the georgetown herald wednesday evening may- 25th 1938 page 7 we have made special arrangements for the servicing oi general motors automobiles we also in a posi to sell new chevrolet pontiac and omsnwwe motor cars we jam a manner of good used cars for sale j your patronage will be appreciated j n oneill son phone office 14 re 168 georgetown telerbone talks ik the watson family w so glad youra fbnf better mothtrl that long distance habit is catching the watson youngsters are not merely playing telephone they are playing long distance for long distance is a habit with the watson family an inex pensive habit that saves anxiety and helps keep the family together let the tele phone extend your horizon beyond your immediate neighbourhood let it keep you in touch with faraway relatives and friends the cost is surprisingly small reductions m telephone rates localand long 1 distance in 1935 36 and 37 have effected i saving to telephone users m ontario and i quebec of nearly one null on donors yearly j would solve cnkmfjjoyment by abolishing sales otheb taxes abolition of toe sates tax and other taxes which are draining the purchas ing power of the country would go a loos way toward solving the problem of unemployment in canada r j deachman mf for south huron de clared in the house of commons last set x venture to suggest to the minister ox labor the minister of finnw- and the prime minister that if we were to return to the tariff and taxation lev els of 1980 our unemployment prob lem would toe solved he declared we axe diverting a lug amount of the earning of our people from the chase of eaonnttcb good to ex penditures upon relief xalhran and other thing and there bt not left a soflwtmavnex to provide puwhtiitng power tor the ttour mr deachman not only depreciated the dlnr ascent of thejnlas tax from one par cent in 1890 to idgtit per cent m mm but pointed out that u imposition on imports from other countries skyrocketed canadas tariffs to then highest point in history his comments were voiced during a de bate in the housa on unemployment in the country in which suggestions for eliminating it were advanced by vah- i would uke to go back to 1030 he aald and attempt to analyse the differences existing between 1930 and 1887 these m my ate the main causes of the unemployment we have today tn 1830 we bad a one per cent sales tax while in 137 we had an eight per cent sales tax to 1930 we had no excise tax now we have a three per cent excise tax in reality a tariff on that amount upon all goods coming from foreign countries in addition to that we have a tariff which has reached heights never be fore approached in canadian history it is so high that i feel oulte certain neither the minister of tnance sir dunning- nor the minister of labor mr rogers could by any possibility look over the top of it we now have a tariff framed up on a new basis our customs tariff which records the rates lor the do minion of canada is now distributed with blank pages here and there throughout the book the object of the blank pages la to provide a place upon which one may write the real tariff because the tariff schedule as it stands does not reveal the true situ ation one must get the true rate from the custom branch by a special statement even then i venture to assert that if today i were to ask the t of national revenue afr hslay the tariff on certain items of cotton goods from the tjkuted state be would have to tell me well it is recorded in the book hut one must then add three per cent to the tariff and a further eight per cent sales ax rand men if one wishes 4o follow it tbrougfito the last newoukt etold tbat to addition section 38 of the custom act has to be considered through which special values are imposed upon products coming from the united states tp certain extent that valuation de- money upon public works unless they render a direct serviceable value un less they have an exchange value to the community unless they assist in the movement of commodities or in e was in improving the efficiency of our services in the dominion of canada what have you tou have men temporarily employed in a par ticular business and as soon as that is over they have no employment bus if on the other hand we made some effort to reduce taxation so that we could free some of this money which is now spent upon taxation i venture assert that your unemployment would dissolve like the early cloud in he morning dew the fort erie nmesbevtow pends upon ju humor of who makes the valuation to go back to an old phrase the rate of customs duty dependupon4he4eiigth of the chancellors boot hits wrong people mr deachman contended that at tempts to alleviate unemployment by further examination meant an unduly heavy burden on persons in lower in come brackets he went on when we consider these problems what do we do the suggestions are many and varied one man says we ought to provide unemployment in surance not long ago in the house i explained that aftercareful calcula tlon i had found the earnings of the farmer amounted to 362 per year while the earnings of the laborer in be f fig quarrelung w r rwnfwhw natural rti intra fnr rimr- n industry amount to well over 900 per year and so if we provided unem ployment insurance we would be set ting up further taxation upon people receiving less than 400 in order to provide insurance for those receiving more than 900 you are proposing to expend money upon public works but i ask when you have expended smmrycrfmtimeioiiiiirttefmit the pore white jeatfand zinc used in the manufacture of 100 pore paint actually provide a thin coot of metal over thesnrtmce because of the use of tfaes fine ingre- dienta as guaranteed m wrtmg on every can 100 5 pure paint retains its color huty longer and gives your property greater protection 100 pure paint ia economi cal too the quality materials used in prodncinghgire it more body thus providing greater surface coverage richardsons hardware 100 pure mint is tcoijomlcal at these prices oallon quart 435 5 phone 25 georgetown ra a nsutm sawvics or tmk camaoiam mkbical socttin am ufi let understanding utlace the more we understand human be haviour the less do we blame the child or the adult for behaving to what is to us an undesirable way mary a girl in her teens has al ways quarrelled she has never seem ed able to play happily with her elder sister and at school her life has been a continuous battle with the other children eventually as so often happens in cases alary broke una of our and found herself in court it was then that someone realised it would be desirable to study mary and so try tarlmd outthe reasonfor her behaviour in order to help her marys life at homo- had not been happy true she was often enough in the wrong but to her that seemed to be of no importance because her parents blamed her no matter who was at fault her school life was not much bet t she had difficulty with her school work and she was blamed for this being called stupid and lazy her teachers disliked her because she was a nuisance to them no one seemed to realize that mary s perfectly natural things for her do under the circumstances she did not create her home or school situ atlon so she certainly was not to blame in the home mary felt insecure 8he was blamed and to her the blame was unfair so she struggled to assert herself which is a much more healthy thing to do than to he down and accept the situation marys intelligence is below normal which would account for her difficulty with school work she has no con trol over the intelligence with wnlch she is born so no blame can be at tached to her on that point this problem did not as a whole arise because the child was or poor intelligence- that is merely an in cidental mary is a problem because she has not been treated with under standing it is the treatment which she has receivedthe lack of under standingwhich has brought mary to the court as a delinquent mary would have grown up to her present age a healthy child if her parents and the school had been able to give her- sympathetic and understanding guidance which would have made her feel secure in her home and in so ciety questions concerning health ad dressed to the canadian medical as spclatlon 184 college street toronto will be answered personally by letter u hours on first job half century on second winnipeg man it was in the spring of 1688 that robert johnston embarked on bis railway career he lasted m hours and was fired noth lng daunted the 15yearold lad was bar toe next day this time under a new foreman he lasted 60 years on hlfffseoand try now he is retiring fitm the post of toadmsster of the canadian national railways at north battleford saak railroaders gather ed from all over northern saskatche wan to pay him tribute cement blocks made of water washed gravel to citybuilding specifications several styles and sizes if building it will pay you to see these before buying samples and prices at snyders cartage phone office 171w or j young and market streets georgetown ihi good summer wood in stove wood lengths wlhfeiitneisoii4 phones office 12 res 211 georgetown dry rotted abisstaa catok an etokskblbcl tirfthamacastoadotftitslapiooaic you meant wony abont tyba sputa it la rood for a atom sod is said whh t yaar guai pis ga is hrtsfl lij nhm ism trirti imagiiisiiil af yaua of amiss to a askyosr iisiiiis ti t hmssh inaiiss ints s that aia aaauy handlai s w m tbay may banl ob right ercryosr eld roar band ridga sad raltar laaasaxsbmesa nmmumami srnef avepsw aaahsw richard vn driving along the highway at the slow spaed of slxty- flve miles per hour one of those on- evltable speed cops caught sight o him and catching up ordered him to the curb xm officer he sakl lnnooentfy ai pulled up was i driving too fast no growled the furious officer tou were flying too low expert watch repairs by j h jordan georgetown phonetr tane block