PAGE TIIE_ ‘GIIARLOTTETOWII Gllllllllll Morning Dolly (Founded In 1887) Anbulua n SOWIIII cm: null. PM Oflln Department. Ottawa Incident: Lleut. Col. W. Checkl- S. McLul-o Vlue-h-vnldent: J. B. Burnett. I’.J.L Secretary: Lleut. Col. D. A. Msolhmon. 0.8.0. ldltor and Managing Dli-octor: J. B. Burnett, I‘. J.l. Auoclato Edlton: Frank Wulkcr cud Ian A. Burnett. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.” THURSDAY, JANUARY, l0, 1946 Financial Prospect \\"hat rwll ilnmeiliiitely strike the taxpayer reading the Lh-llirii) proposals for Dominion- Provincizil lnuilcing, says the illvlllrvfll Sh". is that lllt‘\' iti-lihcrntcly peipetuiite the system of tluphcatc iiiszrtion which heretofore has been Grin: so costly, and which the Sirois Commission roundly COll\'lt'l‘lllU(l. But that is not all. Ihe Sirois Conlmis- i i not possibly foresee the extent to whiQ the vlvti would ziggrtivate the basic proh- lcm. Its fflhill was written when peacetime [Joininioii txynciiiliturl-s, i039. stood at $553 millions and l.‘\‘(‘lltlCS at $503 HIllliOIIS; W119“ the first war vi-ti- nl $118 millions had inst been spent; \\'ll‘.‘ll tlu- lulillcd ilubt stood at $3.0 bil- lions and the curl-ring charges thereon at $l23 millions per \'k‘ll.‘. People were still thinking ill terms of thr- l-"rsl lircnt War when our totzil war cxpcnilxmrs- were lcss than $2 billions. The hzird :'t'2lllt_\‘ of today‘ is that iu the current iiscnl war thi~ Dominioifs expenditures are cstintati-d lll $4.050 millions; revenues at $2,515 nlilliotis The funded debt. last Iklarch 31, stood at SIRJRi-l millions and the carrying charges were $351 millions per vezir. The rec- ent Victory l.l'.'.l! has tidded greatly both to the total ilcbt and tin- CZlfl‘\’ll' charges. On i\larcll 3i, next, tho duht will fir: close to $16 billions and the carrying charges it excess of $400 mil- lions. Expenditures on this vast scale. of course, will not continue but, when the emergency is over, the Doiiiin_ion's normal budget will be not less than $1.79) itiillions or more than three times that 0f i939. Indeed. it is estimated by competent authorities that by r950 it will have risen to about $1,000 millions and that debt serv- ice will devour at least $450 millions annually. It is unnecessary to itemize this budget. ‘The outlay for civil government and debt service- just two items-—will run to $1,000 millions per year. Undoubtedly the post-war budget has been swollen by social security expenditures like family allowances ($190 millions per year) and may well be increased by additional outlays on old age pensions and health. Whether or no these items are warranted, in view of the bur- dens already resting on the taxpayers, is not a factor in the present argument This is so because if all such expenditures are ignored, put aside, the Dominiorfs rock-bottom budget will be so great as to require to be financed in such a manner as not to cripple the productive capacity of the country. And this will only be possible if a satisfactory settlement of Do-' lllllllflfbpfOVlllClfll financial relations is achiev- ed. Reviewing the abOve quoted figures in an article in the Winnipeg Free Press, Mr. Grant Dexter writes: “How is the Dominion to col- lect the taxes which will be required to fin- ance thc national budget? After all, Mr. lllicawbefs dictum holds as true of nations as of individuals. Cottsistently to spend more than you earn is, indeed, the path of misery. If the Dominion is compelled to rely for revenue upon indirect, regressive taxes -— like the sales tax, customs duties, excise taxes, etc, — the burden 0n business and on individuals will be intoler- able, The cnly way in which such vast needs can be met is by direct or progressive taxes— the income and corporation taxes and succes- sion duties. These taxes are based upon capa- city to pay. They are taxes on profits accruing after the business has been done, not on busi- ucss in the course of transaction. Even so, they will be a serious burden and a discouragement to initiative until such time as Dominion expendi- tures ilecline or the national income increases." Australian Immigration Australra is making the solution of the im- migration problem a question of the first im- portancc, chiefly because the war emphasized what vras tacitly recognized before — the dan- ger of undei-ptpulation. The laps got close enough to invading the Commonwealth to im- press the need of greater manpower on every Australian. The iivlxiiiiiiiii number of immigratits that can be absorbed is put at 70,000 yearly and nat- urally British settlers would be preferred but Britain no longer has a surplus though Australia hopes to got =,o.000 British orphans. Shc may also scck ziuxx) Poles who fought with the Royal .i\ir Forcv. lll atldition to other European war veterans. A The Canberra government, however, is ap- liroaching the question of peopling the coun- try froin more than one angle, the most ef- fcctivc being tlit complementary one of build- ing up sccvindniv industries and trying to in- dllce British nunufacturers to transport plant Ind personnel lor production in Australia. The expansion of industry, of course. would pro- duce a better bzilatice in economic life and meet labor fears of ixccssive competition. Another plan urged hy the immigration minister is a bmad social service program which would encourage Australians to have larger families. /\t present the birth rate is decreas- ing, a statistical fact which. in the light 0f the country's ivzir experience, stresses the inlpOrt- cnceof making immigration the primary post- war task. , ' Australia has had the same experience as other dominion» in building up new industries under the compulsion of war-armaments and cliipbuilding to mention only two, in both of which conudciable efficiency was shown. These new skill: can be turned to profitable peace- time production. A similar economic condition exists in Canada and sooner or latex it will be necessary 1° Z0 iOIWBYCl (‘n a more vigorous plan of sel- ective immigration. —l:Dl IURIAI. NU I [IS- .__.i._ The Week of Prayer meetings are being "FY largely attended by earnest and devout worshippers. it!‘ The [ones Government contends the skating tax is nothing new; it has been in ex- istcnce for years, though recently 1t has been 1n abeyancc. n: is n- u I You _cail't beat daily newspapers for time- liness. '1ire manufacturers ran newspaper ad- vertisements offering new tires for sale the very d3)’ the end ot rationing was announced. i: ill m 1t France is negotiating with Canada to place RbPl1l‘$50.\>00.00o worth of orders for cargo Sllllls in the Dominion. The orders would rep- resent about oni- quarter of a credit recently Ollened to France by Canada. i ll i Our provincial interests are being better attended to iit Ottawa these days than for sev- eral years pzist The powers-that-be realize that our representatives, both in the House and in the Senate, "re on the alert. 4i v x x llnnter l\'i\er Catholic community" are going to honoui their distinguished fellow citi- zen, Cardinal hIcGuigaii, by erecting a Church there. Probably His Enlinence will have 501115 part in laying tle foundtion, when he visits hem "1 M11)’ 0r llliic, afteahis‘ return from Rome. “ Tuberculosis was dreaded for ages as the White Plague’ and was believed to be incur- able. Incrmsed knowledge of the disease has revealed that l‘ can be cllred if treatment is begun in time. Chest X-rays detect the disease before outward symptoms appear. More per. 5011s between i5 and 45 Che of tuberculosis than of any other disease. i: ma» British penny postage introduced thisl date I340; u. laid the foundation for the great development and expansion of commercialism m the United Kingdom; and when extended to the Dominions overseas made the postal serv- ice the greatest co-operative civiliziiig force in the world; all sorts Cif organizations, commer- cial, political, social and religious were not slow to see the tremendous advantage offered by so Cheap a means of communication- the recent war has ‘DfOVldbd a temporary set-back, but one of the first reliefs expected from Ottawa i5 a. return totn: two-cent all-over postage with one cent within a city radius. ‘l! i! it it Both the“ Progressive Conservative Leader and the C. L. F. Leader are of one mind re. gardmg Premier Drew's proposals. Mr. Cold-- gen 5W5 that Objflctions made by Drew to the ederal Governments Dominion-Provincial pro- Doszils were in conflict with the expressed views of Mr. BrdCkfin. He argued that “patriotic Canadians n:cd to be concerned with the build- 1",‘! of one nation as well as the establishment of one world,” and declared Mr. Drew's plea. for the establishment of a national adjustment fund to make increased revenue available to less prosperous provinces was “totally inade- qllafy He forgets that the rich province of Ontario is rich because every other part of Canada pays tribute to its financial and indus- trial institutions," says Mr. Coldwell. “He for- gets that all Canada has the right to demand rev- enues from these institutions for the social and economic welfare of all Canada. Col.’ Drew is obviously in conflict with the very explicit statements of his national leader, Mr. Bracken." iiflli The fact that the Canadian ceiling is be- low the United States floor. in a season when W6 ha" e =h<>r=aze of potatoes and the United States has a surplus, is incongruous, to say the least, says Saint John Telegraph-Journal. Bu: it is typical of the way our potato growers have fared under government controls. And, while price ceilings have prevented them from carn- ing anything like the amount they might have earned through the war period, their requests fOr a price floor——a protection extended to practically all other groups of farm producers —have not been granted. The powers at Ottawa have stubbornly evaded their appeals, and have tried to say that, if they were-given a price HOW. everybody would get into potato grow- ing, clear across Canada, with disastrous con- sequences. Yet the United States manages to have ‘a floor that is higher than our ceiling, while our officials continue to argue that even a low floor under potato prices is an impossi- bility. it!!! For some months now we have heard rc- ports of a great ice-breaking ferry being built in Canada for the Prince Edward Island run, says Ottawa Jallmal. By all accounts it will be something new in- ships, something bigger and better and stranger. The news has got overseas. In the November issue of Th: Shift- plugpWorld, foremost British publication on shipping, there lS picture and comment on the Prince Edward Island." The writer points to the extreme manocuvrability of this ship. to its very powerful Diesel-electric equipment, to its many propellers. He addst "The new Prince Edwardlslnnd ferry i: a ship of most up-tn- date design and well worth watching. The hull, the main Diesel engines and the electrical mach- inery, _as well as the control gear, are all of Cmad-ian dcskn and Canadian manufacture. This is important from an export shipbuilding point of visw. for vessel: of this type in the past have normally been constructed in British shipyards.” A little scouting on our own reycals thi: ship is and 95o people. It is 348 feet long, with a sixty- to be 7,000 tons, will ~ fake nineteen railway cars, ninety automobile: ~ Notes ByTI-e-Way l! you m human it, u» uiiw- nena of any Policy q;- pmnim how "member l you mi the llll’ mi-i of 1946-“11 kQQp your in»; croued. Jlnnoouvcr Province. __.__. If Inflation 00mg nlst. You wlll need c b-iiliec. $12k: home your "take home" my; but you won't take the pay homo bo- §l“lf li’“i.illl“ti.'l‘"i...lt°..,""_o.,““ :1} Sound Bun-Timer. _-._- Politics nhould b: dlvorood on. tlrely from the lppolntment of llldleii. Thls brunelr of the admin- lstratlon stiould- he rewrvcd for the best lelrul mind: obtainable. Capacity and character chould he the only test. In that way can. adifs sound leizll prefllgecnn be maintained and lncreased. -— Van- couver Province. - The Infect ff “puma; by the registrar of bulldllny socletlé; chow that more than 1,900,000 p90. gle tn the United Kingdom are uylng houses through bulldlng so- cieties. The average amount out. stlndlng on each mortgage held by the society is about £400. Nearly 3.000.000 people have saving: in- ve:ted tn bulldlng societies. Their average holding ls about £230, Among the most lmporhnt and successful war weapons of the Al- lied armies, the Brltlsh mine-lo- clstor has played an outstanding role. Whereas, however, many wea. Pflha become so much scrap-iron ln peacetime, the mine-locate!‘ can be adapted to useful peacetime ser- ylce. It wlll be used to locate nails in wood planks before the wood Boes to the sawmills, and the pres- ence of metal wlres and pipes In wells and floors can be easily do- termlned. Police and customs offlo- lals are using the locntor wlth great success In their search for hidden metal articles, such as gold coins, which might be smuggled out of the country. ‘United State: nrtlsts didn't get hysterical when Mr. Greber was called in to draw plans for mak- lng_ Philadelphia more attractive. Artists of a dozen other countries have greeted hlm wlth outstretched hands when he arrived, lltvcause he is a great master ln his field. Yet when he travels to Ottawa. to com- plete a job he started years ago when he laid down the original Grebe!" plan for development of our capital. Canadian artists velu. We can't quite understand it. We wlsh they llRll moto- confldance in themselves. We wlsh they appre- ciated their own standing, because lf they dld they wouldn't he so thln-sklnned. -Salnt John Tele- graph-Journal. Vegetables don't need the ultra- fast freezing stressed by commer- clal producers, food chemists of the New York State agricultural experiment station at; Geneva and the Cornell University school of nutrition declare, after extcnslve comparative tests. Texture. color rate of freezing, they stale ac- cording to Sclence Service. In tests on pens and snap beans, nearly ln- stantaneous freezing was achieved by immersing the vegetables ln llq- ui "air. Intermediate rates of freez- ln were also tested by varying the temperature of the cold room ln which the freezing was done. Vitamin determinations on the froz- en beans and peas before and af- ter cooling showed little differen- ces for the different rates of freez- lng. Several experienced food judges were unable to detect dlf- ferences ln taste and color among lots frozen at different rates. A speaker at n meeting of the Ottawa Authors’ Association com- plalned that "Canadian publishers are entirely unsympathetic toward Canadian poets." We should say their attitude ls not unsympathe- tlc, but. is based on the very prac- tlcal ground that books- are made to be cold and lf a ,_ubllshe_r, on his experience and judgment, be- lieves a certain collection of poems would not attract; buyers he can hardly be expected to spend his company's money prlntlng lt. Poets may hate tn admit, but If they are wrltlng for the public their pro- duce come: under the old economlc luw of supply and demand n: much as though they were growing 1gp- tatoes or making mouse traps. e publisher, lf not. the poet, has to recognize that fact lf he wlmt: to continue in business. Printers have to be paid, paper cuts money, and a book the people wlll not buy holds a dlm place ln any llst o assets. -Ottawo Journal. The Btltlsh offlolllly believe - or offlclally report they believe — that. llke the late Mr. rliy, partner of Old Scroo e, Adolf l-l t- er l: no dead u: a oornall. How dead a dead doorncll can be la still a subject of considerable speculation. Mr. Marley l0!‘ "<- cmple, was not so dead that he couldn't rattle certain article: of hardware to the consternation of hl: former nilcoclate. Dead or n- llve, Adolf continue: to more than n little hardware. e Ellllflfl he welded, the fetter: he forged, will go clanking dlrmnlly down the endleu corridor: of hl:- tory. But lf Adolf dld shoot hlm- clf’ lf hls Iva dld fiplson lletlcgfd if their bodlu were fact burn ln~u bunker of the-German un- cellery, It we: an undecc willy merciful end for hlm and, perhaps. for her also. All evidence 3nd! ltrongly to support the B flfill hypothesis. If Ruaslui: and 0th; or: are not cure, that l: but mit- urnl and human. -!'rom New Ybfk Bun. - Rehabilitation Council of Greno- er Vancouver tlilnks it might. be s fooddldel lf quarter: could be oun ln the wood: for married logger-l. It certnlnly would. The day l5 not zolng to leave hi: W!!! ln the city, whlle lu- goe: Into the forest: to work. He la not llke lil: predecessors tn the tollih game of logging. He ll "l vounl mun of education, from the over.- ngs Ognldlln home which. on tho whole, l: a good homo. If the lo: er I: young he want: ht: wlfc An hlb fumlly with lllm. In thll he lbould be pnco - If M llnglc he wants IGlllO v10? if‘ bl: llvlng quarter-r c doflnt WAIIC to lpend m: bum- time In c bcdllm of lrnokc uncarcumvnt lllfi lhlck Ill‘. wum to be b? nine-foot brain, It is being built on order of and will be dwncd and operated by the Deplrt- '. ment of Transport. lilmnlf now nid Mn: h: vmit: to mi til: min fill-own. No young mun, mlrrle or llnllc. Woul mom ln gout: lath the w : f hf: "ll n; oil ‘coil d bcbrou fur w, nirno muflflllth c” "lulauhlliiliiil l a"; be h °._'_tho lh uni-lea. ‘ ‘ our lolfllng lrunl found compcnlo: hlvi MM It pay; .- . THE CHAARIOTTEATOWN GUARDIAFL average young married mun of to- 1 lhl ‘h t ll f0 ll l!“ ,.‘i.'r'.ili'il'.ii-f.l.'im‘"lii.; ° ‘Gossip Technique’ In Government We vlow wlth not l lflltll Ill-II! l: ulnounocment. u» Dunla- lon Statistic Mr. 3w “limmh of z limb‘ t» . u» V 31% t c wu C " and live." all t; m" "the new central research and development mutation of the Dominion Bur- ecu of Statistics." Mr. Marshall held : “pron con- ference" to tell the laubllo cbo ft. These workers, he saga, are housewives and suc woman are w {gr the extraor ’rcch:on t ey are wpposed "the knack of asking without ‘r resentment." woman. that. la. can ask an f- ncm question and set awuy wlth it; a. man a: the same mmtlon mfg-ht be thrown off the front porch. Mr, Marshall's enumeration are to use " he technlque of gocclp over the back fence," and while their first. sets of questions had to do wlth employment. they B" l0 progress to more personal quies- tlons, such as detnl amlly-Jn- come." Mr. Marshall tihilnkd that wlth expel-fence hls housewives will become so skilled that they can "coax answers" to fntlmate ques- tions ‘without appearlng to be nos ." . Mi: Marshall claims thls ls no Gallup Poll” because lt 1S 0011001’!!- ed not. wlth opinions but wlth facts. Actually 1t ls something far more objectuonable, The Gallup Poll ls a comimerclsl enterprise operated for profit. and we can treat it accord.- ngly, the Marshall Poll ls being run b the Government, ls paid for out o public funds and ls official. Great, niumbers of Canadians. we are sure, willl resent tihls new scheme for an offlclal probe into their private affairs. We have been regulated and en- umerated, controlle, directed, ad- vlsed and ln general o dared about for slx ears, We have lled out 1n- numera le forms for the dust)’ archives of government de art.- ments. We have accepted dtor ages and ratlonhxig. the dlscomforts of travel and the llmltatlons upon the spending of the money we have earned. We have seen a mans house made his tenant's castle. We pay taxes beyond all precedent -—- taxes for tine baby bonus, for big- ger and better pensions for varlous classes of the community, for be- nevolent ancl plillanthroplc enter- prises of many kmds. We accept all this, but lt does not mean we wlll accept anyuhlng. We have to draw the line when the Government calmly sends out a lot of women trained to pry lnto prl- vate affairs for the public records, trained to wheedle answers to lm- ertlinent questions without appear- ng nosy, to use the gossip tech- nique. to acquire an assortment of information which. lf useful. hho government already has establish- ed machinery for acqulrlng and into which. ff not. useful. the Gov- ernment has no rlgut to pry. This “sumpllnlfl s la Gallup ls called "a. new and important. de- velopment 1n the buslness of catw- logulng the population." It; is rath- er. we thlnk, a new and unwhole- some venture tn official lmpvdence on the theory that war-controlled Canadfans now will stand for any- and flavor are little affected by the thmg Time was when tine maln bust- ness of our offfclal enumerators was to take a census of the popula- tion every ten years. Gradually l-he questionnaire came to be longer and wlder. to contain many cues- tlons which seemed to have ll tle practical value except for the mak- lng of voluminous deductlons. zz-nd now the trend comes to full flower. All this may be l ecessary to make work between tlmes for the Gov- ernment's tabulators and statistic- ians, itts clocks and enumeration. but. we think Canadians should make a sharp protest against. this official invasion of their private llvcs. Lat Mr. Gallup do hls Galluplng; let; the Government stick to Rover-n- lnv. The practice of mlndlnz other people's business has gone alto- gether too fur. Tel Aviv, City of Unrest (P. W. Luce In the Vancouver Province) _ Geographies a generation ago made no mention of Tel-Avlv. The clty didn't exist, as a clty. It was nothing but a flahlng hamlet in tho barren lllll! fnclng the Mei-liter- runeun Sea, and lt hind probably been that for hundreds of years. It. was too trlvlaffo be recorded fn the history of Palestine. Today Tel-Avlv ls a prosperous clty of nearly 150.000 souls. Prac- tically all the inhabitants arf Jewl. and moat of them are hlghy edu- cated and intellectual. It ls me f only metropolis admlnlstcred who]. ly by Jews, and lt ls the headquart- ers of that element which ls gly- lng the Brltlsh so much trouble in ft: efforts to effect some com- promise ln the Jew-Arab clulmii to Palestinian territory. Tel-Avlv l: u refuge from per- secutlon. Every country whence a harsh government has compelled the Jews to flee ls represented ln this thrlvlng clty. The malbrlty have come from Russia, Poland and the territories laid waste by Hitler's hordes. Hundred: of thou.- 11nd; more would llke settle there. but anakcpt ‘out. With the exception of some wim boom town: on thla continent, Tel-Avlv ha: grown faster than any other clty ln the world. It ha: more than trebled in pulatlon :lnce 1W). and lt bids fa r to rank wlth the moat Important harbor: on the Medlterrunean when the port ha: been Improved and mod- ei-iiiua. or the required $150410" for thl: pur one, flve-rlxth: Wu ralned by pu llc uubscrlptlun, and the rout contributed by lnrge ln- terutl. Th, flnt modern ulfler: Clfll. from Jaffu at the bezlnnln| of the centu , driven from that ancient phcerzy exceul .. rent: and h! luck of sanltutlon. Thclr intention wu to eatublhh a auburb of Jklll. ‘, they founded a town that bu: completely ovcnhadowcd that: orllrlnnl home. The nutlonul chcructerlltlcl 0f the Jew: are more evident ln Tel- Avlv thun ln Jeruulom. Thl: l: el- poclnlly true In the mulntonuncn of the Ancient rellnlun and the ob- servance of all the mynlc rltel. form: and c remonlel. Nowhere also I: the cwlch Sabbath lo ntrlctly oburved. Only u low or- thodox luv: lfi Obi-Minn lnndl keep their plum: of bu__:_|ne:| cloud an Buturdcyl, but ln .el-Avlv no 911g bu” o: ::ll:_ or.‘ trader. t. one boul- before llltfgel on dcy evening u trumps blow: hf: horn In the flrect: ll I Wlfll- ln: thlt the Bahblth l: ct The suntan Int! bun: Btom and office: clolc their doors. Tho .ln the 5cm mil chlnc etorlu I: uhuc down. ‘luv i ailnln 'l: uilupcndcd for M ham-c. : overflow wlth w»:- 11, . e murnln: thank: thlt worklbrlornbollvadlnduthclccu lo TIIIDII‘ POI‘! Kellogg.” {sinuous chlfnaof Thcgu tlutcuncnohnnd bhrouflx and fut Mcdo vcléolmllm to forgot the oo . Ho nought. for Joy. yo: mod wlth- . out o cc I-lll bgluwaauglzmpty llld llll fuoc o. Ho fed oil drdamc, ma, walking Ho learned time wu no road no rldl as Want. Love came belated, deep 0 “That dark wine, and cw content. But, lug llfo ltaclf :0 llko c I'm-w 0ft. wonae ‘ where the other W611 . —-Arth Stringer ln ‘Toronto Sut- u: urdny Night. ' “The Hlll 0f Spring." Llfe l: comparatively pleannt for Jew: ln Tel-Avlv, but it has Its anxlou: moments for tho Anglo- Snxon: wlthln It: walla. Police and soldier: walk ln fear of death. None know when Ill asaasln‘: bullet: wlll speed ln hi: dlrectlon. There are nearly 5000 Briton: ln the Pulectlne police, trylng their best to keep order between Arab and Jew. Most of these are ra- crulted from the army. Some of them travel on camels, and somn are safer in armored cars. It cle- pends on where they happen lo be. In the past nine years 150 if them have been killed ln the llne of duty. Sometimes the klller ls a Jew. sometimes an Arab. In either case he belongs to the extremists l l FENNELL s. CHANDLER I — i ._-~ E Brow & Son i Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance ' at Lowest Rate of his arty which believes that. when lplomacy falls. murder ls a natura means of protest. The policeman l: at a distinct disadvantage. Under British law,he ls not permitted to use his gun un- less absolutely sure his life l: ln danger. By that time lt ls boo late. The extremist. has beaten film to the draw. 0110111111. MAPS llAlll RESTORER ~ A delicately perfumed pm pnntlon whloh rector-cc, strengthens cud hcautlffca l the lulr. ° It" wlll restore gray lulr to It: original color. Promote: c new 1nd super- < lor Irnwlll where the hair l“ ’ < fullln! 1nd f: rcmarlrubly , llseful h: preventing dandruff nvl destroying unrnltlo hulr killers. Jlllt follow the llfr- ccflon: carefully and you wlll be amazed at. the renrlfl, Gel your bottle 140-411.)’. , Prlco M cont: per bottle. GASSY STOMACIIS BELIEVE!) _, person who I: troub- led wlth ls ln the otompch and bowc should [at l hol- llc of Dr. Evan’: Stomach Mixture and see how quickly It wlll rcllevo ull fllztrosalng symptoml. - Dr. Evuu Stomach Mix two, taken at maul time, not only prevent: nll bud effect: from no but It promote: the fnncflonl.‘ activity of the stolnnch. null: dlxectfon and lmprove: the lppcllte. Don't delay. Order your < bottle today. Price b5 ocntl. 1 Attention! Jolt received c Trun- cbl c of collate “I pm‘; up- TllE 2 MAGS l0 Gnu; Goon-n Street H 1x44141111 Professional Bards GAUDET o HASZARI? Burlltarc, siiuuem. Notaries. l... noun m LOAN GILBERT A. GAUDET, 1A., LLJ! _ .A. WALTHEN GAUDIIT, LLB. Canadian Bonk of Commerce Bldg. Charlottetown, P. E. I, NEIL W. HIGGINS Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond St. Even Charlottetown Tel. 589 P.0. Box 66 §O§O§OOO+OO Q4 "lffQlland company- china-m Ami-slum o. r. ARCHIBALD amt-gnawing cliummm ' PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER lllnulrlpllncurfiaanclnnlu t on! oonnpoulmoqyphg ma: nus oinulu ‘lplnlun: fl" . o. In i _ ___ n. n. DUANE a co." Chartered Accountants» 88 Grafton Iliad. can-mun loxifl Phil” ' IcllchhW-Inullglkh. Mel-cod l Bolfll! I. I. llIlTI-II. ID. J. A. lINTI-IY. HO. t l Agent at Summerside. D. O. Stewart ) 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown EGG PRICES l Effective January 7th we wlll pay the following prices for Eggs F.0.B. Shipping Point. Graded New Free Cases Ungraded A Large 33 29 A Medium 31 27 A Pullet. 24 20 Grade B Z8 24 i Grade C 22 18 We will be pleased to supply shipping cases for lrngraded eggs prepaid to your nearest Railway Sli- l0ll. ATTENTION GRADING STATIONS—We have - a good supply of new wooden egg case shocks and Keyes Trays and will be pleased to look after your requirements. , We earnestly solicit your shipments which will have our careful attention. DAVIS i FRASER i LTD. and ISLAND BOLD STDMGE B0. l.Tll. , CHARLOTTETOWN P, E_ 1, We havéniidvanced our prices on_ DRESSED Fowl and we need large quantities of all grades. Fowl may be scalded. We buy both Chicken and Fowl on either a flat price or graded basis. ROYAL PACKING 00-. CHARLOTTETUWN m mm new J. D JENKINS. Prop. \ s\§\\\ ~ 0o i .' ' .. 0o r.’- ~': a 5 . g‘ A4 b; . 2 / - l l’ ' " 9o ' t. ~ 1- ~ E Z ‘The Guarlllcn Want Ail II“ ‘rldllf ilefif~yllll you oxppcgm you cull-coll?’ V ___; __ f ‘y , l ullllltliln Us‘