F" l!" laaeral - an 935 DECEMBER _2. 1 ’ "S W3 CORN,8 tins» TOMATOES, a tins TOILET TISSUE, 3 rolls (l SHAKER SALT, 8 plugs. .. CORNFLAKES, 8 pkgs, ICING SUGAR, 3 plrgs, ., OXYDOL, 8 pkgs. ...... FEARS, 3 tins FIGS, 3 lbs. 3TRING BEANS, 3 tins PEAS, 8 tlns .............................. 29c TOMATO JUICE, 3 tins (large) petcia|sfor'P.J’s ‘Ten Big llollar llays Sale GENERAL roons. A I4!‘ RED SALMON 1 tln BEANS, 1 its.’ 25° ROLLED OATS, 1 lb DATES, 4 lbs. 25c rornnr TISSUEJr-olls 25., MIXED CANDYJIbs. 25c ass srucrarc ‘ slvaeea anus arge) ................ 25c 25c 3 Packages JELL-O 25o All Flavors QUEEN .. 27c 27c i000 lbs. DAIRY BUTTER EXTRA SPECIAL 1 Pound i __As-rchéaa-pw"vrarlasgas-nu.yv gfiflfitgaglCEfis-nnan-......“ WHITESUGAR 2Bottles................... G liivounds 53G $131811? 23c OIIII I ........."......-... ' . MEATS “s “Ho” '/1 Pound igfiigfégsnflajamc, per doz. 39c Dwufféusg" Bakers FRESH BACON, lb. .. . . . .. 11: woman, COTTAGE ROLLS, u». .. ... 26¢ ‘ flhggflflg PICNIC nAMs, lb. . . . .. .. 22¢ spans: mas, 4 lbs. 25¢ m; gaigclflpflclgiamnacu, Each . 7c Tl" ‘$06M LAMB Faolitirss’, ‘it. Q W1, ,0, LAMB LEGS, lb. 10¢ EXTRA SPECIALS 98 Pounds BEST BULK TEA Perlb.35c CITRON rial. CUT MIXED PEEL CITY FLOUR $2.75 for ..__.__..i___._....._ _ ---...-..--.a1.----. LARGE SALT COD, lb, _ SALT MACKEREL, each 10c LP. J. MacDONALD Cor. Kent and Prince (By Major A. Income‘ Ajvld‘ Taxes R. IAWNIICI) Phones eat-eai-eat and ate-ate-nine gard to the possibilities of (1) rc- du".ing the. interest on the bondfid debt by conversion issues at lower rates of interest, (2) reducing cur- rent operating costs oi govern- ment, (8) creating employment 3nd, ' the f, 'zs 'zr 1s '29 are ‘I10 m W0 '3! ‘s: ‘s: in as: ,7, I30 ~—- ao/mza are?‘ --- cn/ma/n/v l/YCON: herewith is taauiiratAoinu an: i articles by or - - ' once, author oi “The Glnlfillfl hwmc," the first complete anal- sis oi the money income and Dill’- ing power oi the Canadian people by counties and 41118118 divisions. Major Lawrence has had "‘ ' exp- ‘ us. i facts which can be used to Pf"- tiesi advantaso in eaarninins M‘ onomic problems, and recently was engaged in market research by several large power corPONtIOB-B and industrial commissions In his initial article Mador Lawrence takes up the question oi Income and Taxation. We have heard a great deal about the "Forgotten Man" and the "Forgotten Consumer." but nothing particularly about the ‘Wrrottsa hxpIWr." Well. he deserves some consideration be- cause. for a long time ha has bean "taking it on the chin." ill blinded debt from i018 t0 I085. In 1m the combined individual "my income was approximately 5-000 million dollars. Considering sum as 100 percent the chart “We i085 income has Ii announces the opening oi an OFFICE in ROOM ‘l. OURRID BLOCK Queen Street, practice of med s. ' 1 i Oillce Phone 18k Residence Phone L W; i""'“""‘ Canadian bonded debt (federal. provincial and municipal) has m“ from 4,149 million dollars in 1m m approximately 5.700 11111- lions in 1985-1» ‘$8.139? "M- Now, Mr. Taxpayer. you have to pay the interest 0n this debt at an _ rate oi nearly 5 P" 0°!" psi- annumnln rim you raid aw" 20o million dollars, which is 4.1 var cent oi your income. In 1835, how- ever, you wi~l have paid nearly 99° million dollars, which l. is 7-5 per cent of your entire- income. The real burden of interest on b income has Eifilartfinasml so m5 wit since 1926. ‘But this is not all. This year you will have sulJP°Yt°d by in‘ ation the current cost of operatinl nine provincial governments. one federal government, i100 cit! 01' town .... ‘rnmcnts and 3.696 small- er bodies. rovarnins ti» tlvendll" urns oi counties, rural municipal- ities, local improvement districts. etc-a total of 4.3M. 0P M" 8°" Qflflng body ior every 2,500 cf our population. . Unfortunately taxation dot! 110$ and there-no indeed-for 7°" Wm also have to suliwrt the 1935 un- employed. He has grown to colossal proportions since i020. I-Iis 1985 shadow on the chart is four times the aisa ed his 1m miniature. But economic menace must be th your char- h]. bill amounts WWW“ taxation for relief itable donations (voluntary atlcn) and the total relief ta to approximately lad mii-~ amolsn lied dollars or 4.! pa: cant of 1w lace income. a I '0 O ' n, mash; problem, while su- couragirig, is unlolvabll l3 use governmm or i the national income. at any an answer will be sought at the’ approaching cognerenca oi Q h incl l“ Ia‘ cost of unemployment relief. Of the three possibilities there is no question that tho Greatest and quickest relic! to the taxpayer would occur by creating work ior the unemployed. Increased em- ployment not only lifts the burden of relief costs from the shoulders of the taxpayer, but distributes the remainder. For it may be empha- sized that, whether we own prop- erty or not, the moment we earn an income, buy food, clothingor coal, rent a house or operate a car, we became, directly or in- directly, taxpayers- OAMZBRLDGE, Eng, (O.P.)-—Rt- Rev. B. 0. S. Heywood, Bishop of Ely, denouncing nudism reccntly said anyone who has visited s. nud- ist camp has iorielted the right to be called a lady or a gentleman. Could Hardly Move About Tccli Delhi's And Sees Wes Wall "Some l8 years ago ’ I was taken clown V» with lridne trouble l so bad could h a r d l y m o ve about," wrlcea Mr. H. M. Stewart, Castle Bridge, N.B. ' ‘ . “A friend advised me no try DcdePa Kidney Pills. I had only takers a few doses when I found I was getting batter. Before rwc boxes were was doi my work-nail was colu- plsrel re ieved. I have never had an! since " D | croul: e with my H . Pills Delhi's Kldrlley . and i i CAI. OWNERS-Keep the inner 0'"? Amsarxrrrirroww mYAPDIAN The Gentral Guardian a newly nature s coats u ward advance. cons-scenarios urn manu- ANCE. L-flGd-‘l-ifl-Ili. ST. Iilflll’! Cathedral Tea and Sale "Wednesday, m. c ' " a-asas-u-cc-n ST- PETER‘! CATHEDRAL, Tea Sale. Wednesday, Dec. 4th. Good iood, Christmas giits, toys and novelties. b3a38-l1-30-2i DUI To Till inclement weather o! Thursday and Friday. Dollar‘ Days will be continued Monday and fuasday. Prowsc Bros. Ltd. Ir-Gkiit-li-dil-rii NOTE! DAME Annual High Tea will be held at the Academy on December 8rd and 4th. Christmas Gifts in embroidery 1nd art, may be pl ’ at reasonable prices. rraaaa-n-ao-ui. iside of your windshield irce from lmoisturc or frost, with a. ‘Price vacuum ian and have clear vision ‘ ahead. Butt and MacRac, I'll Grafton. L-SBS-II-Dil-Si. I ISLAND LADY DEAD - Mrs Christina P. Tlrreli, wiie of City Messenger Harry W. Tlrrell, who has held that position since Lynn was incorporated more than half a century ago, died this morning at their home at 137 Manet avenue. She was a native of Prince Edward Island and was 69 years old. The funeral service will be. held at the I-loughs Neck Congregational Church. Friday afternoon. at 1:30. with the Rev. Frank C. Seymour officiating. Burial will be in Wol- laston Oemete _..-Boston Traveller. The Eastern Guardian ..°Tlsia column is reserved for news of local interest lsui advertis- lug of l uewsy nature may be lla- serted at I cents a word strictly payable lu advnuoa. ..'WEDDING BELLS-A mar- riage of more than usual interest was aolemnized in St. Paul's Church, Sturgeon, at eight o'clock the morning of Nov. 8th when Mary Cecilia McDonald. daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. Wll-iam McDon- ald of Panmurc, and Edward Daley. son of the late Mr. and Mrs- Maurice Daly of St. Mary's, were united in holy wedlock by their pastor, Reverend William McCabe. The brid-e was charming. attired in a nowder bzue dress oi crepe. blue hat and coat with matching accessories and wore a bouquet, as rlid also her matron of honor, Miss ‘Pertha Smith oi’ Georgetown, who was hecomuigiy dreaszzd in ycilow crepe, . with coat and hat in brown. The proud and fortunate groom, who is highly esteemed by all who know him, was attended by Mr. Aloysius McDonad ‘of Paninure. Reverend Father McCabe was celebrant of the Nuptial Mass, at which the men's choir and choir of the Children of Mary Sozlaiity sang beautiiully 1n unison. After the happy ceremony the wedding party motored to the home of the bride where they and their im- mediate relatives enjoyed a de- licious wedding breakfast and later a dinner served by Mrs. William and Edwin McDonald in their own inimitable manner. The table was beautifully decorated for the occasion with cut flowers, the centre of attraction being the “Bride's Cake." artistically’ trim- med with pink rosebuds and silver leaves and the bountiful "Wedding Calce," tastefully iced with decor- ations 0i silver- leaves and beads. In the early afternoon the newly married couple left to spend their honeym m. on a motor trip to Charlottetown and points west, rc- turning to their new home at St. Mary's on Saturday. Previous to her marriage the bride, who was a well known and successful teach- er, was tendered s, miscellaneous shower by her girl friends and a purscsand address from the Wo- men's ?“ titutc Branch oi Pan- mure, besides being the recipient cf gifts and good wishes from her many other friends, a-l o! whom wish Mr. and Mrs. Daley many years of happy wedded life. WOMAN-HATER CHANGES HIS MIND-TOO LATE CHICAGO, Nov. 3i)-—At ‘I2 John Paul Duff apparently has changed his mind about women. About 45 years ago he wrote a book about them, called ‘,'l.‘he Diiplicity oi Women." Today he lay dangerously wounded-his throat cut presumably with a r that lay nearby- ‘ Just before he was found his landlady quoted him as saying: " man ought to get mar- ried. It's too lonesome in the world otherwise." Musical Gomodywi “A BOLD FRONT” ST. PAUL'S HALL Monday 8: Tuesday Dec. 3rd and 4th. Admission 85c Curtain 8.15 Celebrate 329th Aninversary 0i New World Drama ANNAPOLIS ROYAL. N.S., Nov. 30-(C.P.)-No:th American Drama has just been accorded a 329th anniversary celebration near here, close by the spot where the French Pioneers of 1606 d in the mak- ins of s. nation to entertain a re- turning voyages with the contin- ent's first stage production. 15y the ruins of Ohampiainu Habitation, on the shone of the Annapolis Basin, descendants oi these Nova Scotia settlers heard a revival of "Neptune's Theatre," the hurriedly-written masque produced in honor of the homeco ' of Seizneur de Pcutrlncourt to Port Royal after a dangerous voyage of exploration along the Nova. Scotla coast. Marc Lescarbot, a brilliant young much lawyer who was Pcutrin- courfs right-hand man in the early days oi Acadle, was the mosques author. He composed it, as he said in a latter account of his adven- tuNs in the new world, to "show some Jcliity" in meeting Poutrln- court It was a happy thought; ior Poutrincourt and his party sorely needed cheers. Storms and other misadventures had beset them on their trip- Thc cnnmander had met, with near-mutiny on the part of, some o! his men. Indians had at. tacked them and killed some of‘ their number. And the survivorsj were a dclzcted lot when they fln- ally got home to Port Royal. | It was amid these unpropitious circumstances that the drama, as. the white man knew it, made its debut to the We tern Hemisphma; For a stage. the aciors had a ship swinging gently on the sparkling blue of the Annapolis Basin; for a backdrop, there were the rolling green hills o1 the Acadian shore. And for an audience, there were a few French settlers and a handful of gaping Indians. A strange scene it must have‘ been, that Nturn, of which Les-i carbot writes in his usual devout style as follows: “After many perils (which 1 will [not compare to them oi Ulysca nor oi Aeneas, fearing to de lie our holy voyages with profane impur- IW) Monsieur dc Poutrincourt ar- rived in Port Royal, where we re- ceived him joyfully and with a sol- emnity altogether new in that part. D ‘Th!’ about the time that We ex- pected his return (with great desire and that so much the more that, if any harm had happened him, we had been in danger to have con- fusion among ourselves) I advised myself w show some jolllty going on to meet him, which we did. And forasmuch as it was in French verses made in haste‘, I have plac- ed them with the Muses or New France by the title oi Neptune's Theatre . HOW BATTLE CREEK WAS NAMED Many travellers wonder as to the origin oi the warlike name o: this important centre on Canadian Na- tional lines, today so busy and thriving on ~ peaceful industry. Some one recently delved into the archives and unearthed a letter from Col. John Mullet, who direct- ed a survey of Calhoun County in 1895. and whose staff named the creek. "While making the survey we were bothered by begging In- dians. Our party was camped up- on s creek in Pennfield Township in Calhoun County with two men left in charge of the camp. They had been instructed not to give the In- diana anything. ‘Iwo Indians ap- peared and, when refused food, tried to help themselves. m the fight which iollowed one oi the Indians was knocked down and both fled. That night, as an account oi the fight was given, one surveyor suggested that the creek be called Battle Creek. It was given that name and later when Battle Creek wus settled it took the name," Col. Mullet wrotm-Cnnadian National Railways e. Iluurfl Liuiuaeut removes stalls the Gcntral Guardian _-_-_ flail eeluusu Is roan-vol in Iowa u! lucul interest but ldvurtla 0i a ualssy nature usay be use as a cent a word strictly payable advance. ll CONFEDERATION LIFE INSUR- ANCE. L-Blsll-‘l-lz-fllfl. ____, OBASWELL for your Christmas Photos. Is-ililOG-ll-N-ioi. DOLLAR DAYS continued Mon- day and ‘Ifiiesday. Prowse Bros. Lisl- L-ii439-1l-30-C BUYING Dll-ESSIID CDICXI- and fowl daily. F. B. Conrad. bsflit-li-fl-oi. MOVED T0 P. E. b-Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred MacDonald, oi Bar- ney's River. who sold their farm have moved to Covehead, P. E. I- —New Glasgow News. The many friends of Alexa, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davidson, 93 Elm Ave., will ' regret to heu- oi her illness in the P. ll‘.- Island Hospital. Halifax , Port Arrivals ARRIVALS:- Chinese P.ince from Far East, 0. K. Service from _P. E. I. Baxter Dick tram Local Harbour. Novaliie from Lozai Harbour. Lillemor from Incal Harbor. Soow from Local Harbour. SAILINGS:-— Portia to Nfld. ports. Man. Herc to Manchester. Jacob Maersk to Port Williams. Liliemor to Parrsboro. Baxter Dick to meal Barbour. Novalitc to local Harbour. Soow w Local Harbour. VESSELS IN BER/PH:- Chinese Prince, discharging. Accurazy, discharging. Selma K., di charging, , Soow, discharging. Portia, loading; Lady Rodney, loading Ncvaiite, discharging. Baxter Dick, hankering. Liliemor, bunkering. Barge No. 2, berth E. P. Theriault, loading. O. K. Service, discharging Man. Hero, loading. Incmnore, loading. Jacob Maersk, discharging. VESSELS DUE T0 ARRIVE- Dec. i-Chedabucto from E. C. ports. Ba from Jamaica. Alaunia from Havre-Sptn. Calrnglen from Montreal. Portia from Niid. ports. Magnhild from Nild. ports. iP-Belle Isle from Haiiiax. Rosalind ~from Far East. 3—Keciung from Far East. Rec from Halifax. Nova II from Halifax. Femilcld from Halifax. Boston City from Montreal. Pictbu County from Montreal. 4—Mariis from Halifax. Silveryew iz-om Par East. Mayra from Great Lakes. Sonia from Great lakes. 5—-I..enar.ish from Halifax. Cavelier from Jamaica. il-Beavsrhill from Saint John. Lady Somers from Bermuda. Quaker City from U. S. ports. Duchess of Richmond from Havre-Sptn. "KUCHEON" T0 BE THE FIRST CONSIDERATION BERLIN, Nov. 29—German girls who don't know how m cook won't be admitted to colleges and uni- versities, Bernhard Rust, Minister oi Education, decreed yesterday. Alter the spring oi 1937 sixteen- yesr-old girl students must pass an examination in tne fundament- al duties oi housewives before be- ing accrpted, he ruled, and since there was not enough room in the schools for such lectures, their mothers must teach them. NEW CANCER SERUM BEING GIVEN TRIAL LONDON, Nov. ail-In the course of the current annual British Em- pire cancer campaign the inform- ation is given that moving pictures taken have proved that immurlizeq serum used on rodents kills th cancer cells in a few minutes and leaves the normal cells unaffected. The discovery is hopeful; but it is not yet definitely claimed that a cure for cancer in human beings has been found. ;' TAAT ONE “ DESERVE‘ TO HAVE e N-u/ CHRISTMAS l5 COMING" QNQLL HON TIE ‘RT/S. GAMES AND CHRIGTMAS GOODIES ARE MADE i COULD GOV ON. A VISIT 1'0 SANTA . PAGE THREE 2I‘~l!3l2ii| “You tell the children for old Santa -"- bless them — that their jolly old pal wants to meet them in Toyland A Tuesday g 2.30 n. 3.30 ---and come yourselves” CHARLOTTETOWN Overcomes Poor HALIFAX, Nov. 30--(C.P.>~Hard luck sailed with the British i eight- er Inverbank on her last voyage around th" wo:id, but she finished sertlon and death, and the loss of her rklpper. The series oi mishaps that was w trail hcr around the globe began at Baltimore, where eight Chinese crewman made a dash for shore. One drowned while six oi his com- panions were being rounded up. Luck on Voyage‘ it despite stzrm and stranding, de-’ bustion started a use in No. d hold. -with a cargo o; ammunition up forward. I: was put out alter an anxious hour oi fire-lighting. At Aden, as the freighter lay at her berth, a terrific SHBGELOIIII» drove hcr ashc.e. She was reflosled» and sailed on to Ca outta. There, ‘(his crtune again struck as Captain Iwiiiiam Forsyihc was carried ofl’ to hospital with an infected hand. The mate had to take command as the voyage went on. All went well for weeks then, and it was not until the Inverbank was inearing Halifax that her iii luck ihad its final fling. Heavy seas sent the Chinese cook spinning against A quiet voyage then as far as the a steel object in the galley, and he Red lea. where spontaneous cornLwent out with a split head. IIVMLDBE QT/zuf/zg, A MESSAGE FROM 1° 55E SANTA mus MR. K. S. IIOGERI SAYS: \K u- alilr ris got tho most “so“":,x,,¢a from those prn- g. RP’ grams cscry inbo in \ 1th; f, your not must ho 11°- pe" rlglsi. One Wonk ' he" ° lube will "mu n... lrest prognuu. rnrlio we Inn-e wisya fouml Wes!- lnkhonun engineers lciiillrsg ilm ilold," DRONS - YOUR WiSI-i / i6 GRANTED. WATCH THE F2057 0N wmoow PANES TOMORROW.