MONDAY, er Your 2 Wsistllnes . Are Not Alike . .._ so-better wear illfililll , IS YOURS AN AVEIAGI FIGURE? Wen! style 533; Hal bum- wiib mulching olairiuklo autism. Mode In (our Potions b, Avllflgl, Straight, m» Hip, ardSivomSlidehnien- urzlonlngiinilb-IH. (Western retail pm: slightly Iiigiisr.) / vents any “cutting ldGDRE E~ M9LECD Li? You don't believe thatyou youarestanding-measure it again while seated-and you'll find a difference of ll/g to 3 inches. Convincing reason for wearing Ncmo Adjustable Walstl The patented horizontal stretch at the top back takes comfortable care of your midriff expansion . . . pre- Adiustable Waist designed for YOU- because there ls one for every figure type. $5.00 The Oentral Guardian This column is reserved for news of local Interest. but advertising of e newsy nature may be inserted at 5 cents a word. strictly pay- able in advance. CRASWELL for hiotographs. CONFEDERA "ION LIFE LNSUB- ANCE [r9188 MClNNls BAKERY will be closed all day Tuesday owing to the death of Mrs. Andrew Cud- more. L-356-5-5-2i. JUVENILE COURT — At this Court on Saturay a. young lad was charged with breaking seals on freight cars lil the railway yards. He was given a warning and re- turned to the care of his family. WAR sERVlCES office removed. Payments on Queen's County, King's County and, city Canadian War Services Pledges can now be made at the office of Major '1‘. Edgar McNutt, above the Cana- dian National Telegraph Office, Charlottetown. L-360-5~5-2i. GUN SEIZED — The City Police are conflscatlllg all manner of guns have tlvo waistlines? Just these cigyi. An air-rifle which is . . -= - b ~ - - you-m-ddi-wh-l- rllrrrm: “l?.‘.‘i...T-°‘.§§'£..Li€i,'i.‘3a the police have made it KllUWll that l such weapons in the City will be seized when seen. ON LEAVE —- Sergt. Pilot John C. Lee. R.C.A.F‘., and Sergt, Plluf, Arlii AlTlflSOXl. R.C_A.F., of‘ Winili . who iaceived their wings reoenty at Sumner-side. P.E.1.. are spend- iflfi their leave at the home of the formers mother, Mrs. H. L, Lee, 195 Holmlvood avenue. -Oi:ta\va Journal. in”. There's a Nemo g ENGAGEMENT R. Potter, Ohio. place at Bloomfield. N. J., ill June. 195 Kent Street. V announcing dcnlh of tllcir son-lil-law, \ OO+O—O-Q—Q4—Q O-O§-Q~O4-O-O-O-OO§-Q-Q+ 0 ' wllar HAPPENED O O 4 o 3 AT uallrlllallll 9 _i_ c 1 By PI-TPX-LR nrzxnntcr LQQQOQOQOQOOOOOOVM lcontlnued‘from_ page 2, __ ,: _. _.._..___l_._ _. .._ They went bark to the bedside. Tli UilllCliL was saying complain- nx; ‘No doubt Nurse BlilCOIl is iilnw, qllosl efficient. But 1 our .cl why the Rolvley vcmnzln coul n't. come. There was no il("'.l to flake Nurse Balcon from her‘ away duties in London-none re you I have my reasons ' to have you in Nurse nus," said Doctor Leon- qlllfe crmly. "Or with us. blame her?" " ‘ Ali's. Ralph gave a sharp nlolll Ii pvolesf. "How can you say .u'll clililgsl" Al‘; ll».;..l‘ Barbara, don't be child- ish. You can always console yourself h‘; renlenllxlring that in any case do the dirty work, when there's any to b“ done. Comr- and look at your - 1- Dr. lkOllfiffl plays abou; an lrbzlills toillperilture p so " 5m: leil the wily into a dressing- rnonl “linen enjoined. "Ralph will have to move out into a guest-room Fire's better. Not the best ill-ht might be too pain- - ilmkvil over her shoulder, . rlll- sillllr came again, objective, quite ivilllnnt personal interest. "That lvrlr wile-re slle was sleeping, vOll see, when it happened. The sug- grastlolu might be a little enlbari-as- sing, especially if he did push heri- out of trio window.’ “The jurv seem to have settled it that h» didn't." said Molly rather drill", glad that the door tilrmlgh which they haul come was closed. and the patienfs quel-ulmis voice only a murmur on the other side. "I don't know that I believe much in the law myself. This was Ral h's dressing-room. Like it? Conve for mother and child. The baby's in here, by the way?’ She opened a small doOr in one corner. and show- ed a tinv room. one wall almost sn- tlrely curtained window. s. frilied cot standing in the centre. “This was a, powder-closet. once. We had the window put in s few always seemed made a night- nursery." 'I'll€Y looked down won the fleec- ing child. and Cleonds voice was low, but her face revealed nothing more’ Climbs Tow all. ax Rate ‘ them. husbandfs family have no fVIflFs-firct Keir nlolorcn from Char- O ent, years ago-it l 0f‘ tender than distaste. The baby was red and wrinkled and elfin-lookliig little daughter, Shirley. l 1R. still, small or three months. ailu ’ “o, mom, 551mg‘ Kennedy, announcer and control‘ i... “Ralph wanted mm here." said 1'00") 0110mm!‘ B! Rfldlfi fiifllvfl’ NORTH-AMERICAN Clcoile. "Ralph was mod about hinl. g1“??? 191i sijllufllfly 1110mm! ~61‘ TRANSMISSION Barbara was glad to let someone 3113313- “llew he has “ccepwd a‘ Eastern Daylight Saving Time else take care of him. 1 detest child- 905M011 “m1 the CBC. at R351‘). Throughout ren myself-at least until they're old 5:330“ CHNS 0f m?" Clly- OX1 i316’ WAVELENGTE eve of his departure he was tend- enough to look human. Lot's go _ back. 5mm we?» gored a fill'[‘\\’(‘ll by ills co-vrorkcrs me ROW“,- wOman 1S pyflctjcully, lit the homo of Ml". and Mrs. M. H. half-unto ' l0 01141116 d1\‘€1'5l011. and Dr, Lieon- behalf of lile management and stliif ard did ltnbv taking his leave. lvll-sl, by I-h-Col. K. S- Rvrcrs. station Ralph seemed to be an easy person,‘ 0W0" “ml 11181111201‘- to sldetrzlck, which was perhaps as -"—~¥——~--—— lvcll. A few casual words in a soolll- Personals lug voice sot i191" purring and i". was not rlifliclllt to he artificially kind 10‘ so slilzlll and helpless a creature. .\lr. J. P. Al-C-ISOHII-‘ril, Aioniicclln, was a visitor to the City over the Molly made conversation of an ex- weekend plloramiayrtlflnd as tile doctor and; “ ' C . 15'“ eom e saying whatever‘ Mr. Arthur Calrll of the firm "Clcone enjoys f Cahill and AlcPhoc, Selkirk, shouldn't. be ca‘ explained Mrs. O v Ralph Wllll surp sing clilrilv. llvr 59pm the “YJPKPUU lfl llll‘ iii‘): small hands fluttered at her lips; ‘- she had VPTV little COlllfOl over Miss Myrtle Taylor and Miss consideration for me or anyone - ltolmvn to Granville on Sunday no consideration at all. Not even _.____ for each other. You hear how she Mrs. Moses Glligllion has return- speaks of Ralph. But he ought to ed to her home in Cups Traveme be home bv now Do you silppcse after spending the wlntey in we zinything could hnve_" l U. S. A, She broke off, hearing the unmis- takable sound of a car drawing up Mr. Joseph R. MacDonald. stud. upon the terrace. She sat up. e g. 1 15g _. “That's Ralph. 1t must be Cxhulghr,‘ paesxsegfthllgsghaxlfefbéltlglgg Hes here" Hes come saturdfll’ 0" his way to Caledonia W118“? he will take up his pastoral ‘To be Cllnunlled) duties for the slimmer months BRIG/ADHERE CAPTURE Her friends Wm regret to lean M. W. oi’ the serious illness of Mrs. Rleardon at her home in this city. Mi. Reurdon, Sanitary Officer. has 115° b?“ confined to his home with 3Y1 lfllured ankle for some time. WELLINGTON, N. Z. -(CP) - When Brlstdier O. H. Bell, in Charge of manoeuvres in Northern New Zealllnd, approached an ar. morcd car, he found the crew l- sleep after a strenuous day. Fina]- ly dissrrned the crew was warned of possible fatal result; of their sleep and released. ed from Montreal and Boston wedding. “CURIOP G0 CHEAP All the "genuine" brass Buddhu the miniature inlaid templ¢ bell; and the sacred bronze cows "of gx- qllislte Eastern workmanship" which Australians used to haggle in the liars of the east are now ealp in Bf in h thgygfus gnads. m g am’ when ors , m magkets ofheBggad, cyCgvilrtdt 20107217 M! Hone Kori. 1t m ‘ Bmningham. g WW 9y Stay m rnnoAr_ SORE?>A TRINITY UNITED CIIUROI speaking on the theme “Jesus Ind Prayer" Rev. Hugh Miller mid ill that although there are many arguments for prayer, the greatest "W W’ I11 ll that Jesus was con- “nuiuy PYlYl-nl W His Father for I ma. Muzosso mm WITH no cartoons dance and strength in all his did-lily life. People may think ma; they "n Bel alone without Prayer but instinctively when trouble 00m‘?! they cry aloud for help. That prayer is instinctive, Samuel Johnstons once said, ls it; b"; argument. Therefore we must make firflller a daily occurrence in our V05. as Jesus did, so we may measure up to the fullness of 1-115 stnturg, .. The morning music we; under the direction of M . A. R, with the choir rerllderln lthaendfrg them "Immortal, Invis ble"—-Eric Thiman. The morning service w“ broadcast through the courwsy of station C.F‘.C.Y. Rev. Mr. Boothroyd spoke at the ""1108 service. His theme was tho‘ Darable of the ninety and nine ‘~69. sheep and the_ shepherd's search after the missing one. God con- siders everyone of enough impor- - ' tance to search after them and i. -- x '5 does it iii man different ways. How often do lttle, unimportant acts of ours set mother's feet upon the Road of Lira-a kindly, j IWQI-fi l Heaviest in the nation's history, Canada's tax tum-n sml is “K7110? than that borne by British citizens. This graph compares the amounts paid by citizens of Britain, Canada and the LZS. in average lurks lrflllllfl INCOME m 5,000 eooo 7°00 word. a friendly lumri! God also; works through fillHlCP and tile "still snuill voicll". bill His ill-ent- est ministry is through tile ex- ample and life of Christ. Though hr searches for lls in all tires-c eooo 9.000 to (Xi we filld Christ. The evening nntllrnl was. "0 90d Who Has PreparecP-G-aul. _ _ ANNOUNCE- Rg , 515073-041". and 111151101118 A- Mav- Presbyterian Church, Donald, OItMOIIItlIIEI-llc, annolunoe the Rgv, A, J, l m unpormnt export engagemen of le r dau to Lois xt II Cor. (my 0 er - Wlnnffred to Clifton R. lgottcrr, son ll“'l§‘,”~i§§k‘il.l§LT also‘; an seen Th oil greatest prize of all. has of lVLrs. Potter and the late Cllftonl are tempQral, but the things which Mfwfiilile l0 Hike‘ are not seen are eternal." ooas T0 HALIFAX -_ Mr. Sid] Canada and U.S.A.-31.az m.. 2553 m. (to 10.00 pm.) 4.0.10 m (fr m , . ..,, ,. t , 10.30 p.111.) l F. Young, simian (‘l]Ll,i.lP(l, allo “as (from 10,15 um) 31,32 “run “no 1L “ads certainly time for Someone‘ presenter! lvllll a Gladstone brig on w 1245 EDST Mrs. A. A. Hennessey has return. Vlfililo in Bosto Ah to: ' Dorgan-Kelley wxeddislg? FY3318 (lviglllf Efilil "fflsswiiicifillillimi"? ‘i’, h" Royal Hotel. who also oatlicfsdeflolilxllftt‘ first °1 a weekly “m” o‘ pm‘ for llllll llllT Fllll l Y0lIll Bueil It up rifle new and feel llllllllll n ...l'"' "".l;"“'i1'.'.l.l‘."i."' .. . moltiluporhn our pours llilelndilolldilomjlgllidtlwlllqfi , m l Wlzflmuliver gstludsl order l load la your Your“: l one lllmlrb ilhm lwi oufnelfisitu" - 1 ~. lssdschy, dizzy, tinned m?“ sll the the. vswenpnqt 5e em you new. Try Fruil-s-llns-ysufl be ‘simplydelighledluwquicll yedllhslliles new lllifl- 35¢: 55¢- nlfifi-"lfiivr limriifllt? IN MEMORIAM DIALCOITMA-CKENZIE There passed away in Valleyfleld West, on Saturday night, April 26, 1941, Malcolm MacKenzie, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. (nee Hanna MacLean. Lvndalel, Murdock Mlw- Kenzie of Valleyfield. The deceased was in his 90th year. and was one of the oldest icsldcilis of the district, l-le lived his whole life in Valleyfield where he was always a respected citizen. He leaves to mourn their loss a sorrow- ing widow, nee Katharine Martin of Glen William. who tenderly cared for him during his years of falling health. _ He was one of a family 0f Seven. two of whom, Mrs. Katharine Gold- ing of Valleyfield and Christie of . Surrey, P. E. 1.. survive. ‘Iwo sisters |Mary and Maggie, also two broth- {alis John and Roderick predeceased ‘i in. The funeral service held at his late residence was conducuod by v '1‘. O. Hughes of the Montague assisted by Ebbutt of Valleyfield. Mr. Hymns sung were “The Lord is L‘362"5'5"1l-‘ my Shepherd" and "Jesus Lover of “i my Soul." FAMILY BEREAVED - Word Pall bearers were Messrs. John has been received Saturday morn- Sample, Norman Nicholson. Plus ing bv Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Campbell, steel, the Nicholson. and Alex Martin. Percy, Walker in the Montreal General {erv Hospital. Mrs. Walker was formerly. Hughes, Miss Lucille Campbell. Besides his SOITOWlHR wife Mr. Walker leaves a‘ John MacKenzie, Norman Commlttal in Valleyfield Ceme- conducted by Rev. T. 0. RADIO Western Ca nada—23.53 MONDAY, MAY 5 6.20 pm.-—‘London Calling‘. 6.25 pnr-‘Hello. Children!’ Pro- gramme fcr children evacuated in Canada and the U.S.A. phL-THE NEWS. pm-‘Questions of the Hour’. p.m.-—NEWS IN FRENCH. p.fl'l.——TCl’lllyS0ll'S ‘Maud’, set to music n; Arthur Somervell and sung by Dale Smith lbayrl- tone». 8.00 p.m.--'l‘1'lE NEWS. 8.15 pm-‘Listening Post‘ 8.20 D.l'i1.——'[10l'ldOn Calling’. 8.30 pmr-‘BRITAIN SPEAKS‘. Ta k by LESLIE HOWARD. 8.46 p.m.—HEADLlNE NEWS AND VIEWS. commentator: LIND- LEY FRASER. 9.00 p.m.-"I'he Music of Britain’: ‘Singing Shipbulldgls’. Songs of Northern Ireland’ sung by the Queen's Island Mala Vozce Choir. 9.15 p.m.—‘l“ront Line Family’ - Eplscde '1. The adventures of the British Family Robinson in war-time Lmdon. Written and produced by Alan Melville. 0.30 p.m.—-'CANADA CALLS FROM LQNDON’ (in collaboration with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation): Canadian Regi- mental Concert. 10.00 Eight-DEMOCRACY MARCH. 10-15 nm-‘Az Your Request’. 1030 pan-The stones Cry 0m; _ 1: l7 Gough Square, E. C. i; ‘Dr. Johnson Takes It’. ‘Hie 6.45 7.00 7.15 7.30 grammes constructed gound historical buildings, in London and other parts of Britain which have sulfifered damage or deg. truction from Qennan mflnb5_ A BBC Production: Made in England. 10.45 pm-Orchestre Raymonde, d1. rooted by Walter Goellr. 11.16 p.m.-'I‘alk "Matters of Mo- merit’ 11.30 pain-RADIO NEWS-REEL. _ 12.00 mn-The Daily Service. i 12.05 aJm-‘London Calling’, 12.15 snL-‘BRJTAIIJ SPEAKS’. ‘Mk by LESLIE HOWARD. 12.30 a.m.--THE NEWS. 12.45 earn-Close down. Interpreting The War B! Edward If. Bomnr Associated Press Staff Wrflgy Hitler's speech of world defiance him-l “P1011811! that Der Fuehrer has come around to the view that this l5 dell-NIH! l0 be a long struggle. W718i he failed to say was s; 51g. fllflcflnt as what he said. Rfillflfl-lhg to the German Reich- fil-B-G-on- another-v victory he omitted any hprzdlctlonwotfdan early ma,“ w c e r . '- knows I warhttedze “am God WW1 virtually all continental Europe subdued, Hitler saw fit, too. o omit any timetable for realisa- tion of the axis new order. only last Dec. 3i. by contrast, he Pfbfllalfnod to his fighting forces that ‘i041 will bring completion of the greatest victory in our 1,15. ed merely that i941 "will go into history as the greatest year of our revolution." It could be that the essential truth of an old military ssyin is beginning to impre itself on it. lfl‘—".l'0u can do amost anything with n bayonet vim-pt nit on it." Rilnto land of "Arabian nights t/JFY." T0 the Reichstag he predict- 21 IWar reaches (By The Canadian Press) The war has reached the land of the Arabian nimhta dom for sq. the modern whose oil wealth Britain and Germ- presslng a significant is a British creation, but the land itself has seen the tides of empires rise and ebb for more 6,000 years. Babylonian. Assyrian, Chaldean Persian. Greek, Roman. Saracen and Turk have held sway over its arid wastes and fertile valleys, During the first Great War. Brit- ain wrested the territory from the oi ‘Pill-lush empire, and under the Aegis of the fllen colonial secretary. Winston Churchill. saw it set u u the mandated kingdom of mo, ruled bv the elected King Felsal 1. In 1927 a treatv with Britain pro- vided for relinquishment of the mandate. and in 1930 full Iraq sov- ereimlty was recognized. Britain. however, retained the privilege of using all Iraq facilities in the event of war or a throat of war. and kept as a base for her modem magic carpets an airdrome about 60 miles west of storied Baghdad. Spent Much Money steadily Britain has spent money there-the total being estimated at $1,000,000,000-largely to develop the great oil deposits around Mosul and I Klrkuk and elsewhere. | Production in recent years has grown steadily, reachin more than |4,z'12.ooo tons in 193B, e last year It‘); which full figures are obtain- a e. I Britain also has taken about $8.- 500,000 worth of barley a year. The United States has s ent up to $1.- aq dates. the e . fed the British Mediterranean fleet [via 1,200 miles of pipelines. The line. starting at Klrkuk, runs west and south. one branch reach- ing the Mediterranean at Haifa, Palestine, and the other at ‘Hipoli, French mandated Lebanon (not to be confused with the Llibyan ‘Tripoli in Africa.) Only One Pipe Line Now Since the fall of France, the Trip- oli llne has been reported shut off. Britain drawing her supply entirely through the Haifa branch. Should this line fall into un- friendly hands at any point. the British fleet could encounter re- fuelllng problems. Thus the importance of Iraq looms large, even though it. has only about 3.500.000 people and much of its 116,600 square miles of territory is dry wasteland. Until four weeks ago, Britain's position in Iraq seemed secure enough, the country being ruled by the friendly Emir Abdul llahas re- gent for his nephew, King F9158] II. Fe al. who was slx years old Fiji- day lMay 2). became king on .tns death of his father, King Ghazi 1. in an automobile accident April 4, 1939. On the second anniversary of Ghazys death, a Nationalist coup overtlrew the regent. Britain, de- notmcina the action as Axis-inspir- ed. landed troops on April l9 at Basra under her 1930 "threat of war" agreement Sabre engine New addition To air force LONDON. May 2—-(CP)—The sabre engine, from which Lord Beaverbrook. Minister of Aircraft Production, partially lifted the veil of secrecy the other day, is the latest addition to the growing list of new WW engines and airplanes with. which the RAJ‘. is being equipped. The napier sabre engine, with its unique construction giving it a small frontal area, is a portem. of Bri- tain's determination and ability to press on to air supremacy, says the Air llfiinstry news service. - Test of actual warfare to date has proved the soundness of British air design. Fundamental principle has been the stress on armament. With bonlfber airplanes this was can-led to the length of sacrificing some of the possibilities of higher perform- ance. Gemlanyb more lightly- armed bombers planned for the war-HE 111's and DO 17's for ex- ample-were several M.P.H, faster than comparable British types. But they were not so successful as British bombers in dealing with. at- tacking flghter planes. The three main bomber types with which the RAF. fought dur- 111g the first 18 months of the war -Hmpden. Wellington l-nd Whit- iey-have been given such increas- ed performance and striking power as to be almost different machines. Behind these re-designed bomber types are forming up fleets of new- er and bigger bombers—Brltain's Stirling. Manchester and Halifax, America's Boein B. 17 C. and 00n- solidated Libero or-all faster and more heavily defended. - l (‘the government announced last, week-end that the new Typhoon, described in some quarters as s "super-fighter." has a 2.400 horas- power napier sabre engine.) His figures as to German losses and forceemployed, and his shout- ed contention that Britain's inter- vention was "the greatest strategic- al error of this war" will prompt rebuttal. First-hand reports from Ameri- can observers as well as British reports conflict with Hitler's claim that the German lost only a fsw more than 1,000 officers and men killed and that plane losses were relatively negligible. Neutral authorities have estimated further that some 40 Nazi divisions were employed in the Balkan cam- paign. out of 200 or so under arms. rather than the equivalent of only NAVAL fidlmls ‘ IN LAND slurs HALIFAX May. 3—(CPl--Notes about the Navy gathered by a rs- Dorter in a visit to the two Stada- conan. and bases where they tmln liltlrr gave few clues to Ger- many's future course of action. The intent was made clear. how-l cvrr. to woo the Turks. to try tot ways. it is we who hold tilc key wean the Greeks from lflyfllly t0 to HLs ontrancl‘ into our lives. mid Great Britain, Mid to give "Etff-,ghgilgelll/Vgllglzlglssllittilelgflfilfldgs riff‘? 001v by our slllccrr: l-nnlrlllon ran uni pence" to the Balkans by in- yo" atpgrgugslfln__ l-orpnrativg southeast Europe into got-g to s,” is fllyfn ,, m] any; B“ and mask drill ashore. Thgy still chortle at Btadscona. One about the lucll- K lho Third Reich's economic political system. the men who go down lo the sea in Willffhlpfl, , _ Youngest ap licant for a com. mission was a 2-year-old American .e\‘"”ln. D O 5 C O WW ber with a. harllwver. It wasn't e80- ly but this victim wished it was. The silence and speed of hun- dreds of the blue boys at the Slade- cona two dinner table is o. constant surprise to Chief Cook William Nuttal of Saskatoon and vlcwrlfl . . some rush ttuough their heal)- meal in ei hi; minutes. . Substant- ial food wl h little fried stuff is on the menus. Chief Yeoman Edward W. Stub- bizlgton. wlxmlnez. of the signall- ing school has turned his office into a haslilar for plane models he clips out of funnv napers- - In ihefiflme office is . CE. Hawes of Tor- onto whiz véton 1thetD.S.M. at Zeu- bru o e as war. _ Reggulatrlg Pety Office at Sleds- cona Two. Samuel Kennel-d thought he had settled down for life on a farm near Efmonton until the war brought him back into the blue. He left lhc R. N. in 1921i . Edward Kennedy. lth"‘f "oiman of 55811518. Was an R. N. man with Hench lght naval forces until France cap- 'Ilhe futuze sailors learn to recogn- ize enemy and friendly warplanes before going to sea. . .'l‘he bell which tolls each. passing hour bears the words "HMS. NlobwlBPfl." The Niobe was the first Canadian warship a transfer from the R..N. Four or five mongrel dogs keen St/adacma Two themselves. keepinz a strict eve on the gate. lest any intruders should appear The sound that ends the meals is One, Mike. ll mongrel with a drwrnant less chap who went into the chain-w e and the Railway... We’r-e both better off!” “ O happens I'm a farmer — located near a big railway divisional point. I've noticed time and again -— when the railway is busy, I make more money." Yes, and so do thousands of other Canadians-—so much so that railway cal: loadings are accepted by economists everywhere as one of the most important indexes of national. prosperity. The source of car loadings then becomes the vital concern oi every man and woman in Canada. What sends them up? What sends them down? The answer is: The activity oi industry. Most of all, perhaps, the activity of Canada's largest industry -— the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation. Hundreds of thous- ands ot Canadians depend, directly or indirectly, on the $60,000,000 which Dosco pays out annually in wages and other expenditures. l Ii you are a buyer of steel or steel products — or of bituminous coal -— remember Dosco products are more nearly 100% Canadian than any similar products svsilabls anywhere ’ DOMINION STEEL AND COAL CORPORATION LIMITED rxzcurlve AND SALES OFFICES: can/ma crmsnr aunts, lviourRrhL-qlvanzllousrs mo SALES orrlczs ACROSS cums e Only Producer of Shel and Shel Products In Canada Wholly Sell-Sustained thin the Empire e ' Here's What the Buget Means t0 You ‘ouch of bulldog. in top pet and is a‘ familar figure at the daily Divi-l sons. sr. MARY'S noAlT Report of 5t. Mary's Road School i for April: Grade VII-l. Dorothy Bristol, 2. Ieonsrd Pineau. Grade VI-i. Pauline Doll-on. 2. Planets Pitre. . Grade V-1. Eileen Blanchard. 2. Mary Gallant. Grade Ill-A 1. Ivan Dolrtm. SW50. III-B i, Douglas Blanch- m Grade I-A 1. Eunice Pilleau. 2. were“ l r e -B1.LouiDol,2. Kiéheien Gallant. so N“ rn e I—C 1. Marie Pina . 2. Shirley Pineau. ' u Every man w ho Perfect Attandance: Marv Gsliam Carl Pincau. Vincent Gallant, 1.90m Pinenu. Rov P-neau. Louise Doiron. Mhisen ant, Joseph cum- ‘W645 "ARR/ED K325575511; ‘l 700 35.00 N0 TAX N0 74x 750 137.50 /v0 764x N0 mx 1. 00o e250 /v0 TAX /vo mx /.2 50 m2 .50 5o. o0 22.70 - 1.500 217.50 moo 35.00 2,000 340.00 v5.00 6000A 3.500 475. 00 275. 00 n5 .00_ 3/ 000 682.50 400.00 2/5 .00 ‘l. 000 95;. 0o 67x00 #50. 0o I z 000 4332. so 1.000. 0o 735. 00 l 7' 50° 1400-00 4965.00 £63200 ' l0. 000 zsoo. 00 z, 050.00 27/000 l /5. 000 6.272 5o 5,625.00 5209.00 E0. 000 9J0)". 0o a. 330.00 7. c9000 3°- 000 If-OSB-fo x-zoazoo 1;; 62/00 5°- 000 88,392.50 26,965.00 26.43200 ' 75°00 4'5» 671-50 49.93200 4:. 29m» '00» 00° 64s 347.50 (4.875. oo 6/, 299. o0 00.000 1oz 3/150 99. e/roo 99. eozoo ' “Q09” "$795.00 139,270.00 13a. 655.00 500,000‘ 4/1.. 720.00 sch/aqua aaqyaaool This table shows what the average Canadian taxpayer wlll conlrllllllfi 1° "ll! year's War effort. 'l'iu- figure In the first column is total "\- cnme; the levy, computed fur a full year Includes national defenl-‘B lax and Income tax.