Zurich Herald, 1938-06-30, Page 6;Gormentary on the
'Highlights of the Week's News
THAT SALES TAX: The 1938
Budget just brought down in the
*louse by Finance Minister Dun-
ming pleased a lot of people, mann-
faeturers of builders' supplies par-
icularly. But others, who had
oped to see that 8 per cent. sales
tax reduced were not so pleased.
The sales tax, nicknamed "nuis-
ance tax," originated in the teens
of this century as a war tax. In
the boom years of the twenties
it dropped to 1 per cent, then fol-
lowing the depression, it made
'three successive jumps till it got
;up to 8 per cent. Now the situa-
tion has reached the point where
per cent. of all revenue collect-
ed by the Dominion Government
'comes from the sales tax.
Every man, woman and child in
this country is affected by the tax
because it ups the price of all the
property and merchandise, etc.,
that we . buy—everything except
food.
IN DIFFICULTIES: Mussolini's
diplomatic representatives are
pushing like anything now to have
the Anglo -Italian agreement of
'April 16th brought into action at
once in spite of the fact that the
war in Spain is nowhere near a
conclusion (withdrawal of Italian
r`volunteers" .from Spain at the
end of the war was one of the
terms of the treaty). Reason for
the haste on the part of Italy:
Mussolini is hard-pressed for cash,
wants to borrow some from Eng-
land; drought pretty well ruined
Italian crops this year so Italy
will have to buy grain from Rus-
sia; thirdly, Mussolini wants real -
for -sure recognition made of the
new Italian Empire (meaning sov-
ereignty over Abyssinia).
RURAL HYDRO: Extension of
Hydro service in rural areas to
two services per mile, instead of
three, is beginning to show defin-
ite results throughout Ontario.
More farmers are installing the
service and enjoying the benefits
of electric light now that the old
"guarantee" contracts (under
which if two farmers wanted to
have hydro service they had to
sign a third contract and pay a
charge of $1 per month) have
been cancelled.
Soon we won't have to go to
the city to see the brights lights
. when every farm home in
Ontario is electrified.
e By Elizabeth Eedy
READY FOR ACTION: The
situation in France? Very coin-
plex, we assure you, as usual. But
here are the highlights: Premier
Daladier's "Radical Socialist" (not
radical at all) government which
came into power in April has
gained a free hand to rule the re-
public by decree until November,
has adjourned parliament and
silenced all effective opposition
for the time being.
While making the utmost diplo-
matic efforts to stave off a Euro-
pean conflict, the government is
nevertheless organizing France
on a war -time basis, ready for ac-
tion. .France'smobilization orders
are printed and ready for use if
necessary, in every commune of
the republic. The Maginot line of
defense along the eastern borders
is thought to be impregnable
against invasion (But not so the
Spanish border—there is cause for
worry about that, with German
and Italian armies on the other
side of those mountains).
FOURTEEN DAYS: What of
France's ally, Czechoslova7da?
Pledged to go to her aid, it is es-
timated it would take fourteen
days for French armies to find
themselves in a position inside
Czechoslovakia where they could
repel any invader . . . . It has
leaked out within the past week
that the plan to invade Czecho-
slovakia most favored by the Ger-
man military staff schedules a
swift, overpowering series of at-
tacks on the Czech front crush all
opposition, end everything before
fourteen days are up.
IRISH ELECTIONS: Prime
Minister Eamon de Valera of Eine
went to town on the issue of his
new sweeping agreements with
England, won the June elections
(second in Eire within a year)
with an overwhelming majority.
Now Prime Minister de Valera has
what he has been wanting for
seven years.
In 1931 when de Valera's
group, the Fianna Fail, became
the Government party, it had a
precarious majority; for the last
five years it has been dependent
upon a small Labor group to hold
office. Now for the first time Mr.
de Valera will be independent of
all small groups, and he is free to
pursue his policy of reconstruc-
tion and national defense.
THE WORLD
AT LARGE
CANADA
of the
CANADA
• THE EMPIRE
No Camouflage Job
There seems to be more to the
railroad problem than just fixing
a locomotive to look like some-
thing else.—Sherbrooke Record.
Cat Out Of The Bag
That Japanese admiral who in
an unguarded moment, admitted
that there is a war on over in
:Asia, let the cat out of a cello-
phane bag, so to speak.—Strat-
ford Beacon -Herald.
The Real Patriot
The real patriot is the man
who, without fear or favor, not
bnly disinterestedly supports what
he believes to be right in public
=afters, but takes the trouble to
inform himself, to the very best
of his ability, upon all, questions
of public moment.—Guelph Mer-
cury.
Horror a La Mode
Gas Masks are chic, according
to latest reports. London society
Las taken them up and everybody
that really matters is attending
las -raid salons, The best-known
eaders of the haat monde are
bolding smell -soirees, Vials of
liquid that smell like the real gas
are passed around and delicately
sniffed, masks are worn, and
classes in raid -behaviour — exclu-
sive classes—are held. You can
almost hear the screams of amuse-
Mem- over here.—Quebec Chron-
icle -Telegraph.
Not By Lazy Women'
A woman's convention has plac-
ed itself on record as favoring
the appointment of more women
to the Senate of Canada. With
all due respect for_the ladies, we
think this is a lazy woman's plea,
Women, if they want to get into
public life; should be willing to go
into the arena and toil for their
A-0
rp
political honors, and, by fighting
elections, prove their ability. Ag-
nes Macphail and Mrs. Black, we
feel sure, would not ask to be ex-
cused from struggle and demand
a place in the Senate that can be
won by mere appointment, and not
by hard work. — Fort William
Times -Journal.
Let's Sing More
No, this is no tirade against
radios and phonographs. It is an
appeal for more singing. Yes, and,
incidentally, it is a plea for more
whistling. Singing and whistling
drive away the blue devils. They
heal neighborly quarrels and pro-
mote domestic felicity. The old
Methodist church won her way to
dominance in the world and to a
special service at untold value by
her singing. When she degenerat-
ed to having her singing done by
proxy, she lost ground. No nation
is .'teat, or• remains great long,
unless her people are singers.
l)ennrarlc was saved by her songs
and her religion.—Exeter Times
Advocate,
The Deep Waterway Project
But, while nature invited this
project and it is obviously right
that it should ultimately be car-
ried out, the new treaty will have
anything anything but an .easy
path in either country.In the
United States there will be Contin-
ued opposition from the States in-
terested in developing a water
route from Lake Michigan to the
Gulf of Mexico, from the inter-
ests that seek to protect the traf-
fic between Buffalo and Ne* York
by the Erie Canal, and. from the
power .corporations and others•
In Canada, opposition has been
expressed to the project: in the
Maritimes, in Quebec and in Brit-
ish Columbia; and Premier Hep-
burn, of Ontario, has been, and
still is, opposed. There are many
friends of the project in Ontario,
howeveir and that Province and
the Prairie Provinces which would
chiefly benefit, have a little over
half the population of Canada,
Canada's Only
Pet Cemetery
Located Near Aurora Is Abloom
With Flowers on the Graves
—Dogs, Cats, Canary, Horse
Buried There.
Sweet peas, tulips, daffodils and
hyacinths bloom in Happy Wood-
land, Canada's only pet cemetery
where $60 caskets and plain graves
mark the burial places of favorite
animals.
A soldier's horse lies in the
cemetery and a canary whose body
was sent from Winnipeg rests be-
neath a spreading shade tree. But
dogs and cats occupy most of the
plots.
The cemetery was laid out 11
years ago by Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Blochin as a burial place for their
pets, but gradually it has become a
public place. As its fame has
spread the bodies of animals have
been sent to Aurora from many
parts of the Dominion.
Collie and a Monkey
A 10 -year-old boy brought his
collie. Soon afterwards the collie's
friend Peter, a monkey, followed.
Most of the owners ask only that
their pets be buried . in simple
shrouds with plain headstones over
the graves. There are many ex-
pensive caskets and memorials,
though, among the long, soft grass
and swaying flowers.
Plan Developing
Canadian Drama
C. B. C. Manager Encourages
Writing Plays for Radio —
Drama to Interpret Canada
The great field for endeavor open
to Canadian authors in the "drama
of manners, a drama to interpret
Canada to Canadians," Major Glad-
stone Murray, general manager of
the Canadian Broadcasting Copora-
tion, told delegates attending the
17th annual convention of the Can-
adian Authors' Association, in the
city of Montreal, last week,
The C. B. C. was encouraging Ca-
nadian writing and asked that the
scripts be submitted, he said. "If
we succeed in establishing a Can-
adian dramatic presentation, it will
serve a double purpose. Not only
will the position of the Canadian
author be consolidated but broad-
casting will get away from imita-
tion of other large network ideas."
Readings and spoken essays if
authentic and well-done are a very
worth -while advertisement, he be-
lieved.
What Constitutes Drama
"Canadian drama is not necessar-
ily the historical events of the time
of Jacques Cartier, General Brock
and the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police," he said. "If you are inter-
ested in writing for radio, put, your
history hooks back on the shelf and
write something perplexing, amus-
ing or vitally real."
ways In Dominion
Total 400,000 Miles
That "Som thing"
Smilers Win the Best Jobs, Says
Expert
It's the people who smile who get
the best jobs. That is the declare -
.tion of Mr. Herbert Trevell, grey-
haired, kindly -eyed man who in-
terviews hundreds of applicants a
week for a big Birmingham (Eng-
land) business house.
'Smilers stand a much better
chance than the glum ones," he
told me.
"I see so 1 '11)' men and women
in my little office every day, as I
have done for years, that I can tell
at once whether the applicants have
got that 'something' that is the dif-
ference between success and fail-
ure.
"And the smile goes a long way
towards that ‘something.."
So keep smiling. It niay get you.
a raise or a better job.
The standardization of fruit
and vegetables is being studied by
the British agricultural depart-
ment.
Raging Yellow River Drowned Chinese and Japanese Both
Invaders can be stopped by shell and bullet, well directed and in sufficient quantity, but China has
never been able to curb the Yellow river—that is why the great waterway, at once a blessing and a curse, is
called "China's sorrow" The Yellow river again in revolt and already has claimed an estimated 150,000 vic-
tims over hundreds of square miles of Honan province. Scenes like the ABOVE, once more are the rule
as refugees flee the raging waters. Here you see a railroad rendered useless by the flood. The river plays
no favorites, either, for it is reported that thousands of invading Japanese troops were among its victims.
Ontario's War
On Ragweed
Plant Is Responsible for 80 Per
Cent. of Hay Fever—You
Can Help Eradicate It
TORONTO.— In an effort to
eradicate ragweed, the pollen from
the flowers of which is believed
to be responsible for 80 per cent.
of Ontario's hay fever, a joint
letter has been sent out by the
Department of Health, Education
and Agriculture of the Provincial
Government to municipal clerks
urging that war be waged on this
weed.
Spread Increases
The communication which bears
the signature of Harold J. Kirby,
Minister of Health; Dr. L. J.
Simpson, Minister of Education,
and P. M. Dewan, Minister of Ag -
That makes the project one of na-
tional importance. If half the
country benefited directly, the,
rest of the country would assured-
ly benefit indirectly. — Winnipeg
Free Press.
The EMPIRE
Why China Must Be Helped
Germany has annexed Austria,
From the Baltic to the Adriatic
they now cry in frenzied passion
"Heil, Hitler!" What next! 11
Duce is now the head of an em-
pire and he dreams visions of the
glory of ancient Rome. Spain will
soon be a complete Fascist State.
All that is lacking now is a Jap-
anese victory in China. That would
be the signal for real action by
the dictators. Fortunately, China
by her own determined ' efforts
has prevented the fulfilment of
that aim so far. Far from being
crushed and beaten, China's spirit
burns more luminously than ever,
Her will to win remains as strong
as it ever was and she will main-
tain the resistance and make any
further sacrifice required by her.
In return 'China asks, and the
democracies must give her, every
assistance to continue the strug-
gle until victory has been achiev-
ed. The defeat of China is the
surest way to prat the clock hack
fifty years and to ensure the visi-
tation on humanity of the grc'a (lrt
horrors it has endured since the
dawn of time.—Hong Rong P; ess.
riculture, reads in part:
"The several interested depart-
ments of Government have during
the last few years been reminded
of the increase in the spread of
ragweed. This plant is apparently
found with increasing frequency
in all parts of Southern Ontario.
Three Per Cent. Suffer
"While hay fever is not consid-
ered to be a serious form of ill-
ness, it is extremely disturbing to
those who are affected by it and
its complications are frequently
serious enough. It is estimated
that somewhere in the neighbor-
hood of 3 per cent. of the popula-
tion are susceptible to various
manifestations of allergy, with
hay fever due to ragweed as the
most important single item.
"The plant can be easily iden-
•tified, and as it is listed among
the noxious weeds, suitable ar-
rangements should be made to en-
sure its destruction in all com-
munities, both rural and urban,
before the plant begins to flower
in late June or early July. The
second growth of the cut stalk
should be again cut down late in
August or early September." •
Accident Toll
Outranks War
U.S. 1937 Fatalities More Than
Double Number Killed At
Front
The U. S. National Safety Council
announced last week that accidents
claimed 106,000 lives in 1937 — a
total more than twice as great as
the number of American lives lost
in the World War.
Injuries from 'accidents disabled
9,900,000 persons during the year—
at least one member of every .fourth
family.
Cost $3,600,000,000
The calculable costs of all acci-
dents ran to $3,600,000,000 which,
the council said, was enough to
bt.ild 75 Empire State buildings.
Motor vehicle accidents during
1937 ceased 39,500 deaths, 1,360,000
personal thin -ries and an economic
Joss of '$1,700,000,000. The traffic
fatalities represented a four per -
emit. increase over 11)3(1..
Ordir:ai y colors cost England
$.1.2,6,00,),t,J1 in the laat twelve
mono:rs in, lest. work, treatment
a:.d other e..penses.
Domestic Pig
Is Slandered
We often say someone is "a
dirty pig," but little do we realize
that we are slandering the poor
pig. This little animal is natural-
ly clean and will not wallow or
sleep in filth unless nothing better
is available. Pigs are among the
cleanest of all farm animals if
allowed to be so. Most pigs are
"pigs" because their owners force
them to live and bathe in dirty
places. Neither is the pig more
lazy than other animals, if al-
lowed his freedom.
Germans registered with the
police of England number 9,000
hien and 11,000 women.
Canada's Vast Network Is One
Of Outstanding Develop-
ments of Present Century --
Cavalcade of Four Million
Tourists A Year.
Canada's vast network of high-
ways,
ighways, comprising more than 409,
000 miles, is among the outstanding
developments of the present cen
tury. In addition to providing ar-
teries of travel for more than a mil-
lion motor cars of Canadian regis-
tration, these highways also carry
a great cavalcade of more than four
million tourist automobiles h year
from other lands. The surfaced
highway mileage in Canada ex-
ceeds
aceeds 99,350 miles, while unsurfac-
ed roads totalled more than 311,000
miles.
Early Travel by Water
In the early days of settlement
roads were auxiliary to water
routes as avenues of transportation.
They were used during the sum-
mer season when portages were ne-
cessary to avoid obstacles in river
and lake travel, and in winter when
ice prevented navigation. With the
spread of settlement and the de -
m an d
e-mand for means of communication
between centres of population,
overland routes became necessary
and road construction got under
way in the pioneer stages of the de-
velopment of the country.
Road building in Canada receiv-
ed additional stimulation with the
advent of the automobile, which re-
volutionized the node of travel of
the nation. This gave birth to the
motor tourist industry, which has
been an incentive to' governing bod-
ies
odies to improve trunk roads and
scenic highways within their juris-
dictions. Today Canada's highway
systems link eeedern cities with re-
gions of almost primeval wilder-
ness, and serve a land blessed by
an indulgent Nature with an unriv-
alled wealth of travel attractions.
Parks, Scenic Wonders
From east to west, there is the
scenic beauty of the Maritimes, the
old-world charm of Quebec, the On-
tario lake regions, the world -famed
Niagara, the Great Lakes, the park-
lands
arklands of the prairies, and the
grandeur of the mighty Rocky and
Selkirk mountains, to mention only
some of the more outstanding while
countless lakes, river and forests
provide facilities for fishing, hunt-
ing and summer and winter sports.
Anioug Canada's greatest attrac-
tions for travellers by highway or
other means are the National
Parks, comprising twenty separate
units with a total area of about
12,525 square miles. Within the
National Parks are almost G00
miles of all-weather motor high-
ways and more than 200 miles of
secondary scenic and historic asso-
ciations.
5 Head -Hunters
Are Sent Down
MANI*, P. 1.—Five Kalinga
head-hunters drew minimum sen-
tences last week for lopping off
the heads of two Christian youths.
The court was lenient because
the head-hunters were uneducat-
ed, lived in wild country and be-
longed to a non-Christian tribe.
The ruling of the Philippine
Court of Appeals upheld the trial
court. Each of the Kalingas was
sentenced to 12 to 16 years in
prison and to indemnify the heirs
of their victims $1,000.
SNa r• •:g
iYIS•a•
THE
41 4.;11e:.•:e,.6;4,•4:44.•0O.:4 I:4..•:.1,:•0;.4:e.�1.:.41414. 11. 1. 16:e ... d0:i4:44:.0:. �Oe�4.:11 r4i,,4AOOP
REV. GEORGE A. LITTLE
Addressing a Temperance Rally
in Trinity United Church, Toronto,
Iast week, Rev. Dr. George A. Lit-
tle, a well-known official of the
United Church of 'Canada whose
picture appears at the tread .of this
column, inaugurated a Province -
wide campaign against the bever-
age rooms of Ontario.
Dr. Little charged that both Lib-
erals and Conservatives in Ontario
had been "plastic as putty" in the
hands of the Moderation League.
The Moderation League, lie said,
"had more influence with the Gov-
ernment than all the chinches."
Terming beer the danger spot in
the Ontario alcoholic picture," Dr.
Little called for a vigorous cam-
paign to restrict its sale. The
speaker charged that campaign
funds from brewers to politicians,
as well as the liquor profits in the
Provincial Budget, were responsible
for the continuance of beverage
rooms.
Controversy gages
The suggestion was advanced
that Liquor Commissior:,,r E. G.
Odette "plants beverage rooms"
near Protestant Churches and
avoids putting them "near a Roman
Catholic church or near the home
of a Raman Catholic Pries'." "We
need not .hope.," Dr. Little said;
"that the traditions of English Pro-
testantism will be familiar to a mean
of French-Canadian, Catholic ex-
traction."
A great stir was created in the
Ontario press by l)r, Little's state-
ments chiefly by virtue of the con-
troversial issues raised. Aside front
the liquor .question, whether one Is
an advocate of temperance or not,
one deplores the unfortunate refer-
ence to a roan of French extraction
�rhielr is i a: )use feelings of
aetagoni^ -t in title day when Can-
adA n girls all tate "hands" tawarda
national soUclarl' y she c ti muster.