the Wind's and the rain's way. — _ _ c__qolum. a. formalized conflict between pro- fessional fighters that. left the civ- "111" Iwnulation undisturbed as much as possible. Within the last century or so. all that has changed. Wars have become contests between armies-Winnipeg Tribune. a com- mittee to consider holidays with my. the Goverment. at last mdrnlto that this is a practical problem and shows a welcome change from its negative attitude of the past. But more than this ‘ecision is neoes. sery as evidence of good faith.- London Dally Herald. Iii END PAIN — Soothe SURE HANDS I byRubblngin a "M:- bile thus forms the little start in" oc/IZLQm/rzm. ‘ CANNING INDUSTRY PROSPECTS Bun-It ls pleasing to have Mr. Humphrey admit lh his letter in Thursday's Guardian that he was incorrect. in his first letter in say- ing that thej-Ilghgatc Canning fac- ‘tory in Ontario was the permanent l failure that he pictured n, and that it. has been dosed down temporarily simply because of the depression. In the United States thousands of factories of one kind and another have had to close their doors since 1930. On the other hand, Canning South of the line has stead alone as the only in- dustry of any importance that has grown in number and size of the factories. and in profit. making during the past six years. Mr. Humphrey evidently be- lieves in following the line of least resistance and of using all his best endeavour to do nothing himself and to prevent everyone else from making n constructive attempt. to solve the all important problems 01' Dmvfding work for the unem- Dlfiwd and of rendering farming and fishing more profitable. Perhaps Mr, Humphrey will tel] readers of the Guardaln how he would overcome these difficulties. Provincial taxes are admittedly I0\v and. by doubling them. those on relief might be assisted materi- ally. hilt the do‘e robs them of their self-rczpect and morale. It's up to Mr. Humphrey. Let us have the result of hls wisdom, I om, Sir. etc. H. K. S. HEMMING ________ TRUCK AND TRANSFER TAXES Sir.-It is with much regret that we learn of the enormous increase in the regrtrntion fees for truckg and transfers for this season. It; Ls evident that. the farmer and the labourer again tnust bear the brunt 07 U"? present Government's con- tinual litcieased taxation, for this particular tax no doubt: boils right down to the former who in the past ".2 been using the transfer exten- dlffercnt shipping points along the railroad, therefore saving timedn the fall of the year" when time means so much on n farm, moreover very often giving him the opportunity of getting his produce on the market at. a time when the price is at. its best. For example take a farmer living 8 or 9 miles from York Station; he has one t.hou=and bushels of turnips ready for the market- The best he can and in order to carry seventy five bushels per trip, he must have a good team of horses and a heavy wagon. The very best he can do is land 150 bushels of_ his lhctisand at York station in one day, and in order to get his llIOlLBIlCl bushels on board the c r" at. York, he loses sh: m" nor.- days, Oh (‘to oihri- ltnnd if he uses n truck Pfll'l'_\‘l‘\l‘_ 22.’) bus. pct" trip it is only the lllililf‘? of a day's haul- ing and he hm. the use of his tram of horses nt. llClII!‘ to plow or what- ‘ever he wisllr: to do with them. and l.l'l.llEX'l1l0I‘€ it is of great benefit to the railroad. that one 2-t0n truck h-‘nllitg potatcc". or turnips this distance can keep one railroad cor a riay rolling from York to the export; shed at; Char- lottetown. Otherwise hauling by team would keep n reefer car on the siding for days waiting to be loaded. Now I think I have pointed out to some extent the benefit of the transfer to the farmer. and for this reason I have no doubt that the will agree with me in saying that the present; scale of taxation is out of all bounds. I do not hesitate in saying that the truck pays more tax than any other vehicle travel- ling on the road. To use 15 gallons per day is only cuisldered a falr day's work on a good road. Al: 8 cents tax this would contribute $1.20 per any to the Government. This is only the minimum; the maximum might. run as high as 27 gallons per day. So we have lt that a man owning a truck that carries a five- ton load contributes over $300.00 I for a sctron which does not exceed 8 months, or three trucks carrying five ton each would contribute dlr- ectly to the Govemment in a tax well over one thousand dollars. Part of this comes directly to the Government ln the form of a check from the oil company to the Bank of Montreal, and the collect- ing of this does not cost the Gov- ernment one rcd cent. ' It is qulte evident that the Gov- ernment ls trying hard to deprive truck drivers of a llvlng. Under these conditions if a man should be fortunate enough to rake the price of a lloene. he must in order to live raise the price of frelghtlng. And who docs this effect? The poor old farmer who is already over- burdened with taxes! So in conclusion I say. let. the farmer. merchant and truck owner get together and try and have this enormous tnxntlon adjusted with the Government. " I rm Slr. etc- LOBNE B. FLOOD. v sively in moving hl= produce to the_ and do f= make two trips a day to York, farmer as well as the truck owner_ I am the representative consult, 181 Queen Street OCEAN, m4 v51. of all well known steamship lines. For cruise or one way tripa W. K. ROGERS Phone HQ =The Decadence Of Reading "Reading is one of our bad habits." says Aldous Huxley. in the most striking of the essays 1n- cluded in his new round-up, "The Olive Tree". “We read, most of the time, not because we wish to instruct ourselves, not. because we long to have our feelings touched and our imagination fired, but... because we have time to spare" and have lost the fine art of do- lng nothing. We are in a. hurry: our notion of time is a collection of minutes, we have lost. the sense of seasons but think we must do something every minute. So we turn to that “doughy. woolly anodyne writing that. exists mere- ly to klll time and prevent thought- to deaden and diffuse emotion... an addiction, like cigarette smok- lng." Aldous Huxley, writer, is dgppessed by the unlmportance of writers today. Being themselves professional writers, he says, his- torians are prone 0o exaggerate the significance of literature. They devote their pages to analyses 0! different political and economic theories. lightly concluding that. the writings of men have had a more or less decisive influence upon the course of history. But where ls the evidence of it? “Today most of us resemble portant respect." Mr. Huxley con- tinues. "We know little Latin and less Greek. Even the Bible ls rapidly becoming, if not a. closed. at least a rarely opened book." Modern science has destroyed thc ancient prestige of those classics upon which the contmon culture and common understanding of all Europe was based: fl: has set no new magic in their place. The in- stinctive desire to worship persists; but science has inadvertently con- verted the world from monothelsm to local idolntries. "Mein Kampf" and “Dan Kapital" bake the place in the minds of contemporaries once eld b? Homer and the Ps . So "the peoples of the West no longer share a literature and a system of ancient wisdom. Al.‘ that; they now have in common is science and information." Blzt science is knowledge. not wlszic: it deals with quantities. not qual- ities; and its words are arranged without art. And information is devoured without digestion. “There must. be many people who. once having escaped from school or the university. never" rend anything wrlth concentration or more than once. They have no verbals props to shore against their ruins. Nor, indeed, do they need any props. A mind that. is sufficiently pulver- ized and sufficiently agitated sup- ports itself by the very violence of its motion. It ceases to be a. ruin and ‘r omes a whirling sand- shakespeare in at least one 1m--_ Wren Church In Danger (Ehnchange) Bpaln and Russia are not the only countries where churches art being destroyed. There ls a case in London at. the moment in which. by a strange irony, the oorporatlor of the City of London is appeal- ing t/o the Privy Council against the proposal of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners to demolish All Hallows Church, Lombard Street, and sell the site. All Hallows ls one of quite a number of London churches which have lost; their (‘Ongregallong be. cause the district. l-hey Once serv. ed hlWe become 13115111955 and com- mercal, rather than residential areas. The Ecclesiastical Commis. 810w"! want to get rid of those churches which have ceased m be useful and use what money they get for building new churches in Greater London. All HB-lldwl 1105 three claims to fame and the Corporaton o! 14m. don thinks they should be respect. ed- The site has been used rm- m. cleslastical purpgses since before the Norman conquest. The church was built by Sir Christopher Wren after the Great: Fire. 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