TIG
518
"A"
grou eldgob" [001 mi hom
C
#voltre aqnos *[B,{"
Dan -dno s arolasooo east Khas NO .eu of mavin araw
how to only and
J
-
·*80
pret and Are
affe to aruguệ mid hot more t
[ bar! (lob
* ivil to at poo 0:2 beandals he tolloh weiflet H
be
satures do 1994 ti hat
v belo hen aanrader combo ad døds
ɔt Iliɔiberjera
be
*****h miro od
VAR OJ
ANATO agit trit Juls
+380 8 nildstar of Item MẶC. -ot used avar
Casteloɑ KAST or al
Y
To bi temi v dala
fato at si
TANJ 208" sit stiw
Itu A NO
***
་་
**
{
、Y 1:YL• E*!a2
wt do al ravile to nging nda
10 Roo eit ni..IvaIsa vi bom blumon ad of Todoal Coa
.mtvt I
ip to nivil to top @danbrengah o
Choxhot milt Be bod a quORRAS SIDted
o ter shet e soubab
t
rob
7. + 3+
1 noqu
moland'ro"?
Fr
*o* mabaoget at SUSE:BADI
180 A00 $ $ bra Bror. stor pert
folqu? on? Josing of berrovsainus ever
3 m
<
bivala LAVOIE STO
ד:
ed
Toldoslus to me by go
T
30
་༔
no fonotti Dhun * JA
ot roi
ANLATAROSet / &l
- beers goİ **Ak
T .90 0
£0.
Pul Bang
E re
by the Government as an act of imprudence for the conse-
quences of which they were themselves alone to blame.
Further, our examples had to be chosen from different grades
of the service. Again, as the up-bringing of children is
an ordinary consequence of marriage, we took for our typi-
cal cases officers on their highest increment, on the
supposition that they had married on first reaching their
present appointments; and we have supposed that they have
sach a family of three young children, the increasing cost
of whose later education may be left to the future and sub-
sequent promotion. The types selected by us to answer all
these conditions were (A) the Tead of a Junior Department
-
on a salary of $5,400 with compensation, and (3) a subor-
dinate officer on a salary of £345.
8.
Table A gives what we consider to be a rea-
sonable rate of living for these two officers, together
with explanatdry notes. It also gives the salaries drawn
by them at the present rate of exchange. And if it is
alleged in reply that wehave endeavoured to prove too
much; that were the difference between the necessary and
the actual as great as we represent, open crises must have
occurred as they have not done; to that we reply, they have
been staved off, but in many cases by the most unsatisfact-
ory devices: wives and children have been sent Home, with
no prospect of return; many of us have given up our houses
and sold our belongings, and are living in hotels and
boarding-houses and messes like neither married men nor
bachelors, and some of us have been compelled to abandon
our policies on our lives, as we can prove to Your Pxcel-
lancy,
Jniog midj
9.
T
penoffo? IT
•
nd mode 83800
Were there any real hope for an early change
for the betterwe might have continued to endure in silence,
as we have done for the past several years. But we know
hubtenop then we do biron meistgen apody
* calc
only