y- TIIE y. l iisliionmwn Gllllllllll llnrulaslloilylbndclllllll "ll WGIIMI! lllkf THURSDAY, 001E!!! nine . The Tariff Board Liberal ‘papers from one end of Canada t0 the other are now criticising the tariff increases announced in the llsley budget. Most claniorotts I‘ years. lianient un the initiative (as the fifw PHI-f fill- . ,- mits) of the Bennett Government in 1032- Umltl‘ Part I of the Act, applications to theiGovernment by the lllinistei" of Finance to the Tariff Board. were sent to the Minister of Finance and in ' due course were made public. Under Part II. the board heard appcali from (lepartniental decisions. It brought i0 the“? cases an independent, third-party iudgiment. Pre- viously, tlie only appeal from a departmental rul- ing was to the Customs ADiW-Hl Bvflffl- aqbQlll" comprised of the very men who. in_ their in- dividual capacities. had made the original rul- ings that were in dispute. ' _ What is being asked now is—Why is the Tariff Board not functioning? . Of the pre-war three-man board, George Scdgwick, K. C., the chairman, is dead. Milton Campbell has retired, having completed his ten- year term of office. Charles Hebert continues to‘ be a member but is on war leave. At the moment he is the military attache at the embassy at Brus- lels. X Hector McKinnon, secretary of the earlier ' Advisory Board and of the later Tariff BOB-rd of the Stabilization Board which deals with sub- sidies in relation to the price ceilinz- ‘Th1! 15 a full-time iob and in fact Mr. McKinnon has been unnble-proixrlv to function as the chair- man (if the 'l"ariff Board for several years. Actually the board is carrying on after a "fashion. An official of the Finance Department has been appointed temporarily to the board l and, with Mr. McKinnon, he forms a quorum. “Obviously. however. the board cannot function in a real sense with part-time members. The reconstruction of the board would re- quire that Mr. McKinnon be relieved of his present duties and give his full time to tariff matters. Mr. Herbert would either have to re- turn from overseas or make ivav for a succes- or. A third member would have to be named. resumably a Maritimer or a westerner. Apart from personnel. the board u-emains in existence with a skeleton staff which includes the more imporlatit of the pre-war officials. Australian Enterprise Here is a sample of Australian enterprise quoted in the Ncivrlcllcrz-Iti response to’ an ‘urgent appeal from the United States. the Lee- icn canning factory supplied General Mac- Arbhur's men with tinned green vegetables dur- ing their heroic defence of Bataan in 1q42. The manager of the cannery (Mr. H. l. WVilliams) Quid that the Murrumbidgee irrigation areas had. , nce Japan entered the W81’. SIIDDlied 8o Del‘ t of all canned fruit and vegetables shipped b the Allied forces from Australia. An appeal from WashingfOn for any vegetable foods Aus- _tralia could provide was passed on to the cannery when lapan entered the war. Thecannerv hail. up to that time. handled only fruit. and there was very little greenstuff ‘suitable for canning. " Within a few days s considerable area. of silver was sown. and within record time the mat- ed crop-was in 700,000 cans. ready for deliv- - y. America provided a survey vessel to carry - ,ooo cases, and in less than two months from receipt of the order the cargo was on the ay. The vessel got through safely. although ter she was sunk. A U. S. Example . The new tax bill before the Americas Con- . ss shows Washington more alive than Ottawa - the necessity of QlllCk and effective reversion - peace-time economy. The excess-profits tax to be terminated st the.end of the veanwhile _- itional relief is to be given to porporltions hich do not benefit from its elimination. In- 'yiduals with ea ings between $5,000 and 5.060 will have heir tax bills reduced_by r2 2o per cent next__year. The higher income ' ups will obtain smaller proportionate reduc- ns. About 12,000,000 individuals in the lower . moderate income brackets will ~be removed 0m the tux rolls. Canadians wlio are Condemned by Mr. Ils- 's ‘budget sohefne to continue to ply tbljfl I - rters of the wartime levels of excess profits Vy have some [difficulty in understsndinl Why is crushing handicap to industry and all forms f diuslness enterprise remains in Canada. when . ls being discontinued in the United States paid out of “revenue than was the can in _ m. They may be cults u mystified over m; relief rigor-lg: t vm" are uttlnl ‘ , 1 he n I ' ‘ mm- lhe cirelhb pea _, "low-slid modem logistics lulu t . cost hangover.‘ Washington is placing national ieconversion from war to peace economy above all other considerations. But at‘ Ottawa, Government by order-in- council still dailies superfluous on the stage. im- poses taxes at its own sweet will, and spends un- counted millions without the approval or even the knowledge of the DQODWs elected represen- lflll"! "l Pafllamnt. Canadians are traditionally a long-suffering peoplefbtit the limit of their endurance is by way of being‘ discovered by the powers that be. Strongest Memory is Wanker Thu h v h ‘ ‘ _ It is nun pfflCllClllllc‘ for {he City Qouncil Y complainant is the Winnipeg free Press. Wllltll to go full steam ahead with its Airport housing | urging that the Tariff Board be rc-establislied ffilltf DQlICYfthanks to the enlightened action of and allowed to function as it did in Dre-war the Provincial cOvernmcnt ' . . l 'l.‘he 'l'-.n"ift Board Act was passed by Par-l Evidently Prhne Minister Ki" _ l _ _ - g lS iurrymg home, not so much to sit in on the atomic bomb ‘mlfemlcl? at Wililllngton. as to squash ‘the civil for tariff increases or reductions were referred’ ‘var m his pal-w Caucus at 0H3“?- l Tliereupon every interested party including tliel broad interest of consumers. was notified and lead“ in I-‘ram-c; only he has paved the way for invited t flDIW-lr at tlifi Dilblic hearings. llvl- a constitutionally chosen president according to denoc was taken. Cross-examination was pcr- the new constitution now being framed, Nlcan- niitted. The board had its own experts and frc- while he will reign as head of the “Caro-taker” queiitly carried out independent surveys of Dar- Government until the Fourth Rflmblic i5 f0“... tictilar industries. The findings of the boardfally set up. General de Gaulle has not been ousted 1| His experience among men on activg 5on4“; llafl tflUEllt lllm. Commissioner Orames says. that returned men would ask only for suitable em- ployment, a home and “the privilege of beinlv allowed to forget the past and be treated like ordinary people." I l°l1l1 Milton. English poet and prose writer. Paradise Lost; his principal prose work Arr-opa- flllifll. a plea for the freedom of the Press. the Presbyterians having obiected to his heretical views on divorce. Honour, glory and popular prai;e Rocks whereon greatest men have oftest \vreck- _ If l5 bewllie the Liberals from the Mari- flmes nilmbeij more in the caucus than do those from the Prairies and the West. that they are in 8 Position for tihe first time in fifty years to show fight for their rights. Hitherto the Western Liberals have swampfll them, and the Govern. merit accordingly treated them with a sort of tol- "all! CQHICmDI- This is one good turn the C. C. F.’s and Social Creditors have tiniiitentionally done us. from its inception to the death of Mr. SedEWiClt. ; " is now the chairman. l-le is. as well. the head While there were substantial increases in imports of lZOOds from the United Kingdom, 0th" Empire countries and ‘other’ foreign coun- llles (lllllflfl Sebtcmber there was a wide decline lfl imports from the United States with the re- sult that total imports fell short of September last year by $37.4'mllll0fl5, according to figures of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics.’ Mr. Hume Wrong. associate Ulldtff-Sefre. tary of State for External Affairs. said at a Commons external affairs committee that the rank of minister is in the course of disappear ance and the day was coming when the heads of -all Canadian diplomatic missions abroad will hold ainbassadorial rank. He also disclosed that while the Candian consular service was in line to grow the Canadian consulate in Greenland-es- tablished as a war-time measure-probably will be discontinued. A mother's treasure. A United Kingdom slot” washing machine which is simpler to oper- hte than a radio set. It is completely automatic and will wash ten pounds of clothes in forty minutes. The housewife has to do no more than Put the clothes in. add soap powder and turn on the switch. The machine fills itself with water. washes the clothes. triple rinses them and damp- dries them, It also empties and cleans itself and shuts itself off. “Laundrettes” equipped with ten or twelve machines will soon be opened in many parts of the country. reports the London Daily Mail. They will also be installed in work- ing class blocks or ‘flats. ‘l Returned men who spent so much time in the metropolis will be interested to learn that among London's reconstruction plans is the de- velopment of the south bank of the Thames. opposite Westminster, as a cultural and recrea- tional area instead of the derelict and bombed out wharvcs and warehouses there at present. Provision is made for the accommodation of a proposed British National Theatre on a site near that of Shakespeare's famous Globe Play- tee which had previously acquired a. site else- where announced the acceptance of this new proposal. ‘ It doesn't do to be overly lenient with of- fenders who are ever ready with regretting their shortcomings or wrong-doing. The true function of regret for mistakes is to goad the sinner into mending his ways. And this he will do. when outraged conscience has punished him enou¢l't— provided, however, that lie has a vital impulse towards righteous living: and "llovided. also. that there is enough good material in his char- acter (despite much weakness). to sustain him in obedience to soul-satisfying standards. once he has learned his lesson. Otherwise ho must be nude to take his licks to lee if his flesh lie more tender than his conscience. According to London Sunday Express 14o ‘here s" much smaller moot-tlon bl wai- com . y _ in Bflflill “lniiconstsnt lesi- of arrest.“ _ The article said remarkably few. hove bcenfrlveu . ly through Britain. some in smlllvilllgccl. Pro- vost reports show that most ctths aw are Jheltered by women. Authoritteruré a how t is that such largo numbers are‘ ab]! to _ arrest without identltvlcsrd "win or clothing} _, _' ~ _ hays-i. i~ called. upon" M‘ DQVIIIQIItOf WM proportion ole Vi!" o,’ -EDITORIAL stores- ..A_ _ declare; fil-KIWIICV 0f democratic government," {not to take "Press is our indispensible ally in peace o.- lustlc‘ Ken" MB-CKZY. Toronto wit-is. Ill 1k l‘ 1|‘ noun not: #181? lhl5 dale 1974i his Hreatcst poem is no!!! no!‘ V‘ ‘l it Q Iitilli has developed a new “quarter-in-the- i Recently the National Theatre Commit- -..( rue chad Notes By TlhiQWay Science lul now prod washing chln . Own . tinned uulfnu i-ivhic cfffs m . ~_\. 5M2!“ will“... ""-,".'““" s. AW» W... ...,....' -. llmdwdllr I ~ brie, war, is." ‘figs zonally Herald and ‘Weekly iltqr, 98.804000 pounds asmim pounds in i s 80 per cent decrease. other parts of the world uie Dutch the French and the British have lnto consideration ms ct that their wards have grown up-—or think they have. The col- onizing nations which have msds heavy investments ln thege places have certain rights and lf they wlll inent can be reached ‘ -" g commonwealth . erned or even to entire independence, lf such can be shown to be imperative. All these dark-skinned bIys are ct,- tlng to be too big now to be ts en into the woodshed and spanked..- Fort. William “mes-Journal. The British fog-burner, "Fido," has an American form which was developed by Bubcock and Wilcox engineers. “Fldo" ls short for “fog" "intensive," "dispersal" and "or, 'I'lie American modification has burners which may be installed with a minimum of disturbance to an airfield and B minimum of ob- struction to aircraft on the field. The burners are ignited electrically bushy flame give of’! an intense heat. with complete ombustlon and a minimum o! smoke, If anyone thinks the U. S. hll u monopoly on the atomic bomb idea . and figures that, because U. S. Ln- tentlons are good. s11 must neces- sarily be well with the world. he is begging for bitter disillusion- ment. As Dr. Edward Condon, as- sociate director of the Westlng. house Research Laboratories. says, vastly simpler ways of making etc- mle bombs may soon enable a few scientist-s with a small plant in some remote haven to end the Anglo-American monopoly of nu- clear power. Moral: Dozrt develop a Miglnot Bomb mentality’ Brantford Expositor. Ono-may SINBQIIII“ to the end of time as to whether men of boy's stripe were congenital crlm- inals or whether something postwar German debauched them. Debauched they certainly were. In defeat they can neither live nor die with dignity. No cause survives them and none will perish with they. They had no cause-only wild words behind which walked then-wiruelty and lust. But Ley may have been a cut above one or two and then with death-New York Times. Think how much clean: , more were left to lyaautiful residential such a set-lip. or rather setadowit. ford Expositor. With u few Ingenious accessor- bams. fill silos, plough snow, oper- tle. round them. up, potatoes, deliver mllk, move bulld- ngs, clear scrub growth. But these are only a few of its uses.—-Wiish— lngton Post. It. ls time that some parents change the ideas they convey w children thB-t policemen are sort of bogey men who wlll go round pick- ing up little boys and girls when they do something which does not have parental approval. This lm- plants a wrong ccnce tlon of the duties of the llce w o should be regarded as f ends and protectors. In spite of the feeling that persists 1n some quarters the police’ are far more noxious ‘to prevent. crime than to watt. until a crime has been clmmltted and when tio catch those responsible. A good ll chief ls fur more pleased wl an annual. report reasonably free of n 0 lng record of arrests and convic- tions — Saint John Telegraph- lliilli ' n deserters and absentee: are in hldln: , The? W!!! reported to be, spread wido- OLD MOUNTAINS What. substitute for mounblllu do they own, Who wok the city's atreetl, osch no roi- he cannot put. tits flnlol‘ What ‘l; Illa théit he lacks, on which lllountalns now, llotlntslntskmzalaom sues d , - Within the of I Quitti- toln eye; ‘rho human spun ls less in reckon- "nun at: ebftlpolof s shadow of on . I ~ . law-lying, slhnt,’ crostbd in moni- do: the nlih, _ All that a moon nln hos 00,10. ll Yet out-of its ageless and ltoneo G tn IQYQI ‘h! l. th info i ' ' il..i"l"....... m‘ f“ tong-ow w-.__-‘-.__.-. -.-. obs Pursue FORUM an" combination laundry and dish’- lKlI-IIOOPOSSIBILITIII shown by. ttielr- drugs mm tn l ~80 to or lnlllnohr-oflhhnflllnlll? lllt o! prize winners the tliroc entlemen ln charge o! the Domln on Government Pro- cc. ly had no intention o! the valuable services earl have been rendered .A. Netting and his two Bet ogether with the natives sgree- b s, Mr. SD. Irvine and iltlllllllflllsillfilill-t Iliov. Jilin. ...’.........' "oi-er i '_ . fl W l’! WI qyol ' z ”"‘ll'l’.t“u.'l°".'l'fi“ili‘.'f....."’.iq ,1 c’ i r9 . sore. f his oitrii, ‘u... . N, TUESDAY NOVEMIEI lids-crib i "raueoiionf ‘ ' "Education-J Mus. it. n. iiunsr cndMlSS ‘JA THURSDAY.‘ NOVBMIER 1595-650 "Education iiPieparalion for the Full Life"- MR. LLOYD W. SHAW, M.A- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER l6th—7:l5 . "Education Prepares Youth for tho Workodoy World” - Ml. NORMAN MocDONALD , ’ SATURDAY, NOYEMBER l7rli—6:30 “Education Can Help Canada-Will Canada Help Education" ‘W. J. P. MocMlLLAN, M.D., C~M., F.A.S.C., L.L.D., O.I.E. i to independence wlthln bhc particular Lw “open Wm, p"- ntlng at tl difficulties and not infrequently meeting encouragement, these of the ho s of the very satls actor status repdrted by v l: recent letter to The Guardian. While we rarely sec Dr. Nottln s name nor thateof his n public print, there is '-. of te Province appreciate fully the valuable assistance and prac- tical ldvlcc tendered to_ them all times. These men. moreover, are too well known to require any speaking for the future enlar ed raising of hogs as a new and rn- ortunt industry for the Island. hut criticism .ls not, I feel. j fled. With a hog "vs or tn can thousand "y an incident ln mixed farming and cannot an Island industry reco such by the outside worl lt be until it has attained to figu- res several times lts ng the belt hogs in Canada but we are hldlng our light under a bushel and lip to the present time are not: known in England nor like. ly to be until regular weekly and fortnightly shipments of high grade Wlltshlre sides are mlde to the Old Country or to any other country h which we may decide to es- tablish an export trade. By the Why. a friend, speaking of this matter sold to me a day or two ago, "In my opinion, there is m no reasonable llmlt to the possi- bllltles at high grade Island hog trade provided we can obtnl ple supplies of feed grain." at wlll from a control tower. A‘ II. K. S. IIIMMING. Britain's Aid lo'Greece' The ald the United Kingdom has given to Greece has the words of the London Dally Ex- press correspondent in Salonlkn: "Anything from bulldln of his companions. lacking tn the mirror of his wasted life he first. befuddled himself with alcohol - resentahle and undoubtedly ealthler Bruntford, for instance, would be lf all its factories went underground somewhat after the manner described. and the surfiice Transportation was one of the resslng difficulties. Greece, they destroyed communi- cation facilities wlth special feroc- ity. On a section of of Salonlka. the amount of line is among the highest encountered anywhere in and garden areas. Vlslonsry? Of course. But not in the sense that lt Ls fantastic or impossible. War has demonstrated the practloublllty of c troglodyte existence-This could be improved and perfected, And, besides‘ think what‘ a comfort’ British Army in Greece were able to put roads and ports into service again without much delay, but the rallwa s presented a gr . early all serviceable rolll ~ stock was at Athens and th been immense destruction in cer- There was thus no would be ln the case of the our.- break of “the next wurW-Brimt- les and attachments, the new jeep wlll plough fields, cultivate tihem. bind oats, thresh wheat. bale straw. hoist gruln, grind and lent corn, mow hay, rake lt, b e it, ha/ul lt, dig post holes and wells, spread manure, operate grind- stones, saw wood, spray orchards. white-wash or paint hous:s and where a serv ce cou The Peloponneslun rail example, had lost the ra over the Corinth thus cut off from the lines in the The British Army solved the roblem by loading two locomo- ven. two rall can and u number of frei ht wagons on to Diesel- harbcur lighters manned by the Royal Engineers. The j ney by sea was made fr branch ot the railway touched the sea. Nay llon, there was l g ramp bu t two years before by t Germans. An en neer on the rs now completion to the British Intellig- dsys before lt was due to be used the R. A.F. effect- put the ramp out. of action. w the lighters were beached It one of the craters ll ole farm electric plants, herd cat,- okid loss. stretch fence wlre. haul water, dig trains were running from Nsvpllon to Argos, Mycenae and Corinth. After this the transfer by boat lng stock was arrow"- o Khalid: and Pntru. A ., had to be sent lru for assembly on the quay crime of e11 kinds than u. mounb‘ l" Government has already handed ber o! coasters to the Greek Government and ho t able to make more avails Ssionlkc boon entirely demolished b‘: tho ties and ops-nod cfge. on the main route so clone , Within ms skin, and driven by o l r this yuf-iuitnsn hu d . "f." Bfllhiléfi. of ti» c Gold nfnhbmorulngblockun- l“ T‘: Mlllnll‘ giiifplc llvlfrigii 1h’ its’ Jim» gr-gu-yhw-w" v Sol/let Private Properly _,.._. The economic system of the So- vlct Union ls based on Socialist ownership of tthe means and lu- struments o! production. llsl; property in the USSR. Socla exists either. 1n the form of Static party, or in the form o! cooper- pro atlve and collective-farm property. The land, its natural deposits. waters, forests, industries enter- prises (mills, factories, mines). roll, water and alr- trumpet-t, banks, postoffloes. telegraph and tele- phones, large State-organized sari- cultursl enterprises (state farms. machine and tractor st-a-tlons. and the like). as well as municipal ent- erprises and the bulk of the dwell- lng houses in the cities, are State property. l.c., belong to the whole people. Cooperative-collective f-srm prop- erty ls formed by farmers volun- tsrlly joining u collective farm. and handlcraftsmen, a. cooperative organization. after which they pool the means and instruments of orn- ductlon or pay dues la members of the cooperative organization. Collective Economy The prevailing form of agricult- ure ln the USSR. ls collective econ- l.e.. collective farming of the . 1989. 93.5 oer cent. of the total number o! farm nous-z- holds were tn the collective farms. In a collective farm all the prin- ctpal instruments and means of production are pooled as public property-all the draft animals. agricultural implements, s‘ e e d stocks, fodder in quantities neces- sary for maintaining collective- furm cattle, farm buildings need- ed for runnlnl the collective farm and all installations for ocesslnz the produce of the collective Xiirm. In collective farms and cooperat- lve organisations all _ the basic means of production as well as all the output, m distinct. from State enterprises. are the common prop- erty of the members of the collec- tlve farm or the cooperative orga- nization who use this property. as indicated by the genenil meeting of collective f or members of the cooperative organization, The land occupied by collective farms ls secured to them for their use free of chargi- and ln pernetu- lty, by special Government deeds and cannot be bought, sold or leased. In o. collective farm the mem- bers retain for their personal use a small plot of land attached to thetr dwellings (from one-halt to two and a hail’ acres). and as their personal property a dwelling house. livestock. poultry, and agricultural implements needed for farming the p o . Soviet law per-nuts the small pri- vatie economy of individual firm- ers and hundleraftsmen, based on their personal labor. The prevailing form of economy ln the USSR ls the Socialist sys- tem. A total of 98.7 per cent o! the productive capacity of the ont- lre national economy stats o public property._1.l per cent ls the personal property of collective runners and only 0.2 per cent ls owned by_ private individuals-- farmers and lisndlcraftmien. i l... F. illptsbcsol‘ 0W0lllT§lSTl I ‘Spoellllsli touts" u" or glasses for tlon of ocular ulc- y flip ~ . - ,- SS-Grsflnn Street PromotcsNoficnol Health" \ ‘ COL. W. W.- REID, ‘D.S.O. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER Nth-EB ' Home and Schcolfnrlmnhl ' . QUELINE MAC NALD ' ssslcnal llanls Chartered Accountant 144 Richmond Si. Charlottetown made for maintain mom's "sdmlnlstro v and for strengthening the coun- ‘fcbe output ls car- sump ion t. ls ldod into two msln parts. The first ulrements o! she cns for cultural and public ser- The second part ls for personal trlbutlon of that of the puclzllc ou zmunp crs, lntellectualu ees ls effected 1n th Everyone receives ln the wages that share of the put which is due him. smcc with the quantity and quality of he labor he hn exrggnded. JJ. Mllfilllllll; DJ. NWIAIIY. BTU- und ofllco omploy- ‘ i ‘ ' " _'*' h M. ALBAN FARMER IIAIIJSTSR. $01.10 OIIABDOTTIIT Cllllllln Bani or Commerce Bldg Stats enttltarprgesunnd m u are ~- - oonsumpon y s,p non. sold through the State trading ALEX w_ MATHIESQN Every clilzen may acquire. out of Ollloe: B0 Great Goo s. any commodities he i,“ his personal consump- The citizens of the not llmlted ln any way ln acquir- ing personal property if lt. ls not used as a means of exploiting sn- BABBISTEB. SOLICITOB. ETC. ti. r. Moe's-Z; pa. K.C BARBISTER. SOLICITOR- Every citizen, for exam 1e. ml? of substan lal per- sonal savings but he may not. lend this money out at interest or Pl‘!!!- rmlsslblo for citizens a pract ce of lend- ing books out for payment. Ever)’ citizen may purchase for his awn BELL 6 MATHIESON Barristers. Solicitors. do. ll... B. BELL, M.L.A., D. L. MATIIIESON, LLB” LC. Attorneys-shun LOANS 0N CITE’ AND FARM 150 Richmond Si. Charlottetown, RE], PALMER £4 HASLAM A. J. IIASLAM. B.A.. LLB. BAIIRISTIII. ETC. Blnli of Nova Souths Chambers Ch P. B l. machine, a mowing machine, or any other means of prod but he has no right to use the!!! as a source of unearned income or as a means of profiting from the labor of workers hired to operate them. The right o! citizens to acquire out of their own earnings oomrno- dities necessary for their personal consumption ls insured b tleie 10 of the Constltut on of the ' ‘USSR. reads as follows: "The right. of citizens to personal ownership of their incomes from work and of subsidiary household econo .1, their household tumlture and utensils ‘and articles of perso- nul use and convenience. us well as the right of inheritance of per- "of citizens. ls pro- CORN No pods or planters to fun with-Jul‘ I h" drops of a painless rcmaly PUTNAPPS CORN EXTRACT Oil-only o fur applica- tions and relief coma quickly. ‘hello g your can corn today. For rsphlnnultn. for greater comfort, us: (he old nllobh Corn remover. PUTNAPVS CUR" EXTR/tfllll- 35c at nll dealers In medicine. Putnam's Corn Extractor Bzi ‘Johnston oucr for Deeds. Etc" Prince Edward Inland MI ms Eiiiiuurn cusses FITTED ! Jo so OPTOMETRIST . (‘timer Kent aim goo", m‘ . P "ll dunno I01! ll Private property f ‘“ IX- o lsts on the buts of the two main forms c! public properly; State property and cooperative-collective nrm- petty. To ave a correct idea of what. this means. one must clearly gras the interrelations between pubic and private pmperg ln the USSR. In the Soviet U on the income from State entc lacs. and the output of public y-owned enter- prises do not 8o tn Private indi- viduals, thus creattn m undue accumulation of we th ln their hlndl, but. are our. n the alswll o; ‘tfiethfltotie llfold ls the property o c poop . The distribution of all output of State enterprises follows certain main channels. One part. ls desig- noted for making good the well‘ and tear ql-thc means of roduo- tlon and for the construclou ol new mills and factories. Certain sums are allotted to insurance and zsserie funds. Allocations are BACKACHE SClATlCPAlNS wooo-ooc-owoo-owo-c-voo-o-o- BUYING DAILY AT Frniltirlc l. Largo ~ ""3"" "Wilton. ~tii ammo s: LIVE and DRESSED i HWIL and BIIIBKEIIS Crates Supplied _ EASTERN PACKING C0. ‘ McLeod 6‘ Bentley w. s. summary. IL o. s. a umnn. k. o. - 1nd Attqrncyl-ll y, 00-OQ0O§O§OO~ MAX FAllTllll Pencils Malls-up l“ Prince Street !'»‘~"‘é'¥2b§~e-§~e-.\:-.wv., wv§ Charles R. M a A Ban-h I5, Solicitor. N’ IM-IM. a... ma" ema-iist-sziamr "eammw-w- DAIE Q DD. Chartered Accountants l! Griffin Iii-at. .. 1 null Itch Ll (ill -