flireuu--v-vflfl”"“‘- __,_.-.-—--@~ --- - llllAllllIT]ETOiVll_ Gllllllllllll out; awn» u um Aatbcrhl u Eoiiond Chin doll. hill Offlu - Depnnlinnk- Qthn ~ ‘flu Guards! u» b0 Manned at: . Ilb loauw loop. lumen. N» I- Th NIII Sh». mil-Nils‘- . Goorl I'll-fill» - - Wain’: Will-abbot. l1 Slltu it. Illlllll. NJ- llotropolitan News Annoy. llll Pill 5R. Mfllilill- United Olga: Stolen. Chilean harlot, Olhwn Oll- I. Mill-II, Lord Elllll‘: 80M‘ Ottawa, Ont. J. Fine. 3M Boy Sh. Toronto. Ont. Wolfe's News Stsnd, Snilbiiry. Ont Old South Nuwn. Cor. ltllll and Washington lbw Boston Ilolallnfg m» Agency, rum animus. Miler!- Presldont: W. Chester B. MoLnn, M}. Vloo-lWeside-nl: J. B. Burnett IJ-l. Scorctaryflieut Col. D. A MiuiKmnon. 0.8.0. ldllor and Managing Dlreoun: I IL Burns". IJJ. Aaloclnts Edllon: Funk Walks: and Inn A. Bruno“ “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than . the Weakest Ink.” FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1946 Special Security Tax The Winnipeg Iirce Press, disturbed over Mr. llsley's problem of reducing taxes while ex- penditure is so high, forecasts something that well my happen. The something is a special social security tax which would take the form 0f a percentage tax on all incomes. The FFCL’ Press rejects the theory that soc- ial security measures, things like family allow- ances, in themselves create prosperity. It quotes the Sir-Dir, Commission report as saying that such measures —— "transfer payments” — do not directly add anything to the income of the com- munity as a whole, and afldSiviiTllC (slmlsl 11' port put no credence in the current tendency to regard them as a tiieans of assuming prosperity. As a people we cannot pull ourselves up by soc- ial security bootstraps, however desirable such measures may he in themselves.” ‘ ‘ Tim \Ni11nipcg paper proceeds: "The limit of social security spending . . . is the capacity 1nd willingness of the Dcoplc 1° Dllfl "P ti"? money. On the existing tax structure it would appear that the government must either main- tain substantially present tax levcls 0r fi-Cfl chronic deficits. But this Outlook Wctuld b6 materially changed if the government were to expand the contributory element already prcs- grit in the unemployment insurance fund. By means of a social security tax, the burden of family allowances at $250 millions per year. ti“, pfQpQ5Qd $30 per month old age pensions, $200 millions per year, and health insurance at, $130 millions per. year. 001110 be tlffifltll’ “Sed- “Such a tax could take the form of a pcr- ccntagc rate on all incomes with very low 5x- Qmptions and a ceiling 53y $3.000 P" Yfal- This, predicts the Ottawa Journal, is what we may well come to. The people who kept telling us that all these social security measures were going to increase the national income, and therefore wouldn't be felt, that they weren't go- ing to increase taxes, which would be progres- sively lowered as s00n as the war was over, now lnnow that they were wrong. The)’ ha" dls‘ covered that the production of wealth must precede its distribution, that it is not Possible f0 iticrease national income by having Jones spend Brown's money when Brown would have spent it himself‘, and, in their awakeniul!’ “WY a"? proposing to get out 0f their predicament by the device of a new tax. ' i Newfoundland’: Surplus Newfoundland had a. surplus of $4,340,- 000 on revenue account for the fiscal year I945‘ 46, according to an announcement by Finance Commissioner \\'ild, who, howeverysairl he ex- pected a 4mm of .1. least $750,000 for no“ year. Newfoundlands fiscal year coincides with Canada's and ends on March 3f. Total revenue for last year came t0 $33,‘ 437,000, this being an "all-time high" in the country's history. Ncwfotindlands estimated rcvcuue for next year is placed at $33,250,000, with expenditures expected to rise well in ex- "cess 0f $34,000,000. " This latest surplus brings the Ancient Col- ony’s accumulated surpluses since I940 f0 $23,- 669,000. Financially at least, Commission Gov- ernment has proved a godsend t0 the people 0f Newfoundland. The Soviet New Plan Soviet Russia, while keeping the U. S. O. lively in international politics, is by no means neglecting her domestic interests. The new YSOviet Five Year Plan Calls for bringing up the ual production by 1950 to the following lev- I9.5 million ems of pig iron ;‘ 25.4 million _ a- of steel; 25o million tons of coal; 35.4 mil- iron. tons of oil; 82.000 million kllomatt hours 0'! electric power; 500 thousand automobiles, r27 million tons 0f grain, 26 million tons of sugar million tons of cotton, and daily freight ._nn railways up to n5 thousand cars. t 5:950 Staiecntcrpriacs, including bwar-‘ravaged "districts, apart from num- _l enterprises, are to bepreatored or lt and put hito operation‘ within the five ye a. , branches of industry, transport, com- “ agriculture and livelfocltwfbrming d5; gnniiderabil I‘ ndrlndemqnt. , ed" cfiucieadegfitate expenditures- flll uflllly services‘ in towns iflll 7 flp million rubles in d930, ll" _394°¥'fill1"¢- ~ » . is. claimed, will ‘rise to r-ED| I URIAIL N0 I-ES- _C@r Owners m". iteceived a fortnighfs warning to put their autos in condition in pre- paration for R. C. M. P. inspection beginning 15th inst. u ‘u _ u n- ‘ _ Evlflenll)’ it is 850210 be a‘$2,ooo,o0o sub- sidy whether the Conference fails or not. Tlic Federal Government by the mouth of Financial Mllllsiel‘ Ilsley admits that that is the minimum to which we are entitled. Premier Jones and his fellow delegates _are remaining at Ottawa in the hope that the minimum may be raised, i! i‘ U ll Senator Sinclair is to be congratulated on the stand he has taken on the Margarine Im- portation Bil], a measure initiated by a Liberal member of the Senate‘ in tlic sci-called inter- ests bf the consumer. As a inaittcr of fact it is much more likely to be in the interest of U, S. packers and exporters, who wish to increase their market for the waste fat of their pro- cessed productions. It is not in the interest of farmers 0r the consumers of Canada that but- ter should be substituted by a synthetic of in- ferior quality.‘ i I i and author, born this date I469; was second Chancellor and secretary from I498 till I 512 when he was dismissed on the victory of the itical wisdom on the bases of humanist school, subtle, ivorldly-wisc, unscrupulous, full of cyn- icism and opportunism; high principles and Christianethics being spurred as political ini- possibilitics, until Machiavellianistn became syn- onymous with everything that was evil; today he has not a few disciples who accept The Print-c and subsequent works as their political Bible. at 1v 1k m The provisional estimatcs of i945 income. earned by and taxes collcctable from,iudividu- als show that less than 200,000 persons carn- iniz from $3.000 to $10,000 annually constituted only about one-twelfth of all personal income taxpaycrs. Yettliey will contribute, according to the official analysis, close to 30 per cent of the total of individual income taxes collectable. The average, tax payable on incomes at these lev-. els is approximately $5300, ranging from four to I2 times as much as the average tax on those earning from $1,000 to $3,000, u n m w London reports on the world food short- age give a very fair and correct picture of the situation, but omit one most important fact. [t is now realized in well-inf0rmcd circles that the U. K. Government deliberately withheld the pub-' lie announcement of the degree 0f the shortage, lest the result should be an increase in the price at which the U. K. has to buy food. This effect, of Government attempts to rig the market, is the inevitable result of Government sale and purchase of important coummoditics. i I F The Rt. Rev. J. C. Mann, Assistant Bishop of Rochester, and the Rt. Rev. Samuel Heaslett, land by air this week for Tokyo to resume their pre-war missionary work in Japan and re-estab- lish contact with the Anglican communities there. Before the war these comprised 37,000 mem- bers. Bishop Mann was Bishop'of Kyushu. Bishop Mann as Bishop of South Tokyo was arrested by the Japanese at the outbreak nf mu" and imprisoned for a few months as a pol- itical susipcct. They will be joined in Iapan States. c w n- a The British loans value to Canada and the U. K. depends on the intelligence of public pol- icics in both countries. Enough money is made available by it, to take a case, to pay for the entire Canadian exportable surplus of wheat for nearly three years, at the present price. Since the price of ivheat is bound to rise, the value of the loan will automatically alter when this oc- curs. The loan is big enough to give every iii- habitant of the U. K. $30 in Canadian goods, which is not a large addition to the consumptive capacity 0f the British people. Therefore, it is extremely important that the U. K. Govern- ment should conccntrate its buying in Canada on those goods whichrare needed to restore the functioning of the British economy; not 0n goods to improve the standard of living of the British people at once. ' I Q i No war for fifteen years at least is the ‘opinion of Dr. Leopold Infcld, professor of mathematics in Toronto, University. A genera- tion of proper education against the destructive use of the atomic bomb could bring world peace even thereafter in this opinion. Discussing Run- sia's knowledge of the atomic bomb he wagered that the U. S. S. R. would have the same knowl- edge of the bomb in I948 as iiow possessed by the United States. "Russia”, he said, "is not as far behind in knowledge of the bomb as peo- plc would like to think." The opinion of scien- tists on the matter ranged from two to six years. Russia would not think of an aggressive war for the next 15 years. This belief he placed in the necessity of Russia's need for developing its own territory and‘ rgstozlni!‘ W" 55111520 ‘ , ‘ Two Montreal men and a wmiaifan al- ready arrested while 300,000 counterfeit sugar and butter coupons were under seizure ln a rdid by the police on a printing plant. Enough svfllfll paper to print another 500, , ilk? mllwfllrl printing press, fourcetuof plains and other equipment were also belted. Counterfeiting rum sold the falls 41011 h in , ilrid. Aooordplittl Niccolo Machiavelli, Florentine Statesman Th Medici party, and retired to write works 0f pol? Assistant Bishop of Sheffield, will leave Eng- Jqiufngl a to the» rethiléra'nt' , ‘about $4.50 ‘per iiuiqirq n: in stated, with or; v THLCHARLOTIIFIUW‘ Notes By The We; 1-‘ We don't understand this rnovo 1x tho imhig 1 at? it!‘ W‘ yb “hi? Next Wlntu we my got oomiwt in driving our hands warm in be w we ‘“ . Just a. lltitle elect-rte heat- lugooili-ollcd '13 1n aleatheror ru be: fabric an treated from the , does this t-rlck. -Sclence News latter. It in Joni plain uynlclan to any that people do not take an inter- efiit in the well-being of others, who is the mos: vehement penici- pantlnoheevgiunentaswblam or mnnpled fmders when twig can; brush other? The guy w in el vehicle. and ln fact. didn't arrive on the scene un- nll flve minutes after the crash.- Wfndmr Sitar. Surplloeu from prowl linen lllltlllnF greases and cassocks from wart e ded » (Berks) Church, The London Bun- daw Empress reruns. ‘Flue “nightlew were remnants of a vlll din-r ty géoviding “sown: and ams for poor worm ." garments have not, been distributed for eius. e-y were fcimd Ln an at-tc by the new rector. wllldls vuow IkInown tho! 65g; or or an epoch-m discovery was made b the British textile fnxl-ustn‘. name y the manu- focvure of cotton material which . °°.‘;“’......“r‘°‘°'°;ll;. ‘.5 poser: g ‘y e assess the value qf hhliifidlswvery to the textile lndtisti-les of the whole world. The new materials are making their first, a peannoe 0t a. fashion display in anchester and mousing great; admiration amongst the experts from all nations. —U.K. Information office. eir, ls sad. He thinks the public should sym thin with him. Al. Christmas lamented that. there was a “hell of a black market 1n turkeye" and he didrvt lcnow whak. i" d“ “so .. posed .. oranges a oris ex him. Says Sir Ben, "It's a sad thing to contemplate that there are such vicious people in trhe land." ‘Pilot's 0J1. Ilhe public have a duty here. They should be conscious that they are hindering the Food Minlster ln any and all tfhelr under-the-count- et deals. Thegknow he has a big ut equally the public g pfileclsely why the e News, London. The United ‘Nations Charter makes fire/vision for a world DOlXOQ force. t provides that each mem- ber nation shall participate by. offering to U N a force of mm mid equipment. the size to be de- termined by the U N. military staff oommime. The ccmmlt-tce already has helld preliminary talks and ulti- mately the world police force will take sllmpe. ‘The-re ls an obvious and dpreeehig nee-d, however, for s. worl police force now- the soon- er, t-he fer. M-ariv months may 815% before the mllita staff com- mf ca work out i plans 1n detail an them Into effect. For the coming critical months it. mould be possible for the Sec- Wlby Council and the military staff committee to eéitablictti a, tern rary force. —Provzdence TAKE TWO NOTES BY . Ham are being made for a ro- sumpt-Ion of the floral displays which were a feature (if the East Princess street. Gardens of prewar ports. Such a windswept position, plus the impurities of the atmos- phere produced by locomotives and adjacent, motor traffic. is anything eroome such problems theicity by Anglican clergy from Canada and the United “mam Egts. Mom 0f opt in 10 days to a fort-night. Some become shabby and have to re- even earlier. Of ‘all the dif- crorit plants used in thwe gardens, azaleas are r osrt ‘pup- ular. With t ese some the display tihls spring. The success attained by the British food ministry in feeding the people dvurlng the was has encoiu- - ed the growth cf communal nan-ants used by a fonnerly sandwiches to work or retuni home for the midday meal. Originallv 0o provide for workers, these moata/uraiifs have spread ood. restmmmts ln . Smith, the British minister for has mud that. the government th , when o . to in: mime ii bill gl Mil-bor- illeu to communal tenements. flt in wt timing an ' endnn the ‘W. jiellguwiria ‘limes. in. main Wdllh, Ontnrbi now su- Ben smiui, u... Food Mlnlnb “d NOW 8 NOKGC in J existence. - . h Scotsman re- m"! but ideal for flower gardening ‘Do Y lsleiogledtore- films clientele who thepro instituted dhlefly ln bod-out most o1 the industrial areas. They t bhoftheni Illa labial‘ lo- iIInQIoI Myers come again, if necessary I m. Bit‘. READ V W!!!‘ POINT It!!! sun-I widi tb correct. report in yours of the Both-rm West. Point. Ferry. which states e Oombln ls formed and la headed by me and that I was the only one unpainted, I may my that while I urn much lnterolted I rm only one of a committe; w- Dolnted to gather what, informa- tion we couldL regarding mush n service. r r with Mr. Keith Mathews. secret _y of n“ mm. mime. Dr. ‘nnton, John Yep and W E. Mflllfllhlll I did in. . R. E. Hutch, ptesld ‘ Northulnberlund Ferric: Ltd. and secured much valued in. formation. But so for u a com. puny being formed. we have serv. ed notice of our intentions through the owner dtanueh. l-nd ll: 1s the intention to have a company in- corooriited as boon as possible. As chairman of this committee 1 relative to this service be addres- to the secretary or any m‘. gestlona of interest. could be m“. ed on to any of the {allowing mun/bars of the committee: Messrs. Clarence Moi-Macy, LLLA "r13. Ramsay 1.1.1.5., A1. r1 Weés. Alberfon: Black. Alberton: 3mm". 01mm Rev. w, n. Monaizhan. Albertou; m, Mum“, Tmmn- 01-8011: H. A. 07-9810‘: John Yco. Knutstord; or g.‘ Wilfred Tanfon. Dresldenl. of e Board of Trade. Alberton. I iirn Sir. etc. GhSaANFORD PHILLIPS, ‘yum?’ P. n rImnn of Committee. P. W. C. ii RURAL TEACHERS Blh- ADlm-e u ed ll deilmes have failed to ‘bcrgiiiign iii: minds of many I do not mean IwIi-lwllfllv to boost the Mayor's fieecgh £11’?- 1; WOUJd like to give . c em ~11: -- minder of some “(into lliem ‘ m seem to oonsldeiio q did n“ HOW many is... "W1 washer Slve loaihedllaydfliwrh: lfglvrgntiv of thenli r11? In t 9 m". a $05908 v cold country Rfme- Dflfflllre glora ggmboomappetlz- luréi llwerwigltmosl. half her 2335i W8 t: n e1- wt", Perhaps unbroken. a. ve siiio 1 a. c as room wvl either n0 fir-so: one Just. recently lit. and mcegd w rihr.‘..“i‘°i* “m” m u» 1' ° 8" Y work for a/eftyngrade (which la tisuauv eight Then her Grade x pupils mm; {me half hour or so before school "M. for zeometrr- wim does the jlworgural teacher do? qet 1| Mm aialknollkghthe teiiclhws 1n P‘ . . - e expo n6, um qs. really ilirlder “Si! m. 1W?!" 141 5881a at?» make smelytlizgli: understand this i 9 lllllrv to k a/efyllllv "mt" work. Don't titled? 1H w may day, film-talking fifty 0r more lessons-no flu minim Derzgmdsulto relax the tired mind and WI. 6Y2. Wholly g0 comes ui u» quickly. The headm- in Particular attention fnqbci‘ “"10! Ptllinlls. mtln clam perha m. butlmfllpl talking an plantation. HOW B1831 Bfllfl la . . thonqho G11 OIPWOII avtz been Dion, ‘P TB-Clfplflll] iqspm In my eimerience. few ent-ly principal o! g more - 5i is risii ‘E "tPlilfil-jc- FORUM i ' best. of lief ability that more pu in "i" wlar lesiiim 1y between Plymouth 0h. N07. aln honest-to-goodnegs qr. m" “l 5555 “e if would ask that any conemonderice o m And round iibout Thee are its rock; m! lng imns! th ent- Socleby." lucid had society in connection with a Errol 1n Jelly, 831 ernment also gsv . Arm m, Mm‘; mo, left. nits z‘ , ‘Comogshlnl down o» Dortnll of. Thu oiiter boinrindory to thorn’: - donutii‘ t - Treelesb-ulriahneltered to the winds g And fashioned ‘by the imam of the Oh Island lgrovlnce! much we owe - e . For all my beauties-all thy mum Hue fresh“: the un-lirom. u. tr-ltazni 1&1. thulltbrytli a . , . . The waves thal break in timultlnt wuii réufifiuowdo to ‘hm! their onwardJweep. Ahiizltu etbabom-browu-land a rm, ~ ‘they lift non: tlu oout their > broken cliuin. _ ma: um uuninii mum: upt- ‘rhq riouso btandsi by nldllli l. Blessed b‘ the mariner. when tgmpesbs frown ‘ - And through uhe gloom he sees the nnl urn. A5 o'er the waste the black night closes d ‘ ‘ . c arms. The soil that falls not. and the fruitful farms: Along thy border breaks the etern- _ii um. .mr-.i~:.1. A m ltfagagiisc. moo. ._. -_..- .- -- - R RED. Island, Lady lfiptle-y was patron- ber. "Ric buaau ," gun, "began at, 12 o‘ ock sharp; l: H. V. Huntley and Indy Hunt- ley were there nearly all day, and were considerable purchasers. This visitors and purchasers were mun- erous as the result indicates. Iii- dced, the Court: House was crowdq ed to excess throughout the dazi The article; exhibited for sale d great credit tn the Ill and mu ' as well as to the kind feelings of the ladies of Charlottetown and vicinity, of whose labors we have, every reason to be proud, and for which the indigent poor have every regson to be uteful. The cum realized was i‘! .3‘ . In Indy Mary Fitzroy’: time it was found ve difficult to get. a mum sufflclen iy‘ large in which to hold u bazaar, and for wsm of n better place the ladlu od the lded to have their sale 1 " This was g whlc She sailed (hi; on Ohmrlottotawri until 1838. when m wan driven on shone outside of lied (now Summer-side) hour diu-rln: a heavy gale. As was oonderrmcd, part of hei- was, ‘ i‘ lhewlnter takmou; Y‘ wade we aviino off 60W I l d took the aht with ‘it. or our on the stalls were formed of caavpc the whole ship decanted e with flags. We no informed that. m; 59,1 aiwoaaoful In: m? chlvllry." ,0. o. c flirfihe Si a ~ moat 0°2£l‘".‘....‘.' ‘...'.'.'.tl;"i."""...i. if»; nil; uh rollol h: upturn. Your lb: m5," ,0 "M- 2r an] on all u. A adieu-y. rubber-count “In ad‘ fur-blah’: proper pnxn when avoid " l W0 hlvc I Onnolou LIIII~AII Elna. I I‘ I ‘ gin: flégg. ‘axperluacfld In align: d. glllk OIIVCIJI-TATXM VI l! Bu’: Dolly i- Roda filrlltnl. COII ‘IQ U8 A1‘ ‘Oolgfil, WI CAI, macs‘ . ' PIG WORM POWDER lt. will thoroughly lbollsh tall Inca of worm: and the health of your bard. ‘ Prlcoldoenllpcrlb. TllE 2 IIMFS DIUGBTOBI ‘ l0 Great George Street All Moll Order: Glvan Prompt Attention. r infant. atnrylatoldoldionar rinse w h took plume in old St. Pa“: Obuzrc . many lo were cirpon,wu th oornci-unlhwny Hoilmourrlodoff by fin Q g Wm n1"... Rue; ,\!» .. . =~tn none rrzsr? i‘ ifi . T . , for lln _,c traction of oeuju 4, woos-r i ' v-vvm Chlrlfi R. liieoiirii h“ . ./ ‘Pill ' cumimmuwdh’ g Phone I'm- °"++6+Moo{oo-oo4.»“,, NEIL w.» HIGGINS Chartered Accountant I44 Richmond Si Charlottetown ‘m. s89 l’ o. Box a; oooooooooooooovo-ooooo”, "MTG" and Company Chartered ‘smackin- o. F. ARCHIBALD Intern no}; Bllfldhq Charlottetown ovoo si H. R. DOANE & C0. Chartered Accountants u 0mm» sum. Charlottetown 0O loll ‘ t lamb W. nlaanlngadim i McLeod & Bentley W. l. BENTLEY. 5.0. J. L-BINTLBY. ILO. Bllfflbifl lid Mhrnuypn - law I54 Prlnoo Street +ooooo++kooo+ooo++uw BELLY& MA'l‘l:llESON “time” rffflmibri“ u. L iinunison. 1.1.11. no. AttnrneyrsH-aw LOANS ON CITY AND FAB-M PROPERTIES COLLECTIONS Ill Richmond 8t. Charlottetown, 11.5.], BR. w. n. .,cinsoi - Chiropractor ‘ lllllll‘ Grullilto Charlottetown a an rim» s0. ‘fhollfl um FEEDER“: A. LARGE . IIABEIBTIB. no. Pllllll Blldlin." o Phonon-l“: ' ‘r. 593.‘; s OBARLOTTITOWN. rm DR. A R SMITH owns: HI Grnfhn Sh!“ Olllou lion-I: l lo lip-l bl Telephone fill. ALEX W. MATHIESUN BAIIISTIB- JOLICITOI. I!“ 01mm JO Great Georg Stun ‘time: u i.»- bounti- PALMER & HASLAM x A. mama, 54.. nun IDAN P-O. Bu ll PUBl IC STEWGRAPHEB Ililnolrlililng QIQ,IIGBIIQIH bllllllllll I188 nun fools ; " no r m.‘ _ in Quantum J. AgblcGUlGAN, in. ~ two-ran. no. . “55‘i'un'“h33.”i§i°§5°‘ It Arum titanium uunluivilililllu