l ‘l I I \ _ ‘k i-noe won . TIIE ‘IIIIAIILIITTETOWII eulnnnn ' Ins-Ala; Dull; Ifolmllod In Ill!) Ausbuelnel a: Second Clu: Mall. Ind Ollie: Dopnrbnlt, Othw: Indians: Hut. Col. W. Cluohr l. Iolmn ' Vloo-Prouldont: I. l. lunutt. I..I.l. lolrotlq: Uout. Col. D. A. Iullnnipl, 0L0. Hm: ma! Ihnqlng Dlnohr: .I. l. Ilia-nut, I.J.L Anoeht: llllon: Innk Inna l_lll In A. Burnett. ‘ “The Strongest Memory in Weaker Than - the Weakest Ink.” THURSDAY. JANUARY u, m: Indirect Taxes It is curious that historically and invari. ‘IPIY I119 Pfiiolc ot the United Kingdom like direct taxes. on incomes, ete._ whilt in North ‘Xinerica _w.-_ seem to like lndireci taxes, buried suitably Ill excuse dun“, “npOSI: on jewellery and other luxuries, in tariffs, and in subsidies 01’ HHYWIWYQ 81M‘ The direct method annoys us . . , _ r and 1i 15 ‘NW when we occasionally look up from the sand in which our financial heads are buried that we suddenly realize we are beihg Yflflldlv bereft ct our feathers. The IIICUIIE: tax over here is astroiigmigal enough; statisrcally it would challenge a 0m. sus of the Milky Way. But. as the Hamilton §P¢TN110I' shows in the following analysis, the indirect taxes almost choke one with their stag. gcrmg embrace. Awake or sleeping, gaging, drllllfl")! and 5imD1Y sitting down in his chair the Canadian is being indirectly taxed; the’ ghosts that walk in with his pay s00" take i; out in kind. For instance, here are a few tax revenue Odds and end; that the Federal exchequer jotted downuin its notebook last year: lrunks, suitcases, purses, bags, etc" $4,. _1-'l3»°°°; fountain pens, pencils, desk acccssor. ies, $i,o32,ooo- chewing gum, $1,207,000; candy and COIIIBCIvOREry, $11,066,000; flgars, $1,482,, 0°05 c'€a‘ell‘*-°» $49t93l.°00; manufactured tobacco, $io.66o,ooo; gasoleiie, $29,670,000; PlaYmll 61ml‘. $655,000; amusements, $12, g83.ooo. Th? "f?!" Durchase tax. which some jew- ellers pay, amounted to $5.328.o0o. Revenue derived from excise duties on matured spirits brought in $29,379,000; 0n 0n. matured spirits. $2,196,000; 0n malt, $35,121,- 000, on beer,_ $7,102,000; 0n (jlgayetteg, $72,. °83.°_°°- (This in addition to the excise taxes °11 Clllarettes as shown previously.) Taxes on matches alone totalled $2,935,. 754- T111158 Who bWlEht cigarette papers (to roll their own and save money) paid out; $5,. 5s/,857 to tne Government in taxes. Taxes on 5"" {walled 55532171050; on toilet preparations, Perfumes. em. $5,035,000; 0n cameras, films, Prmecmrs» "@- $477.°°°. and on electric and Ras stove and household and beauty appliances, $4.o56.ooo. When Ire (lack Canuck) went for a trip and gazed out of his Pullman window he could flflllre that the Government would take that year 9" IYQYISDQYIEPiOH. tickets, seats and berths near- 1y $2_O.°°<>,ooo. When he went to the race track, at his destination he could remember that the Dommw" W15 mlleetlfl! $3,000,000 from that source, and whcn he had a soft drink to c001 off he could mentally add another $20,000,000 for Ottawa from “pop." "Maybe." comments the Spectator, "they are hidden for our own good. We simply ¢0uldn't take such a beating-if we knew we W" lak"!!! K-_ Especially if we were to note by WHY of curiosity that next year, by budget forecast, such levies will be added to $75,000,. ooo war exchange taxes, $725, ,000 persona] income taxes, $710,000,000 m Corporate and excess profits taxes, $20,000,000 in 50000550,, duties and another $29,000,000 in interest Ind. dividend taxes." In The Professions v The lfilliication Statistics Branch, Domin. ion Bureau of Statistics, is to hand with an in- ""5""; '57P" 0" Supply and demand in the professions .n the Dominion. Canadian institutions of higher education grant some 7.000 (letfrecs and rliplolnag each ycar, SIX hundred of which are post-graduate. Of the others 3,809 are in Arts, Science anil i Cmlllflerffi; I0’) in dentistry; 585 in medicine; I55 in pliarriiiicy, 257 iii nursintli I76 l" hOuse. hold science; zoo in law; 30o Roman Catholic tllfiology; i5o Protestant; 690 applied science and engineering; 24 architecture; 32 forestry; I30 agriculture; 59 veterinary science, Not all o‘ our-graduates are retained in Canada. There are over 1.000000 Canadians in the United States, many of them in profes- sional fields. It is noted that the numbers of graduates In science and in commerce have increased rap- idly during the period i937-4i, that of com- merce bcing three times what it was from 1992-26. In the newspaper field 800 newspapers. and 1,400 periodicals are reported as published In the Dominion, and at least 75V per cent of their writers are given as Canadian born. Two schools of journalism have been established, one at Western University in London, and the ofheluCai-leton‘ College, Ottawa. i ~ n library work, women seem to have pretty will taken over the field, some 80o of them lllltliiflng‘ degrees. Still. the number of libraries hlvlnlpscientifically trained staff is low. Unl- vtrslty libraries have much the highest and their’: ii 43,11: "cent. _ “A: for medicine in recent years the an- ' number OLgraduaIts has been The ratio between is 971 per- doctor. In thenU. S. A. the figure i loo. mm. mucosa. from medical i-EDITORIAI. __-__ NOTES- _There certainly is a greatly revived inter- est in_our civic affairs which, no doubt, will mlke itself felt on polling day. i U I The Attorney-General, Mr. F. A. Large" reminds race track owners that, under the criminal CW1". only incorporated associations a" Dtrmitted to have pari-inuttiel betting on their courses. ti! The prospects fife that this Province will “make good" as the result of the Dominion- Provincial Conference, thanks largely to the able representation of Premier lones. assisted by Professor Latimer, Hon. Mr. Hughes, Messrs. Massey, Carruthcrs and Co. 0f the technical staff. iii! Bernard Barton, the Quaker poet, born this date I734; was the author of Household Verse: which had a- large circulation in its day; he moved in a select literary circle, among his intimates being Southey, Hogg, the Ettrick Shepherd, and Charles Lamb: Words, phrases, fashions pass away, But truth andflatuure, live through all. Q The average death rate from tuberculosis in Prince Edward Island for the period i930- 1934 was 95.7 per hundred thousand. Ten years later, during the period 1940-1944. this rate had fallen to 57. Had the Prince Edward Island death rate from tuberculosis for the past fire- year period remained as high as it was during the period 1935-1939, sixty-six more people would have died from that disease. i! It U l The 6oo-bed Canadian military hospital on the grounds of Cliveden, the Astor estate near Maidenhead, Berkshire, is to become an in- stitution for research into heart disease in children, as Canada's war memorial inBrit- ain. The 500000 pound ($2,500,000) hospital, opened early in the war to care for sick and wounded Canadian troops, soon will be present- ed to the National Trust. The last Canadian patient has left and the final work of putting the hospital in shape before it is handed over is expected to be completed early next month. Canadian authorities made the request that it become a specialist hospital carrying out re- search into children's heart ailments. i i Q * Tongue in cheek, Sudbury (Ont) police commission allows it can find n0 satisfactory interpretation of "bingo", that game recently placed under a ban by Attorney-General Black- well. The dictionary, commission members said, defines bingo as a sharp impact from sound. Colloquial and army handbooks classify it as liquor. Mayor W. S. Beaton, allowing the local Lemon branch to hold bingo games every second Saturday, saidthat “the criminal code allows occasional bingos to religious and charitable organizations and the Legion can continue its bingo even if I have to do time for it." Then, noting that Mayor Robert Saund- ers of Toronto had professed a desire to aid other municipality wherever possible as a step towards closer liaison, Mayor Beaten added: “I know my old friend, Mayor Saunders. in keeping with Torontds good-neighbor policy, will come into thetceil blocli with me.” i i If the British Board of Trade and other Government Departments listen to the plead- ings of the British fashion designers to use some of the materials developed by scientists during the war, women should have some fun with their new clothes in the next twelve months. There is one fabric, a satin material which tech- nicians call “photoltiminesccnt." It glistens in the dark with the same ghostly glow as a lumin- ous watch face. It was employed to cover the landing paddles used at night on aircraft car- riers. The fabrics made of plastics for use in equitorial war zones will give rlesgners enor- nvus scope. One material, used by Britain's Royal Air Force for rustproof insect screening. should be popular for office suits, for ink, grease or stains can be removed without blem- ish with a dump cloth. m 1i II‘ l? "Is it sensible to hate Toronto because its citizens pay more income tax than any other place in Canada? (asks the Globe and Mail). Of course we make money in Toronto! Who'd pay all those taxcs if we didn't? Do Toronto- haters want to pay them themselves? Well, then, let them pipc down! Instead of griping about what greedy, materialistic hypocrites we are, they ought to be sending us illuminated ad- dresses of flanks. Who calls us ‘Toronto the Good’? Our crime rate is very near as high as Montreal's. and if we had a less efficient police force it would certainly be a lot higher! It i: Bill)’ to hate us for that. We are always happy to give people advice on anything, and are glad to have them come and sedhow we do things here. We just don't understand this hate. Being as smug as you say weare has its advantages. We just turn the other cheek, as the Bible advises, and take it again and again, and again. In tact, the satisfaction we get out of it is positively sinful!” Q i l! i The British Government Social Security bill i: expected to go through this year and it is estimated it will be in full effect by i948. It will be formally introduced to the House of Commons in a few days. The scheme i: an all- party affair, the plan having been drafted orig- inally by Sir William Beveridge in 194a, and approved in principle by Winston Churchill’: all-party coalition "government. However, the benefits suggested now are slightly higher than those Sir William proposed in hi: famous rc- port. The reason for the scaling up is to meet the rise in the cost of living during the last three years. Unemployment benefits go up from 24 to 26 shillings weekly for a single min or woman. A hurried miin will get 4a shillings. The benefit: are payable forgo weeks without proof of need. and an extension of the period mly be granted after uPDIICItIOII to special tri- bunals. Old-age pensions will be increased from the pteofllt flat rate of to i-ltillings week- .T.t'.?__§.!'AR!=9_[IEI.9_‘51N...9951"‘A ~ Notes By neiway world. No other country can ggpcgnso néuioh munitions-rompin- been clilled the n W m“ worl . food shorting", the Went 1| "D to It: name of the world My and the wheat : pug to good Mo. or . i I: f?“ u: e n --KI ohuier Rec‘- Tho atomic bomb Isn't enough m worry about. N:v:I experts now warn that man-made epidemics n: hlxhly fatal dlaeue: might be a weapon In another war, 11in; the lproud and mighty human race, ord_ and master o the earth It in. habits, has finally grown n0 wt" that It now has a ch01 ways to annihilate Itself. Whafll ll be. boys-Invisible hug: iir tn- vlslble ntomsf-Cslgary Albert“, 151N110 Int wherever l went yesteniay-Mr. Aneurln Bevan‘: xrey pin-stripe ault. Mr. Beviin made history as the first man to wear a lounge suit to : royal state banquet. He was In order. ‘I'm in- vitation, Issued by the Lord Steward bore in the right hand b01100,’ corner, "Dresl, dinner jacket. Day dress. Servlce uniform." 'l'he King himself wore service uniform not full dress. Permission to wenr' day firm was given by the King lest any delegate, flying here, had b55311 prevented by nirwelght restric- tlons from packing evening are“ —London Express. A hobby of boo-keeping In; bu; turned into lhrlvlng, profitable business by C. Murden Johnson, n a local resident, and his example suggests that other; might turn their hobbies Into n business and get good financial returns, says The Niagara Falls Review. From n single swarm of bees, Mr. John- wn. e nature student, has develop- ed the biggest bee-keeping business in the Niagara Peninsula with splendid financial returns. The or- iginal colony now has expanded Into 675 colonies of bees and u honey business worth 330.000. ltfsny people likewise have hobbies that could be converted into proLtable business ventures. Poi-thud, Maine, ha: grabbed n place In the news because fisher- men have taken Into that port a lobster weighing seventeen pounds and having an extreme length of three ‘feet. Portland is to be con- gratulated for being permitted to view this crustacean which was de- signed ns being too tough for ent- Ing and of doubtful age. Probably it was due to the Inflrmities of age that It crawled into a fisher- mnn's net with the Idea of end- ing It all after being discarded by a New Brunswick Iobsterman for be- ing under-size and undesirable. But just to keep the records stralzht t must be noted that at. Sherlinc, New Brunswick, a lobster, weigh- ing twenty-one pounds was caught In a lobster trap (we have to use large traps in these waters so as to catch what to us are normal lobsters) and it, like all our sea- food, was of high quality and worthy of a place on any table. - Salnt John Telegraph-Journal. Most pe Ie who wrIIe at :Il could contr bute something worth quoting to a symposium on print- er's errors. A rather agreeable one is recalled by Canon Anthony Deane In the memories he has just published under the title "Time Remembered." Writing for the Church Times, of all papers he was describing some riverside scene In which "the young men and women would land for a picnic tea,’ disappearing among the l~ushes.| and leaving their punts behind them." The printer saw fit to sub-l stitute an “a" for the "u" In puntsz, fortunately-or perhaps unfortun- nteIy-It was discovered In tlmtnl There Is rather a fatality about there particular vowels. One of my own earliest literary efforts was at review in a college magazine of James Hilton's admirable parody of Swinburne, The Octopus tn the cou,rse of which I quoted t e qua- n n: "O brealt that 'twere rapture to wrltlie on, 0 arms ‘twere delicious to feel Olnsped close with the clutch of the python When he maketli his murderous meal. . . ." In this case the printer put a "u" for the "a“ In ‘rapture"—and In this case It was not discovered time. —1andon Spectator. Vlnocnt Stu-raft call: ltboutlon to an "Intellectual game" Invented by the late Dr. John Sampson, once librarian at the University of LIv- emool. The trick of this cerebral gymnastic In to take a famous poem and see how far you can oil It down, "by succeulve excis- ions", without fundamentally alter- Ing the original wood: or vlolat- Ing meter and rhyme. The doctor's own prize example was the trlm- ming he gave Gray's "Elegy writ- ten In : Country Churchyard." The original runs: The curfew tolls the knell of part- Ing day - The lowing, herd wlnd: slowly Iy o'er t e 1e The plowman plod: : weary way, And leave: the world to dnrknen and to me. After : couple of cut-downs, the stanza read: like thIs: The curfew toll: the knell of day, The herd winds o'er the lea, The plowman homeward plod: hI: w:y, And leaves the world to mo. And finally, after a few more naiinngulntfom, we come out with I l. Dusk tolls, Herd: flee, Hind: scoot: Not mo. —OountemoInI. Mr. Churchill told flu reporter: that In the writing field h: I: II- wny: open for any offer, but that did not. apply to bl: paIntInatA- bout these e add, Oh, M. M. they no not worth nlllnl." I: Wu not mock humlllty‘ jlllllhl IIIIIQ, w: mny be :ure {tut ‘the moron nmnteu :ketch flmml by Wlnltoh Churchill would fetch a prIcv: en- homeward t to f tho ouifunuwyofl-l ‘or fir!!!" zcolog’, manner There I: doubt bl!!! Ill cou a m m hi: III h II nlghfiitifodotq: Hbwnlfwiocwen: n for non-objoogliva l?“ i" "ll why Into the h ' (Jri, he ‘again “keg: , . n t l‘. .- fill.» Iaor: which Chmnll m. “so an to replace the aflpiyl h ton." Iy to 6 llliliilfi!‘ for a lulu-and f6 shilling: for hlcwlfo. ' ‘ In an . IICVITII’. PUBLIC FORUM I'M: column h GIG‘ h», l the dhouulon b; ‘oom- ! upondnnt: of qufllnm of ' ' mums. n: ourlomtowii Ginrdlan doe: not nub:- Ily undone h: with: 0| oorrapontlenh. FEDERAL HOUSING Elly-Did you notice thlt In oe- der to provide houlln for return- ed men In the old C .3. Hotel In Vancouver, the Federal vern- ment has guaranteed the clty n- galnst loss In handling the Inlt- fer. How differently things are done In Charlottetown, where the 01W Council rushed In to houn people outside the olty limits. in Govern- ment owned property, whet; they are free of cIvIc taxes Ind without asklng for, or at least without re- ceiving any such guarantee u WI! given tosxancpuver. I am, , e 0-. ' TAX PAYIB. The Great Game (By SIDNEY DARK, FJJ. In the Joumnl of the Institute of Journalists) It is forty-five years since I wrote my first llne of copy In _n newspaper office. I had, had n trlal assignment to write a notice of I lay produced at n suburban thea- iare and I still remember my acute nervousness when I sat. down to do my two or three pars In the reporters’ room, with two gentle- men noisily playlnlz shove harpenny on the centre table. It was n great moment In my llfe. From m)’ early boyhood I had determined to be a journalist. Heaven alone knows why, for If there ts anything In heredity I ought to have wanted to make crie- ket bats like my father and my grandfather before me. But l had no desire to make bats and, to my father's sorrow, I hated using them. I just Itched to write and though I may not have succeeded In writ- Ing with any great distinction, I have certainly written industrious- ly in these forty-five years. For years before that trylnlz eve- nlng In Carmellte House, I had sent. artlrle after article to every sort of periodical, and I could have fllI- ed a scrap book with the return sllps. But I persevered_,e.ncoi\rag- ed by the fact. that, at. the agr- of fifteen. I sold a very pessimistic poem that 1 called "Ll e" to the Agnostic Journal and was paid ten shlllings for it! R.B.D. Tom Marlowe was the editor of the Mail when I began, and Ralph Blumenfeld was the news editor. and it was through Blum that, soon after my trial trip, I had a staff appointment. All that I know of the newspaper business I learned from him in an association that lasted In the Mall and the Express for more than twenty years. He was n splendid man to work for. He was the complete expert. He decided quickly. He was essen- tially kIndIy, with a humorous but devastating capacity for crItIeIsm. I remember that. after reading some of my copy, he told me that I wrote like a plumber, and try as I might, I should never make a journalist! I know now how much I owe to such “kicks 1n the pants." When I left dally journalism for the quieter llfe of n weekly I had been asub, a reporter and a “spec- Ial correspondent"; I had crItIcIs- ed plnys and music, reviewed books and written lenders. Indeed. I had done every newspaper job except writing racing tips. And what a good llfe It had been. Charlie Hands, the wIttIest man In Fleet Street history, once sald that the drama of contemporary llfe ls played especlally for the benefit of journalists who are glven free seats In the stalls. But It Is truer to say that we see the drama from the wings, where the make- up and the make-believe are far more obvious than they are from the front of the house. Beyond the Trnpphig: The experienced journalist can» not be deceived by ornament or fool- ed by rhetoric. The great. often ap- pear comlcally little to the man with the note-book. He sees beyond the trappings. For hlm the whole world Is In Its slippers. The Journalist has more varied contacts than the man In any other profession. The great mun of the Sta wlII. on occasion, welcome hIm as warm- ly as the great man of the Stage. Zuni; \ BREAKERS - There Is : furtom freak: [nos To breakers, SIIIBI-III, " foom Ihlt . which IIIIIFEIOIII-IQSI rise to face Thewhltesandbealttfhki“ ‘ 1 night; ' which hover, then come ow“: ‘lb lose their frenzy. i. .i......... “.5? °“"° we And leave thin mark: for Ilho next stun 2555a, comm. mun They Hoe h splondorou: wrath m Thcmlelwgza In more, and lhk from A fa ‘siiu-umimmr. A: futllielyatll-ie sand: of llfe. o -DuvId Earl: Lewll. Bridgetown. N. 8.. In "Kandahar-d. or th: front half of a :0 on the grisly, of Normandy and a 5,000 ‘waited’ d; tow uslon: buLwIth a n of humour. :11 men coun with him but none too much. ' I hlve Irnown generation: of ju a the men who were old when I we: nag-T. P. O'- onnor, Georg: Robertson : ofhen- from whom I recoI ldvlce and en- nzement- the men of my own axe, thefiuf of good Oompanlont. and the man who are younz now thnt I um old who treat me a: I mm md a bro er and do not nud- dm me by foolhh and lnulncero deference to my gre halrl. And I claim that In no wn k of llfe can there be found :0 little lclflsh dds. :0 much enulne frtendllness, so much Inlnctfve appreciation of the supreme truth, “all ye are brothen." Good fellow: with whom by the grace of God I have lived my year: and with whom I pray that I may be ‘associated until the en Arthur Wnlklev once "described Journalist: n: “the journeyman o Ietterl." We need not quarrel wIIh the description. It I: better to be an expert journeyman than a p0:- lng Boomsbur "llttersteur," Ig- norant alike o llfe and grammar. Trill: of the Sub The subs, the lent conlldered of the craft, are perhaps the moat expert. I write without prejudice, for I was a sub only for a short time and not at all a good one. Is there anywhere on this earth, at lenct In time of peace, where the pressure I: so hectic as In th subs’ room In the hour before go m; to gens? Here Is the pLture by H. . Nevlnson, In an article that he called "Farewell to Fleet Street"; “Six columns of speeches in al- ready; how much?’ asks the sub- edltor. ‘Column and quarter.’ comes from the head of the table, and the cutting begins. Another sub- edltor Ieees together an Interview about t e approaching comet. ‘Keep comet to three sucks,‘ comes the order and the comet's perihelion Is abbreviated. Another guts n‘ blue-book on prisons as savagely as though lie were dlsembowelllng the whole criminal population. .And all the time the boys go In and out with those oinnge-coloured bulle- tins of the world's health." Gifted Men of Letter: But many journalists are far more than journeymen. Recently I chided an "author", who suggest- ed that journalists should be pre- vented from writing books, and I asserted there Is better wi-Itlnz every day In newspapers than In 80 per cent of published novels. I can recall he name of a gul- nxy of working journalists, not “occasional contrlbutors," who have the right to be considered as nift- e'd men of letters. Among them Geor e Steevens, H. W. Nevin- son, . N. Brallsford, Philip Gibbs, Robert Lynd, Herbert Sldobofh- am, Wlckham Steed, A. G. Gan- dlner, E. B. Osborn, J. A. Sgt-"ider, J. L. Garvin, C. E. Montague. Char- les Morgan, Ivor Brown, Bernard Darwin, Neville Cardus. Beach Thomas, Ian Colvln. And there are many more. . The young man mnklnlz his way Into the newspaper wngld from a small rovI-iclal weekly may pro- perly eel that he l! joining I splendid company. No Projudlcoo We are no respecter of persons. We are not given to banding out. bouquets. Many of us refuse to take serious things seriously. Some of us are amused by other people's strung opinions and prejudice: We have our own Ideas of honesty. ‘In my young days it was a point of honour In the reporters’ room vio- lently to disagree with the pollllcnl policy of the paper that: employed us. As technical experts. we have no prejudices of our own. I once know a man, for example, who af- ter helping to bring out the Chi-Is- flan Globe, finished his week bringing out the Sporting-fluxes. The Institute of Journalists ls startlmz another year with an- other distinguished Presldent, and I have welcomed this opportunity, an a very old hand, to wish hIm well nnd to add my testimony to the great service that the Institute has given to the craft. I flnllh with one lingering fear. I have carefully added the F. J. I. after my name at the head nf this piece. It Is a possession of which I um very proud. It Is Indeed the only such possession that has come to me, except an order with ~,_~. WHY HAVE ih,son£ :b,rEer; my,‘ 5 :1 t, .5 % t. IIIIIIIII .’_ Inc's IIAIII nssroatnt , Adflhlolshmnmotlpro- ymd lnnllflo: , l IIAII ...*...-:..-.-:.w-....-- - : III] tbeuuudatthoresulh. ' Gil Milli Io-d: . PrIoo Mnxt: no: bottle, osssr ' sromons BELIEVE!) Ev porno h I: Iroll or. r."'~.l:r'-i.e~rl : In of ‘Ian’: Stomu Mixture and no how ' It wlll relieve :II dldrculng vlonu. Evan: Stomnoh M]: > V b BIIY P A _ JANUARY a1. i946 ti. F. llutsliuson 8i SIIII I OPPOIITIIITI “Spoclalllt: In the fII- ting of gluunfor tho corroctlon of oellu do ‘B8 Grafton SING! fail." .i|:.|li A» u-i-tr-nu!‘ I Professional Bards GAUDET 6' HASZARD Inrrlncn. Solution, Nolan-Inc, 1m MONEY ‘I0 [DAN omens-r A. owner an 1.1.1 A. wnnrnm oxumifr. min, Cnnulhn Bank of Common-o: III. Charlottetown. P.-E. l. NEIL W. HIGGINS TIIE 2 IIIIOS l0 Grout George Street IIIIIAIWMMA? a gorgeous star bestowed on me by the King of Yugoslavia, and that, I suppose, wlll be suppressed by Mars al Tito. T. England —-(0P) —The destroyers Napier and Nor- m/an arrived at Devonport recent- ly with more than 130 Ions of food from Australia. For Foot Ailments CONSULT II. .I. n. IIRUWN. DJ’ Orthopedic BIIIROPIIDIST eourxmr WF ARE PAYING HIGH PRICES FOR DRESSED CHICKEN AND FOWL The IIoyalPaoking Go. ' Charlottetown J. D. JENKINS, Prop. FURS Send orbring all your Furs In as soon as possible as the next receiving data for the sales is February 4th. Prices are good. PROMPT RETURNS .I. II. JENKINS Charlottetown c/o The Royal Packing Co. By Ken Reynolds PIIOIM I5 but It nriimm: Iho Chartered Accountant {"31" “"2" g1, :23 144 Richmond ~st. Improve: the ammo- Charlottetown boat-gag? -m¢:l:l§§ “ggg Tel. 589 P.0. Box 0o lhl-pmenf of SIp-ruhto i a‘, A" u"; , O-OGO OO-OOO Ilorroll and Company Cluttered Aoaoutmt: D. F. ARCHIBALD lantern Trlllt Blllldln] gmiimsuiwu PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Mlmeognphlng ans-dang: 2:31:11: bookkeeping. MISS HELEN GIDDIN Telephone 1800-] . . ,1 I58. Connnught Apt. No. I H. R. DOANE 8: C0. Chartered Accountants I! Grafton Sine‘. Ct-nrlotfefown Ill (heal Georg: Street than 2080 B0! “I ii I ii w. iuxn on. cnnnuvrnrown v1.1 n“ H’ ‘m’ McLeod & Bentley w. n. BENTLEY. no. s. n. nun-mu. no. ,- B ' nail Attorney-n kw 1M Prim: Strut ALEX W. MATHIESON Offloo: 90 Greet Georg: Shoal Money to Inn Collwilol BABBISTEB» SOLICITOB- BIO. PALMER 8: HASLAM A. .I. IIABLAM. BA. LLB. MINISTER. ITO. Bu: of Nov: 8mm: Climber: Charlottetown, P. I. I. MONEY 1'0 LOAN 1E0. Box ll J. A. lVIcGUIGAN. an. NOTARY. ETC. IABIHSTEB, soucrfon count BUILDING M. ALBAN FANMER 5A.. LLB. MONEY To, LOAN o IAlllSTEB-i soi. onon. er . cnnnnorrzrown Cnlmdlnn Bunk of Commune B168 BELL & MATHIESON B, A" D. L. MATIIIESON. LLB" ILO- AIIorneyrnt-Lnw LOANS (IPIROCITY AND FARM Cbnrlottetawn. EIJ. H. F‘. McPHEE, B.A.. KC noun. mo. BABIISTIIR. sonrcrron l_II_ey Building Charleston!’ FREDERIC A. LARGE BABBISTEI, ITO. Ihllllp: IIIIIIIIII, Ill Gnfton SI- III: l“! P. 0. B0: l“ OIAILOTTETOWN- PIJ. prefix. n. siurrn DINTIQT l" Gill“! SCIQQI ‘Offloolonn: ltoll-l I0! ‘IUIOIIIOB III‘. Cbarlc: R. Moquald :4. IIIIUII, IQIIQIII- Nlflfli I80. . Ilrll hi. llllllllv 1 FIB: “II xxx x x xxx x AA thins IIlX-AMINID l ~ ' GLASS! ‘FITTED _ .I. l. To?!» , ononnrptsr ~ ya... I: : fowl l l ‘illIlll\l\\I'6IllIlIl\IlI<l\l\\l.t\1IIIIIit-.-