. 17, 1{@) & the newer t question E—EE—E—E—E—E—— 17, 1962.) | te te tees eee cs at ‘nis rules and regulations. aiiteiars To Questions Given ,, ,,.. YS*="5 After | OFFICE FURNITURE George MacKay asked the d. By Government In House _ ,,;., 5eors Mackay as | |. (1) What offic / romancs ator jut am; us; 2m oe acy! § $EXioh School | A. W. Matheson asked the/ Artemas MacDehe ld - * 3190: ment = the fiscal year ended minister of highways to table a/ 30.60; 40.00; Les Acorn - 12.00; | March 3 . 1962? breakdown of the item “Labour Millburn Stewart - 12.00; 12. 00; | (2) What office carpets and —~Wh t -$3,731.91"" answered in question! 7.20; 7.20; 6.00; Roy Nicole-9.75; | Tugs were purchased by your a Department for the No, 37 as the labor for the/ 8.00; 9.00; same Fourth District of Kings for the} Wallace MacKay Jr. - 6.00; period? | year ended March 31, 1961, | LeRoy MacDonald - 24.65; 6.80;| (3) What adding machines, | a 13.60; 5.95; 43.20; 8.00; 23.80; | calculators and _ typewriters ea aes 20.00 William | £2?! Nicole - 36.00; 6.00; 24.00;| Were purchased a” your Depart- en eae ° 3.60: 8.50: | Lorne Richard - 16.00; Tom Car-| ment for the same period? Daley - 24.00; 1 Oi = | ver - 11.00; Orin MacKay -12.00 4) From aan firm or firms 34.; John D. McGuigan - 21, * | Milton MacKay - 25: John| were these articles of furniture, | 12.00; Charles J. McGuigan Burhoe - 32.00: 7 oo -12.00: carpets, rugs, adding machines, 21.60; 12.; Cecil Hughes - = 60; ‘| calculators and typewriters 21.60: oat William Glover - 21.60; . Earl McKinnon - Neil) “Austin Bell - 28.80; 7.20; Ver-| Purchased? Bruce - 21.60; 18.00; Herman) c (5) What was the cost of the McKinnon - 14.40; 4.50; Barry | pon Glover - 32.0; Craig oe furniture, carpets, rugs, adding McCarran - 7.20; r 00; | machines. calculators and type- Howard McKinnon-6,00; Gor- | Randall Richard 6.75; Bud) writers, and how much ‘money a et ake 12.38: 6.00; 28.00: we- 15.00; David Reynolds-| W" ata nants Sion on Nicholson - 12. : ° 15.00; Floyd Gordon - 24.00: P ch supplier for | Melvin McLellan - 16.88; 28.50; Clarence Reynolds - 17.00; 5.25: each nie ern 40; : or (1) Secmee chairs, Steno- Russell Moore - 4.50; 88.00; 16.00; 50: . +] ereohic chair | 48.45; 29.75; 13.60; 23.80; 23.80; | 3 Nil ames Dixon - 5.25; 4.50; John | , 1 Re? HO ee ome athe ae, Clas, Diao Mae e McLean - 79.20 7.20; 15.00; :| 15.00; ee oe. one (4) and (5) Archer and Mac- Can. Chemical | 14.40; 14.00; 14.00; 16.00; 18.00; | Beaton » 3.00; Leo Daley 1n.00;| Donald: stacking shaies $118.56 Ronald Bruce 72.00; 21.00. | Jerome McCarron - 13. 50; Aus-| ph . . SEAMEN DON’T LIKE RED CHINA These seamen walked off ; in protest against sailing to | seven were arrested and charg- d hers chair $37.91, Victor A : e et 2 : : | a phers chair ictor British freighter North Devon Communist China with a load ed with desertion and aoe Sales Sai Strong | Raymond White - 36.00; oa | tin Tattrie - 6.00; 28.00; 16.00;| | Machine Co., calculator nea in Vancouver harbor Thursday of wheat. After ship saiied. said two others are wan onald Livingstone - 57.60; | ( MONTREAL (CP)—Net sales | ps 21.00; 21.00; 14.40; Harold | Georse MacLean - 6.00; 6.00; 25.) Cudmore Business griniachines. of Canadian Chemical Co. Lim.| Richar td - 79.20; 14.40; 10,80; | lps MacPhee - 34.00; 27.20; | GARAGE COSTS | Daniel MacPherson - 9.00; 6.00; | ' ited so far in 1962 are at the) John Munn - 63.25; George, i mer ieee a om sort H. P. Smith asked the min- a i O el level in the company’s! McKinnon - 74.25: William Mac- | Lean - 24.00: 10.80: St re 1 ey| . el neraye ieee iy oe ory, Robinson Ord, presi-| F ee - an Douglas Meroe; | MacLeod - 24.00; Simon Finlay-| operating the government gar- et told the annual meetin Selden yen as - 9.00; Preston| - 18.00; 24.00; 14.40; Ha nk| ages from January to Decem- Robertson 3 5.50; 5.30: 12.0 Spina > 18.00; William Cameron- ber inclusive during the years espite Low Income Taxes “rss enesine 1 in kmeaitc 38, 4i t: Sat 7, Tei and Hat ies eee for 1962 as ewart MacDonald - 12.00; ANSWERS . Phe - 6.00; Earl MeLean i 8. 00; Dick Bieren - 24.00; John ore | (1) See answer to Ouestion No. George Blue-1! Sa a s i sales will show fairly substan-| 1 By PRESTON GROVER consumer goods, Two exam-,ing abolished. tial improvement over 1961,” he| Walter Livingstone - 8.00; | 15. 00; Miller West - 12.00; John| 62 (2) as ae t i ae 8 AR ade Moskvich ut Set ee sald, | 16 6.00; Roland Bruce - 4.50; Son» 1800; “mnoee mine alensigdl xes are dying out in the So- ussian-m. In 1961, net sales and operat-| 10.80: Slee antl * gar Vanliderstine- viet Union, but one oe not automobile, about the size of a arene in oo. 0 per cent | ins profit reached record pia 040; John tries reel 20; Harry Van Iderstine ‘Home Is Pushing eonclude that the U.S.S.R. is a | Volkswagen, is a as te ° Bs sg sgl hy ages eo He told shareholders textile | John Boudreault - 6.80; 5.95; | | 10.80; William Lannagan - oe ‘ Citizenshi Bill taxpayer's paradise _ for the equivalent o n = This he way it works: ne fibre sales were at a high level | 12.00; 6.80: Louis: Boudreahit *} 12.00; Archie McLeod - p xes are as inescapable in| the U.S.S.R. the price is double The government fixes the f fs | William Farrell - 6,00: an LONDON (AP) — Foreign ; ; ae ; hich rent- | {rom the beginning of 1961, al-| 5.25; Cecil Hicken - 33.00; Geor the Soviet Union as in North | that. price at which a government- though most of the company’s| ge Vatcher - 10.80: John Dal.| 2aylor - 6.00; Earl McKinnon -| Sesretary acme has urged | 4.50; Cecil Nicholson - 4.50; Al-| the House of Lords to ap- America and elsewhere. The, 2. A pint of Russian vodka owned steel mill can sell steel. vert Horton - 9.00; Harold Cud-| prove a bill which will ease the abolition of the income ‘ax, can be bought in Denmark for The price is enough to permit | Products had ‘considerably bet-|ey - 7.20; Tom Boudreault-6.00; proclaimed by Premier Khru- the equivalent of 81 cents, in- the plant to meet its payroll | og results” in the second half| Fred White ~ 3.00; William Mc- | dy - 27.00; Emerson Gormley- Way for South Africans to re- ehchev, is an adjustment in cluding tax. But when a Rus- and have something left over °f 1961. a i Lean - 3.00, 20.00; Joe Kelly - 91.50: |cover their British nationality. methods. sian wants a nip, the same bot- for expansion, When another _, Demand for “‘arnel” triacetate| James P. Richard - 3.40; Al- ae Under the bill, already ap- The income tax has never tle in Russia costs him the factory buys the steel, the price fibre exceeded production ca-| fred Stewart - 10 50; 5.00; aren i RULES {proved by the Commons, such : y : equivalent of $3.50. Tax is par- is much higher, The difference | pacity in 1961, he said, and| Alex McLellan - 6.90; 36.00;/ M.L. Bonnell asked the Minise persons will be required only i aa a ol ear rs ticularly heavy on alcoholic is the turnover tax. capital expenditures of more| Newell MacDonald - 10.50; 36.00;| ter of Health: | to register their intention of be- gwevm per cent of all tax col- , beverages because the Commu- In turn, the turnover tax is than $1,000,000 are planned inj 10.00; Doug. Stewart - 3.00; An-| (1) Did the government pass | coming British again. They will ie be nist party is trying to discour- reflected in the high cost of 1962 to increase ‘‘arnel’’ produc-| gus Stewart - 3.00; Albert Hick-| new rules and regulations under | not have to undergo the stand- ections. By 1965 it will ee ate ; Cea eked snot Sir ae drunkenness. goods to consumers. tion facilities. en - 7.50; 7.20; John MacDon-!' the Hospital Act {n 1961? ‘ard naturalization proceedings. Sentas number of people. Ar A tax on farmers works this tisans. such as the few cob-| way: Every year state buyers lers, and lawvers and doctors ©° to farms to buy up the pis senmnatiasiheeupumntes seieiie : eonemmencenen sesonnen . ° eeeercen . se sd " mith private practices, will con- able portions of the crops, The tinue to pay a tax of 18-43 per State pays far below the mar- eent on earnings even after ket price. Government buyers | 1985 took about two - fifths of the in. Wheat crop of one farm this On wages and. salaries, : u . correspondent visited. The state @ome tax is going down vear by year. Lower brackets—persons buyer paid the equivalent of 90 | ; earning the equivalent of $40-60 Cents a bushel, about half the | monthly—already are exempt; Market price. That amounts to | : there are a large number in (he @ heavy tax on farmers whose ; U.S.S.R. in that category. living standard {fs the lowest in : Russia. MANY BITES HIDDEN The government owns every- It C I el Oo Other taxes lie hidden in the | thing so practically everybody Famous automotive authority, says: prices of everything people buy. , works for the state. Probably Taxes are especially heavy on | that is why income tax is be- : : . / choose ECM Poses Problems | Re om drive Cw For British Parties 5‘ at least Junior Matriculation? e° e (girls: 2 years high school) By FRASER WIGHTON , thinking on the question. LONDON (Reuters) — The; A closer study of the practical | Do you like question of British entry into {issues involved in membership people? the European Common Market,| has been started at the level of " expected to dominate the next| the Labor “shadow cabinet’’— . general election here, is posing| the men who would form the| + helping people? gome severe internal problems) government if Labor defeated challenge? for both the Conservative and the Conservatives in the next Labor parties, election The Conservative government After the Easter parliamen- became publicly labelled as the tary recess, a series of meet- Common Market party when it! ings will be held by Labor mem- | wecided after long consideration! bers aimed at giving them a| to take the step of exploring the! chance to digest as much infor- possibility of British member-| mation as possible about the! ship, but its own ranks are| Common Market and form some deeply divided on the question, | idea of the progress of British-| Do you prefer modern, well-appointed offices? regular hours of work? Do you want Oo 7 oooooooo oo ooo o< Partly because of similar in-| ECM negotiations. ternal divisions, the Labor party | This is necessary if the Labor Fgh ° thas delayed taking any firm de-| leaders are to be ready at the| } a good starting salary? eision for or against member-| appropriate moment to declare! ” : ‘ ahip, but the signs are this can-| where they stand, since what- promotion on merit alone? @ot be put off much longer. ever they decide will need the The decision on whether to| solid backing of their members. ' pension plan? in the six-nation group is one Government leaders are leav- f the most vital which has/ing the Labor party, and the up insuran faced any modern British gov-| electorate, in no doubt that the oe cet ernment, and it is also critically | time for decision is not far off. curi important to the fortunes of the Iain MacLeod, senior cabinet job se ty? sabor party, whose future could minister and chairman of the is ki 4s profoundly affected by the Conservative party, said in a re- f pleasant working conditions? Vtand it takes cent speech ‘‘when the next gen- | 4 . This weekend the Labor lead-| eral election comes, clearly this | ; a friendly colleagues? prs moved to crystallize party is going to be the great issue.” y " ; community standing? ' sind il is wisi eesti seid 2 alist i - opportunities to work in other 4 to partsofC. d r d? 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