GPAGE roux TllE GIIARLOITETOWN GllAlllIllll i’ Morning Dally (Founded in 1881) Autho ‘ n Second Clan Mail. Post Office Department, Ottawa President: Lieut. Col. W. Cheater S. McLuro Vice-President: J. R. Burnett, F.J.l. Bbcretary: Lieut. Col. D. A. MacKlnnon, 0.8.0. Idltor and Managing Director: J. B. Burnett, F. J. l. Associate Editors: Frank Walker and Ian A. Burnett. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than ' the Weakest Ink." TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1948 Mr. Sayer s Address The tax; of ii \'t‘l\' llllt‘l't'~llll"' wddrcss on firaiisportzitioii, curt: ii: Rotary (flub by Mr, 1Q . ‘ ' i - - .. . bayci. L._\_-l\< Public l'L‘lZ|llllil5 OlllCCl‘, Mone- ioii, appears lll l|lfl,'l\'.\ i-sttc. .\lr sire-y‘; at». count of the lll<1\\'lllk‘lll o1 llttults‘ iii ihc C'l.l'l\,' . . P?!" 01' ill‘: “at. zuitl of the irc-nicndotts coit- tribtition llllitlt.‘ lviiic L..\.l\'. in titc war effort, contains llllilflflilllllll which so far as we are . a\vare, \ has V lint lit-cu tiuhlisht-d before, and which at any late is qui.‘ impnuiv. in i“ totalitv. lle lizis Jilsc» sonic \\..,-g[,\\1,,[e thin",- m Say . a about the iutirisi trade, which is due fora great postwar cxpaiishg-n, lyl‘\\illli_l't‘_'_fill".l to truck" traffic zind the dcsir. Gully 0t cciitixil control of highway transpor- mnon» “l3 5"\"~'Y 5llV-"lh: as a railway man and Quite properly so. Bu: there is another side to the DlClllfL‘, as we know iii Prince Edward Island. lhe‘ (...‘V\.R_. is a public utility, mmed bvlhe pcope o: L aiiztdzi, and its prime respon- lilblllly so tar its uc lift conccrnctl is to provide flllclellt "lllfllhtrtntioii with the mainland Truck CllIlTfKS 0n the C..\l.R. car ferry are out 0f’ all l>1">l1v\'li9i _to the (‘ltitfgcs made on the \\ ood l>l.'ll‘i(l~'—L1ll‘llJflll ferry which is operated by private enterprise, stihsidized by the Lioverii- ment. The effort of the railway to restrict truck traffic by exorbitant rates runs absolu- tely counter to the spirit of Confederation, Mr, Sayer points out that before the war, fifty Der cent of all railway traffic was czirricd at a loss and twenty-five per cent at cost. No Province in Canada has a better right than Prince Ed- ward Island to insist on efficient service re- gardless of cost, because it is written into our terms of lli1‘.0n with the Dominion, Lfmii 1M5 basis of our transportation grievance is con. Wdfid. We ‘cannot be expected to look with favor 0n the lJYillCiplf of centralized control, either of railway or of highway transportation. We mm to have had too much of that already. Federal Proposal! "n According to the Financial Post, the iie\v oor of Federal grants for all provinces dis- cussed at the Qttawa conference, is said to be about $r8o mIlAIOHS. 'l'liis compares with $138 {flllllctna m tllCCflglfifll Federal proposition. This 1s the sttm \vhich Ottawa would offer as an irre- ducible miuimttvti grant in return for the prov- inces giving up the riulizto levy sticcession duties, income and corimration taxes, _ It compares with about $125 millions re- , . . . celved b)’ bit provinces in 10-10-41 on the basis 0f sticcessiori tlutv collections. statutory sub- ridics and their own tax rcveiitics as calculated for the purpose of wartime tax agreements. 'l‘he $138 liilll10f15 minimum was calculated at $12 P°Y_ Ca lfa based On 194i population. The new b?" ll $15 P" Caitlin based on i942 popula- tion. In addition. the Dominion Government is reported as now prepared to offer special con- cessions to meet particular claims of British Col- umbia and Prince Edward Island. These con- cessions Wfilild be in the form of zilternate pro- posals so couched that they would be of inter- est only to these two provinces. In the case of B. C. it is thought that the new proposal would guarantee that province a niiiiiiiitiiii payment of lbou $I9 pct‘ cmpila 0r an :iiiiittal tiayiiicnt of not lcss than Stb’ millions. This coniparrs with only about $10 millions offered to that prov- ince under the original plan. l". ll. I. is offered In irreducible minimum of b2 millions compared with an original tifter which wntild have work- Cd‘ out at only Sm million.- Assuming these two iutcriiato plans are n. the order iiiirttttctl. the follinviiig tziblc indi- cates just how cnch province would fare under the new plan as Ct)lll])2li't‘ll with the old. F i-:it~.'i.\it'.\i t-"i.iii~:iz.\i. i.|.-.\.\"t" (41 millions of ilollztis) Ofililal I lommirin Revised PrOViilcrs lhupiisnl Proposal I’, l5, l. - 3,0 . . s“) 7.0 5W) 5&3 10.1) l_’.7 Ill) 18.0 Total .. . . . . . . . . .. 158.0 180.3 A5 wcll, flit- lliitliitiioi! (ii»\'9t'i||||¢||t i5 rc- Jiorlcd as having (rift-rod the provinces a "stabilized" iuiiiuul grzuit Iiriscil on the avcrtigc of income 1nd population ovcr three years. This would assist the provinces in calculating their grants more accuriitvlv in advance and lilsn eliminate fluctuiitioi] in thcir rcvviutcs. lt \\'()\]l(l mean that in ir,4(», for example, the proyinogg would receive close tn $200 millniis based on the new stib-itly piiitviwils mid zivcragcd accurtl~ mg lo income and population in 1Q,“ 44 and 45. ' "Contrary to expectations, Prime hlinister Kl"! m his opening remarks to the conference #7 i: ‘ the importance Ottawa attaches to the neces- sity of a single tax system in Canada. He also indicated that if such a system could be evolved, the Dominion was definitely prepared to reduce personal income taxes considerably and also t0 remove doti-blc taxation on corporations. -EDITORIAL NOTE S- Nominations for City Cotiiicil take place tomorrow. 'l"he_rc are evidently to be contesLs in each of the five wards, as well as for the lllayoraltyt. fiflilli The new .\rk Royal which will accommo- dzttc one hundred. aircraft is being built in the Birkenhcad shipyards of (Tammell Laird‘. l? ll‘ * ill .\lo fewer than thirteen persons were re- ported in yesterday's issue to have been burned to death in fires in various parts of the con- tiiivut. A heavy toll, due for tlic most part, to defective heating appliances i! ll ¥ i Stunincrsitlc Board of Trade is still active lll its endeavour to obtain a reduction in auto- iruck rates on the Borden-gormentine Car Iierry. They do not see, nor ‘o we, why sim- ilar rates should not prevaal both at Wood Is- lands and- Borden. Ill * ll! W Not since the Charlottetown R. C. Cathe- dral, now the liasilica, was destroyed, has the Catholic Church here sustained such a severe loss as bv the fFre at St. Paul's, Stimnierside. No doubt it will be replaced hy a similar new edi- fice, though it will take a long time t0 accom- plish this. n- v m n- The first R. A. F, College was founded at Craiiwell this date i920; it was from this be- ginning that the valiant Air Force which saved England in 1939-41 was built, and it was to enable its students and graduates to practice uiuiiolested over wide territories that the Brit- ish Liovernznont asked the Ctinztcliaii (lovem- nicrifs permission to have .1 branch of the Col- lege established in Catiada. Permission was re- fused, and thereby hangs a tale. a v. a i: Where ignorance meant bliss. A postcard addressed to Abraham Lincoln, Springfield, Il1., was received by hilanager Hayden Davis of the Abraham Lincoln Hotel. It read: “Dear Mr. Lincoln: Please send me a copy of your famous Gettysburg address. I need it for school. Robert Bendler, zit York Street, Camden, NJ.” Davis sent ;i copy of the speech in the next mail. i!‘ Premier lanes gave good advice to the budding farmers at Guelph Agricultural Col- lege when he practically told them a little book knowledge in a dangerous thing. Theoreti- cal education is of value only when it supple- ments practical experience, and that with farm- ers must be got on the farm. Similarly a young man who has a mortgage :0 wipe out is much more likely to put liisback into his work than if he merely has to begin on the finished work of his dad. ‘l 8 1 1k Ill By 3g1‘(§(';]14§|][ with the ‘Nliiiistci- of Finance, the llritislt (lhancclloi- of the klxclicqticr has arranged to serrl a dclcgzitioii lo Uttawa to coit- duct, in association with the lligh Commission- er f0; the United Kingdoiit, discussions on out- standing financial and cxchzuigc problems with the Qmigpliaii (jovcrnnicnt, The tlclcgation will consist of 5n" Wilfrid lizidyi, .\lr. A. T. K. Grant and Mr. Edgar Jones of the Treasury, Mr. C. F, Cobbold, Deputy (ioveruor of the Bank of England, and will be i0incd by the H011. R- H- Bi-and, Trtgflgtlry Representative in “klsblllfl- ton and by Mr, Gordon Munro, Financial Ad- vise; to the High Commissiioiier. The discus- 5i0i15 are expected t0 begin about the 11th of February. u a s a ’l‘orouto eriioys the limelight of adverse criticisms. Comrollci- D. A. Balfour thinks Toronto is becoming too puritanical and wants to revive bingo games. "If V0“ Want l0 913V a game of bridge, poker or bingo why shouldn't You be alloivrd to do so." he asks. "Th6 WHY sortie of thcin are talking at city hall these days vou d think it was a sin even to walk outside the door of an hotel for fear someone would (lrzig you in." Ontario's .\llf)l'll(",'-GCIlCl'3l Les- lic Blztcluv-zll recently cracked down 0n bingo games and .\lr. Balfour, one of the four mem- bers of the citfs Board of Cotitrol, is think- ing of carrying thc bingo players‘ cause to the Federal justice Minister if ticccssary. He b8- lieves that veterans and Cllfifllilblz. groups and church orgai: ations should be allowed to hold benefit bingo gnmcs, as is tindoubtc-dlt’ the C855 in less ciilightencrl provinces than Ontario. a =4= m 4- Some of the most cotwiforting words sine: income tax was nothing but a dark twist in s0nicli0d'y's mind fell upon Canadian cars this last weck. 'l‘liu.\' were: "For PFiFllCHllV 99 P9" (gut of the faxpziyiiig public new (income tax) forms dispense with stibstantiallv all calcula- tions of tax." Eliminatcrl were "thediereto- fm-c mihr-r complicated calculations.” \Vith this‘. Rcvi-iitie Minister McCaun iumotiiiccibtliat the forms f0,- 194; income were being distributed across Canada Tllcl’ \\'C""- he §“l<l-_“"_° ,1“ "lunbfl" '11,“; would be available at district 1n- ctiiiic tax offices and ‘it 00ft Oiflffs‘ with!" ll“ no“ few diiys The first form. generally speak- ing, is fut‘ thus: iniilcitig lass than $31090 “Pd the other for those making more than that. Itor [he ulhcfg ti»; mx is stated on a fillflllillllfl of a range of income with ii slated Dfifcfnlfllk o‘ the income above the minimitiii of the rat]!!! to be added to the dollar statement contained ‘in the table. i\lr. .\lcC:inn's statement gave this fin- courzigt-ineua: “'l'he forms at first glance apvcar highly dctaih-d but the first 111197959011 sllollld m; hc the l2l\"'lllf.' imprt-ssiui. for if each tnIPDHYCY will pfuCCCfl in an orderly manner and follow ficnlty in coming to the correct (letcrmination of tax p,'1y.’ll)l(‘," Thi- simphfied forms fulfill failed to put to the met-tins; a list of prepared Questions commenting on the troposals mad: pubiic earlier bv Premier George Drew of Ont- ario. \\'lia: he did d0 was to mike very clear ilk’ llft)lll]C\'_\' ol Finance blllnistrr llslev i" fill! litidget address during the lust session of litr- liameiit when Le said that they were brim! dyrcctinll‘; it 1s anticipated he will have no dlf‘. b. _._._._- u Nova Booth °n 97°31'81". halted by iilx 0! Wlr. ll to be reaumed. Prgsegilii Diana call for the extension of el- and atreliies of w we a" ab“ to ar are abatlng, and I9! back to normal ggiflggi-eglnéztlizlgy atlugients have -Wlndaor Star. m ‘h ‘"1"’ It ' dllfl Wll ult to er Robert [mills Stevgiiilijdiih viihrdii he was a child. "Robert, you go sltuln that corner for being miugh. W- Ofderfid the nurse. The em- bryo authur compiled. After a time, the nurse decided the boy had been sufficiently chastised and said: ‘You may come away from ‘he Mm" ‘WW. l! Y0“ Promise to 0d." “_Shh, don't bother me," Slim 1h?" ‘IVE-year-old Stevenson “ ‘m re n; myself _' Magazine Digest. a "My In the current laaue o! a pup". liar weekly, [we discovered the word ergophobla , the meaning of which ls that. it Pflya to be lazy. And the writer certainly Bubmjflgd “trons "Bllment to that Every lead-swinger in the will have nothing on hla cons when he digests it. In effect, the fellow who loafed on routine and nasty chores had a lot of unused energy when he came to grl with the enemy. The “ergophobes ' really won the battles. — St. Catharlnes Standard. army elence Among the characteriaflca of the present age, the virtue of rever- ence is not conspicuo . It is ‘in- deed an irreverent age. On every aide one hears in ordinary convey. satloa the name of the Dlety light- ly used. Person: who would be offended if they were classed as non-Christians commonly use the name of the Almighty as thgv use slang words and phrases. It. ‘is a vicious habit which, when contract- ed ln early youth, is hard to get rid of. To the reverent mind, even to persons of refined taste though not of religious bent, such blas- phemous talk is repellent and nauseous. — Guelph Mercury. A newspaper reporter atrlvea to be accurate, but in the nature of thlnfl he cannot check and guaran- tee every implication of what he writes; he can only vouch for the principal facts, says The Peterbor- ough lhtamlner. Utterly accurate the following, which is said to have been written by a pathologically scrupulous cub reporter who was sent to report a church bazaar, with instructions not to make any statements which he could not veri- : ‘The bazaar was apparently opened by a Mrs. Johnson, alleged to be the wife of Councillor John- son, commonly su d to be t1 more or leas esteemed tradesmen of this town. She was dressed ln what some might describe as fash- ionable attire, and wore a hat of nondes ript appearance. She was supported on the platform by a clergyman alleged to be the vicar of the parish, and by other reputed ladies and gentlemen said to be- long to the church." When II. G. Wells predicted the Second World War in his "Shape of Thlnizs to Como," he also pre- dicted that some time after the holocaust there would arise a new civilization in which all of man's material requirements for content- ment would be satisfied, Yr-t there would be new cause for controversy because some (llS('0i‘llPfllf‘l‘l souls would insist on flying a spam? shtp aeern utterly fantastic, We have rockets that do not need the air for sustenance. We have atomic energy to drive a rocket ship throuizh space. And now we know that there will hr radar to guide it to its goal, Wells meant it. sym- bolically. Man should reach for the moon. The fact that the reach- ing by radar was done by an Army laboratory is significant chiefly in that it shows what energies, physi- cal and mental, have been diverted into the ways and moans of con- flict among men. The man in the moon must. be smiling wrylgr on these smart but mxled-up mortals. Whiy don't they get together with ther atomic energy, their radar, their television, and with themsel- ves, to make a world worth shining cull-New York Times. The Red Pine is a handsome ma- jestic tree. It is easy to dstin- guish among the threc common na- tive pines of the North by means of the number of needles in a cluster, The Red has twn; the white has five; and the pitch pine has three, says The New York Times. Each pair of the long neod- les of the Rod Plne comes from a long, scabby sheath on its limbs Sometimes the sheaths are an inch long. In the woods where the trees are clustered close together the bare reddish-brown trunks run lilizh in the air, and the follaged limbs make small top-knots. The Red thrives on the thin-soiled upland pastures and along sandy stony ridges. Its far-ranging roots secure the food that; keeps the foliage a deep, glossy green and in the sprlnr turns the tree into a giant bouquet of beauty for a few days. Then the reddish clusters of pollen-bnarini: flowers blossom ln great numbers on the branch tips. Prodigal .- mounta of pollen come from the flowers, meant by Nature to fertl- llze the ovuies in the developing cones on the ends of the branches. The Red is dlffercnt from the White pine. The White ls gracious. feminine and pliable. The Red ls straight rugged and BKITESSIVO. It la a fitting tree to go with the rugged topography of Its environ- ment. Through the years ft fares the tests of the seasons and never aakl for quarter. Though there was no city, town or village ln the country which dlil not in some way contribute to vlc- tary in the war, it is not unjust to record that three cltles did, in their own particular departmentl, more than their share, lays Th0 Manchester Guardian. Birmingham. Oxford and Coventry~two of them with an old tradition of engineer- ing, one with a new~were truly nerve centres of mechanized war. Their Influence was so rvasive throughout the armamen indus- trles that there la hardly a weapon that was not produced wtnily or ln part ln one of the three. MEIR- cheater, Sheffield, Glasgow Bel- fast (and of course, the great In- dustrial clty of londorn may have contributed heavier armaments, but few of their product: went tnzo ttle without some component produced b the lighter industries of the Mid andtlTha arnaiier links in the chain of war production are ’n rural electrifica- reporting results in passages like qhgd lo the moon. No longer does that f0 Hi5..9"ARLQTTEIQELNCQUABPIA! N018! By The Way PUBLIC FORUM l This column Ia 0R5 to» tha dlaclllllon by mngl spandenta of questions d: Interest. The Charlottetown ' Guardian lloea not nleoaau- t i liy andorao the oplnlon of siillillcfapriiaivlarovei-‘og Fe,- §§"‘._§}“},”,‘,{ correspondent; Year!- -Halifax Herald. Peace la really l; i °"°- '1" ""1"! AHEAD or ONTARIO Sun-Well! Well! So Ontario has a woman who can make flowers out of shells and fish is going to set the at/ylea for Van- couver, Los Angeles and other cit,- ies according to the Woodstock re- port, in your issue of Fab. 1st. Tlhose flowers have been made here in Prince Edward Island for years and several ladies have earn- ed a lot of money by making them. Hundreds of dollars‘ worth have been sold in one season at. one of our summer hotels, end one of our local stores here in Charlottetown has been selling tihem for years. If your "Hamilton Spectator" correspondent sees tihls he may bo- gin to think we are not in the horse and buggy stage, but he will never admit we are ahead of On- tario in anything. I am, Sir. etc., ONE WHO HAS BOUQHT THE SHELL AND marl SCALE JEWELLERY. Charlottetown, Feb. 2. FREEDOM OF THE FREQ Slr,-I wonder when will the Patrtfgit, Editor of “CliléillaecOg en " oea whining o ‘feat of Hosne. Cyrus MacMllian, at the last Federal election. I won- der why Cyrus does not atop Um- Perhaps the doctor does not read tihe Patriot. They say he has a very i te beak t. use was £24550!!! of echo press ts No doubt. a. wonderful thing, Some d? ago "Current Comments" car ed a. clever one. to the effect that. the Right. Honourable J. L. Iisley, tum- lster of Finance. had added $2.000 to his indemnity — non-taxable. Surely the writer of "Current Com- ments" knew that, the additional indemnity ta taxable in the case of Iglnlstfirs and the Iieaider of the ppos on. More recently one of the said Comments in dealing with com- plalnts about. the car ferry service lnslnuatod that since Hon. Cyrus MacMlllan was defeated, there was no one worth complaining to. which accounted for so few recent com- plaints. _ As an mlooker. so far as Queens County ls concerned, the writer has heard it. repeflmdly wld- m“ Hon, Dr, Cyrua MacMillan spent more of his time among his constituents, and leaa of his time in the Patriot Office, his chances of rte-election would have been better. I am, Slr, etc. OBSERVER. King's County, ‘Feb, 4, 1946. United Kingdom Supplies to U.N.R.R.A. Details of the U, N. R. R. A, fin- ances mulnounced on January 21, show tihat, the first elem mlllon pounds of a total of 175 millions already made available to U. N. R. R. A. b the United Kingdom Zms been prov sionally allocated as foi- ow '— S. Supplies: Slxt millions. Shipping an Relief Services: Nine and a half millions eaoh. Administration: One rnllilon. The sixty million-is for supplies includes nearly 23 millions for agri- cultural rehabllltatiun; nearly 19 millions for clothing, textiles and footwear"; nearly 5 millions for food: over 4 millions for industrlnl rehabilitation and over 3 millions rmedlcal and. sanitation, The statement points out. that foodstuffs represent only an insignificant part of the supplies from the United Kingdom, though over one million is allocated to food not. produced in the United Klngdomwtea, cookinz fat, canned meats and dehydrated beef and mutton of South Ameri- can or Australian origin. The rea- son 15 that use has been made of tihe existing bulk buying arrange- ments the nited Kin dom Govern- ment has in the mar ets concern- ed. An important food item from the United Kingdom is over one million pounds worth of herrlngs. Most of the United Kingdom oon- tribution has been allocated to goods such as lorries, locomotives. transport equipment, surplus mili- tary stores, textiles and wool. Tho h the items range from pins to ralway wagons. penhltyis the most; spectacular United lngdom aid to U, N. H. R. A, was the air despatch of six iron lungs to Prague last autumn following an urgent, B, B. C, broadcast which re- sulted in offers of no less than fifty - seven from United Kingdom hospitals Also las tautumn the Uni- ted Kingdom su plied U.N.R.R.A. wltih tuberculin or Greece. insulin for Italy, anti-anthrax plasma for Albania and i htherla toxold for Luxembourg. ugoslovla, Czechos- lavakia. Poland and Greehe have received from the United Kin dom over four hundred fully eoupped hospitals, totalling over 26,000 beds. 70w‘ 6mm inn PERFECT MEASURE The force of what. we fail to do may exc Tlhe force of what we do, a grave decision Evaded act u. a decisive deed Obllquely lhltting beyond focused vlelan Marks ilifiilmaglned by the evasive w . So each oft us inextricably la wrou Within the all-imagining miracle Whose lnterblendmg hues and forms of thought Envbiazon the divine moralltlea: The Heaven} Father and the spar- row's all: Lazarua, rlaen from his leprousles: The Cnictfled and his forgiving. call: Anik-ggltlng all men with exacting The perfect measure of the Golden i Rule. -Percy MacK~r~ '- 1lhe New York Tlmea. Lifted Oui. Na pad: or plnatera to fun with-inst a low dvopa of": painless remedy PUTNAIWS CORN EXTRACTOR—onI,v a lac appllele flan! and relief‘ comes qulclnly. Tackle your more corn today. For rapid rnultn, for m often the most lntrlcatr- and the molt vllal: the mlghtleat ef- fortu of fotuulry and forze are uaeleal without the precise and ivorked out by the revenue (lepirtment trlbuted by the machine shops. highly flntliierl mechanism: con- gnaler comfort, un tho old relllhlo Co? "nun". FUTNAMTCORN IXTRACPO s 3k at all dnlm In Inudldno. Putnam's Corn Extractor British U.N.R. one of the four European count- ries in which U.N.R.R.A. l5 0P‘ eratlng on a large scale. the others being Greece, Yugoslavia and Po- land, U.N.R..R.A. 16 11150 T991303‘ slble for the relief work in Albania and 1s to stn-rt operations shortly in White Rluasla and the Ukraine as well as over the Allied relief work iii Italy. U.N.R.R-A i. also starting on the blsswt; re- lief rggnmmtuie of all-for Chine. s no United Kingdom's contribution to U.N.R.R.A.'s act.- lvltles? In the first place. Brl is one of thirty-one uninva ed iiltrl ll triibutlnns w °°“ °"rl’.°ri°.£‘§‘n.°i”.‘ o... nex lhlli of the U.s.A. and amounting to some uhlrt. mwo shllllnis per head of populet on of the United Klflfl- dom. notwithstanding Brita n’s enormous economic sacrifices -- lng the war. Last. August; the .N. R.R.A. Couxwll decided to ask the contributing countries for another payment on the same scale. and the United Kingdom Government was the first to undertake to Dro- vlde further amounting b0 seventy-five mlll potmda. The B. Cover-intent has a now author-ind a full second - tributAon and Canada whose or? inal quota was over seventeen n11- lion pounds. is well on the way to making a. second quote available. Two other British Dominique - Austraiia and India. - have a RA funds with original ol over nine million and near-y ix million pounds respectively e United Kingdom Government. moreover placed on the agenda. the U.N .0. Assembly a resolution for the earliest. powlble payment by all nations of the second con- tribtrtlon. U O I Regnedizq UN’.R.R.A. per - nc-l the British Commonwealth hill claim to have provided some o Heat. stratxra and experts. tint/fated re- ??? Y“? 1n 1941 and la i pan rig n. e part in the Preliminary work $3. ‘pla ed by Sr Arthur Salter, the wel-lcnown British ecormmnkst who was for many year-a Director 31 the Economic Section of the e of Nations. T111 r 10M. Sir Arthur Salter was Senior uty to U.N R R.A'a Director Ge - oral. Mr. Herbert Ldhmari. He foremost. among the M.P.’a bringing UNRR A. matters be- fore the House of Commons. Il‘r0m the Government, side, the B01188 of Commons k informed about U.N.R..R.A. by the Minis- ter of State, Mr. Feilllp Noel-Baker. tit/those responsibility is the Unit/ed Kingdom's Government's relations with U.N.R.R.A. On the U.N R. B.A. Council's Committee for Europe. the United Kingdom Gov- ernment's representative ‘ Personnel E Cn Janu 10 was published th! I . t i. 1 u. iatmas messaae from t “iii-ikm.ea~rst"e“' "m "Eslom i0 . Q0 appreciation of the pmmlvt l A tllllbl lllllli l": substanttal help given his count-l’! tlon by U NR R.A. and in particular g1" and baautiflna pg‘ ttae work sggrxilee] bgnhltgfiwuall-Igd the halt. "8 °m °' ‘ * ‘ - an u R.R.A. msion 1n Czechoslovakia. i l! 7m mh" l"? and c; Lhgthgu wiiiuciaoéave lta orlllrial color. u. come om -' "my" up» the shtqslng of food. all‘ 6113"“ l tor Irowth H3311.- half ll machinery, medl supplies. melt- "ml" u; g t. uls. and lorries Czechoslovakia la "on" m "Nu-flu g \ killerl. octlonl oarelullv and v01 will be anneal at the ronlta. Got your bottle to-day. Price l" cant: pa! bottle. GASSY STOMAOIQ BILIEVED who Ia troll ato-aa Don't debs. Order yolr bottle today. Price 86 oelta. Attention! Int reached a lhlnment of up-tvdate ‘nun- ea. All inn. 4 1 l i» Q , 1D Gust Guru lint i IIIIIIIIII Qtualigtn head oil’ t.h . e ldeimlce Oontml . 'I‘o U.N.R..R.A.’a Imidon (X1100 of the General Council the lmitocl has contributed Mr. ay Whrd. the financial ememt who represented the British Treas- urv at. the 1819 peace conference. U.'N.R..R.A.’ vital auppl t- meint in Ioniilon la ln theyhfirol sfuornar of / Personnel British. but thla la ol due to consideration whkh alao “ tlom in the be American an nearly h .N.R.R.A officials out of 8S) an Brltlah. In Abbanla, Colonel Oakley-Ill g1 mizliahrnan, h haul U. . .R.A. ‘-' Head oouraa of Washington odiai a» . In the field in lur- aenlor FEBRUARY ‘S, 1945 RiA QIIIIIIIIIJ "--'-—--—-—~—-l l. F. llatcliaaii - l. 80! OPIDHITIIITI ‘Specialist: la the flt- ting of glaaaaa for the correction of ocular do» $8 Grafton Street Ioeta.’ Professional Gard: ___________ GAUDET e.- HASZARD IOITIIIQII, loldton, NMIHII, It; MONEY ‘I0 [JAN omunr a. oaunu, i“, u . A. warmmn oaunar. uln, Oauatllanllankofcornnareepu‘. Oharlottetowmlfill, NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel. 589 P.0. Box 0a llorroll and Gummy Chartered Aooo—ll.lta D. F. ARCHIBALD Bantam Trust Bdllag C‘ lottetowa PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER WWW-Pm?‘ S“ hookkebplng. ' mas nuns GIDDIN Telephone 1890-! r. o. n»; m. Oonnaught Apll. No. l H. R. DOANE it C0. Chartered Accouataata Boxlfl this 2000 Randolph I. Munch‘, CA. d the (é th m l la the nadlan leader Drury. otiher CXI-lflpld! of British e personnel are the chief medical of- ficers in Yugoslavia and Austria The tonne: la Dr. sinclalr-Imitlt who waa formu- uirvlaer to the United Kingdom , of Home Security on blitz casualties. The latitier is Colonel Gotta-ell who aerv- ed with the New Zealand forces in Italy. 01X TIE lUPK-ATII (OH-Git ll 1a lster to the Yttgoslav Government, and therefore has an expert know- ledge of the Balkan needs. The (ihtiintnun of tilils Committee ls Sir Frederick Lelth-Ross who has been Chief Economic Adviser t0 the Un- ibed Kingdom Government for over thirteen years and has played an important part in maniy interna- tional, economic and rtinmtclal conferences. t . . The Chief of U N R R. A. oper- ations in Euro —F.iltliert0 UN R..R.A‘s main fold-Ls Lieutenant- General Sir Humfrey Gale this of- ficial title ls Personal Representa- tive of the Director General). The Administrative albllities of this m8- ular British Army officer were rec- ognized by General E ntwwer who appointed him his Chief Ad- ministrative Officer The splrlit with w'n1c£h he ls tackling his new task ls shown in a remark he made tr. a recent broadcast. "as a. soldier I find myself enthralled by the job of putting right some of the des- tiuctlon caused by the war". Thmigh at the moment. a controversy mges around LlBIXlGIIfHIt-GCHGTB. Sir Frederick Morgan-another regular British Army officer who was ap- pointed last Septembe to direct the U.N REA work for dis- placed persons in Germany—lils ability cannot be questioned He was primarily responsible for Al- lied invasion plans. was Eisenhow- er's Deputy Chief of Staff, and Mr. Lehman said of his U.N.R.}! A. appointment that it was in accord- ance wltih tho policy of obtaining the services of the finest men av- allmble. In charge of the Finance and Adminlstrat on Department at the U.N.R. RA European office is yet. another British Army Offl- cer. Major General Richard Lewis, who was Deputy Quartermaster General at the Mediterranean Al- lied Headquarters under Slr Har- old Alexander. The head of U.N.- R.}! Ads Division of Healhh in Loud is Dr N LMWD% — rqaortud vfrom Iran that work on the Hab- bebi escape scheme on the River Euphrates la to be lemme‘ immediately and completed with- in four years. The scheme is in- llloney to Loan McLeod & Bentley W. I. BENTLEY. KC. I. A. BENTLEY, KO. Banhton and Aflornqa-at Law 1H Prince Street ALEX W. MATHIESON Offlou, 9O Great Guru Street Collection tended to provide a draw-off o fthe dangerous enema of Euphrates flood water. RHEU SWQLLEN JOINTS When then la an exoeaa of Urln Acid and other lmpurltlea In the blood. look out for Palm In Back, Stiff Maaclu and It aohea. You can help to " ‘ a Illll ayltem and drive out lm- pu tlel with DR. HAMILTON? PILLS. To aulat ln ulokl get. tgllllgllléelleaezaa an. uAmr. otrs nan . no pllla an mild, Dll{ oh. a0 effective. Don't delay, nae Dr. IIAMILTONS PILLS now, today. 25c at all druggiatl. ' DR AM 0N6 PILL Ii Attention Farmers We want large quantities ol live or dreamed con, hulls. ra. hol- fen, calves; also llve and ironed poultry. Good prlccl. mrompt re- tnrna. Eastern Packing Go. l ‘ Finale U5 lllley Bulldln BAIIISTEIL SOLIGIDB, BIC. PALMER & HASLAM A. J. IIASLAM, B.A., LLB. BARRISTBR, ETC. Baal: of Nova Scot-la Chambers Charlottetown. P. E. I. MONEY T0 [DAN E0. Box II J. A. McGUIGArl, B.A. NOTARY, no. BAIBISTEII. soucrroa CUIBIE BUILDING M. ALBAN FARMER B.A.. ma. MONEY 1:0 LOAN BABIIISTER. SOIJCITOR, ETC. CHARLOTTETOWN Canadian Bank of Commerce B!“ BELL & MATHIESON Barristers, Snllcliora, B. ll. BELL. M.L.A.. D. L. MATHIESON. LLB" K17. a w CITY AND IAIN PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS 150 Richmond 8t. Charlottetown. P.E.L H. F. McPHEE. B.A.. KC. NOTARY. ETC. BARIJSTER. SOLICITOR- Charlottetown FREDERIC A. LARGE aullnlt. aw. Life Insurance ls Thrift and the guardil adlan Homes. llYllllMAll_ 8i Provincial Offices: llidal ‘CRATE A INSURANCE ESTATE TODAY A few dollars invested annually, will pur- chase n guaranteed estate of t-houaarula. upon, because it. is alwaya worth par. Create an insurance estate today. The Great-Went Life la the champion of Consult your nearest Agent or write Prince Edward Island Branch Office. Insurance Since 1872 Charlottetown - Summeraidc - Montague ALLISON I. IIQLIAN Dhtrlet Manager at IIIIIIUIO onus a a. atuw puma mum at lumps rnoma nuavma. r. l. avtmnaau Iofiuanlalvn u Charlottetown. the first asset realized‘ n of thousands of Can- 00" LIMITED Mu nagers on . .M. Goodman Ila 8m, I11 Grafton 8L smash ‘llifhff '°""‘ "m - P- 0 r" “' IQ M“ 9B ' ism-y. mo... ti}? British colonial — vflmwwwowfl- PM DR. A. R. SMITH DENTIST 175 Grafton Street Dffloa flour-a: 8 to l2 — 2 l0 5 Telephone ti“; ‘L4; Charles R. McQuaid ILA. Barrister, Solicitor. Notary, Ito. lantern Trust Buildin- Charlottetown ‘Fllolla I'll] t i EYES EXAMINED i AND GLASSES riwan a’ S. Tl"'l0l' orromirmsr cu-mxm mags-u!"- "ab" "glltllfilll Plano: i013