been completely modernized with MONDAY. I F I THE GUARDIAN. WN Seeeeiieil Tiiniier Continued from page I their words clashing. Then Canby remembered and an- gworod himself, "Oh, yes. she's the one'wit.h the peppy younger ris- ter.' Miss Peck answered Mr. Dew- e,v's question, "she made it in November." Miss Lane added the explana- tion he needed. "Fruit cake has to stand and season before it is fit to eat. you know" ”oh, God.” groaned Timothy Ito himself in an astounded revulsion from the bland interlude of grati- fled vanity into which Canby had tricked him. "Well, anyhow. HHS is only Wednesday night. There's still plenty of time." The meal was over. He stood up, hauled Aunt Lavinia to her feet with a mechanical gesture, said to Can- by, "Will you drive her home, please? I've got something to work out in the office this eveniniz. 1! may take me rather a long time." "I'll drop you there, as we go "I'd rather walk. Thanks.” He saw Canby, noting the dry- nera of his tone, giye him an in- quiring, speculative look. thought fiercely, ”No you don't. YDUDK man! Not I second timel" hunch- ed on his overcoat, reached for his hat. and was gone. Timothy was panting when he reached the darkened Academy building, but he ran up the steps, unlocked the door and walked at top spccd through the echoing cor- ridor, with its musty smell of age and rubber overshoes and mice behind the walls, He opened the door to his office and went in. Without turning on a light he took off his hat, dropped it on his desk, felt for his chair and, still stand- ing. gripped the back of it hard with both hands. ”Now." he asked himself, "I am Jealous of Canby, yes. Does that mean I am to send him away before Susan comes back? Does it mean that I am to decide, not Susan, whom she is to see, to know? Does it? Does it?" . 0 0 In the middle of the night Timo- thy opened his eyes wide on the thoiiszht, ”I'm an idiot! I don't have to wait till Sunday! She's not five houis' drive from me. I'll go over tomorrow!" Then he fell asleep so soundly that he awoke only to the shriek of the morning rain at Lathrop's Orosing. Nine 'clocki He stretched, yawned, felt himself infinitely refreshed. rolled slowly out of bed and went to close the window. In front of it. there was I pool of water. It was raining. Pouring. The first time since November. on going down to cold coffee and congealed bacon, Timothy found Ca-nhy had long since gone out for an all-day skiing expedition. "Canby's crazy," remarked Tim- othy casually to Aunt, Lavinia. "You can't ski in the rain!" Aunt Lavinia did not say as any- one else would have said, ”But this rain maybe snow on the mountains." She said instead, "I wish I could find a decent accom- panist for Jules. You cant imagine the comfort that boy is to me. The first soul with musical sense I've ever seen in this benighted town." He did not know the name or address of the over-the-mountain Barney kinfoil: Susan and Delia had gone to visit. But this troubl-I ed him not at all. Miss Peck musti know. He rirnvo to her house to: ask. so careless of what anyonei might surmise from his wishing in imow where to find Susan Barney that his natural easy manner sug- gested to Miss Peck only the idea that he wished, as superintendent. in send her as teacher, some not- ice about her school work. To be continued WINTRY NOTE WINNIPEG--ICP) - Winnipeg's snow removal department now has the removal of 40 horse-drawn snoixuplows. The old plows were knocked down to the highest bid- der at auction. BRIGHTON, England -- (OP) - Wihile repairing a roof. John Baker found a German Iron Gross pinned to the swastika "wings" once worn by a Luftwaffe pilot. During the war a German bomber crashed near the spot. Pleads liulliy To Receiving" Bonds Stolen From Bank MONTREAL, Oct. 31-(CP)-A 44-year-old prisoner, paralyzed by a police bullet, pleaded guilty to- day to receiving 528,000 worth of bonds stolen from a St. Jerome. Que.. hank last year, Romeo Bernier, brought into court on a stretcher,, already Is serving a sentence for attempted theft. Two charge: of attempted murder are yet to he heard. Bernier is the seventh man to appear on receiving charges in connection with receiving the bonds. Estimates of the total have run as high as M.000,000. A branch of Banque Provinclale du Canada was broken into and nef- sty-depoalt boxes smashed open. Six Montrealers are awaiting pre- limlnary hearing on receiving charges. ' Hernler went to jail following an attempted robbery of a theatre. New Map Of Canada Available OTTAWA, Nov. 2 - OP) - A land-office business opened Thurs- day in a dingy set of offices on first time In nearly 25 years, Can- ada was selling a new map of Canada. Previous publicity on the map has drawn hundreds of queries. A fairly good map of Canada, dated 1947 but revised since, hangs on many office walls. It is bigger than the new model, which does not replace it. Its dimensions are approximately 58 by 40 inches. The new map is about 40 by 36. Main difference in the new edit- ion is that it covers Canada up to the North Pole - the 1941 map goes to about the 77th parallel - and that it is accurate to within one per cent in all dimensions and directions, The new map gives a truer pic- ture of what belongs to Canada. It shows some new islands in the Arctic and various lakes, in- leis and bays which were not sc- ourately defined before. Behind its production lies years of aerial photography by the R. C. A. F. and a harrelful of cartographers headaches. Cartographically, it is a "Lam- bert conformal conical projection. standard parallels 49 and '17 de- grees, modiiied polyconlc north of latitude 80." t In layman's language, this means the cartographers capped a cone over the North Pole, touching at latitudes 7'7 and 49, and projected Canada onto it. The first printing, still bring run off, amounts to 22,000 copies. It is expected to be a sell-out. The 1947 map is 64 miles to the inch. The new one is 100 miles to the inch. Main demand so far has been from people wanting to use 1: in offices, schools, for lectures, and also from economists. MONTREAL. Oct. 28 -(CPl- Hon. T. C. Davis, Canadian am- bassador to the federal German republic, will plant a row of 12 Canadian sugar maple trees Wed- nesday at the Dusseldorf Airport, Germany, to mark inauguration of Trans-Canada Air Lines North Star service to that city. RIO DE JANEIRO. Oct. 2'7 - iR.eutersi... One of four British Canberra Jet bombers on I. good- will tour of Latin America hit a vulture yesterday as it flew from here to Sao Paulo. The plane had to return here for repairs to a damaged nose. It hit the bird at a speed of about 440 miles an hour. Baelucue 91 help for Baeklcbl Eiiiuiillfii f-TIE? tlfrtcting up aims. org;-'2' cloudy urine. irritating pessllll. IA! Pea”? and loss of energy due to Kidney and!!! troubles. try Cvltex. GONE ""91"" ""'S fiction or money back. Don't suffer soothe 4., giuwuz asking your arugglst fer Cyetex. llepori New Hard A Coal Conigici WABEINWION. Oct. 8l.-(A.P)- John L. Lewis and hard-coal op- erators were reported informally today to have agreed on s. new wage contract for 65.000 anthracite workers. - Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, spent the morning in e. bargaining session with the operators' wage committee headed by Edward Fox. Indications pointed to an aver- age wage boost for hard coal min- era of about 31.90 a day. The pre- sent basio day's pay averages 818.35. The anticipated settlement would be subject to approval by the Wage Stabilization Board, which has held a 31.90 raise for soft-coal workers was too high. New Search For Tomb Of Champlain Now Under Way QUEBEC, Nov. 2 - (OP) -An- other search for tihe tomb and re- mains of Samuel do Champlain, founder'of Quebec who died Christ- mas Day, 1635, has been started here. Abbe Paul-Emile Gosselin, secre- tary of the Conseil de la Vie Fran- caise en Amerique, an organiza- tion devoted to the advancement of French culture, holds little hope that they will ever be found. ”I don't think they will ever be recovered unless we can find more explicit and authentic documents to guide us," he said. Several groups have launched searches in recent years. The latest effort to uncover a clue to Cham- plaln's burial place is concentrated in one of Quebec's most historical blocks. bounded by Buade, Du Fort. Ste. Anne and Du Resor Streets and the Quebec Basilica, the Chat- eau Frontenax: and the old post office. The whereabouts of the bomb has puzzled historians for more than 100 years. It is known that he was buried in the cellar of Notro Dame de la Recouvrance Church and the remains were later removed to I special chapel built by his succes- sor. 4 Historians believe that church records at Notre Dame de la Re- couvrance probably contained pre- cise infarmatiou but all was lost. when the church burned June 15. 1640, The present search has uncover- ed a wall and searchers are won- dering whether it could be part of the chapel which held, the remains or whether it is part of a. drainage system built by the city about 1840. Abbe Gosselin said if the discov- pery proved to be part of the old drainage system then there would be little hope of ever finding a trace of the tomb. The Societe Samuel de Cham- plain, which conducted previous searches for the tomb said it was not aware of the latest hunt but was ready to help in every way possible. A spokesman said the society he- lieves Cha.mpl'ain's remains would be easily identifiable because the swords of governors and noblemen of the period were always buried with them. Searches were conducted in 1863 and 1875 but without success. First. two priests dug under stairs lead- ing from harbor-side Champlain Street to Cote de la Montagne. The N SE lied infiltration campaign on in Africa, Middle East . (fly I. M. lobeete, Jr. Assoelaeed Press News Analyst) The Communist infiltration eun- paign in North Africa and the Middle East is being co-ordlnsted from Moscow, according to a three-year survey Just ieleased by the Moral Re-Armament move- ment. Much of the planning and real Work. however. is being done in North Africef by French and It. alian agitators and by their lup- eriors in France and Italy. In Egypt. however. as elsewhere In the Middle East. it is virtually a Moscow show. with much use be- ing made of former German field officers, captured during the, war and indoctrinatsd in Russia. It was these officers, the report says. who really" engineered the recent Cairo riots. and who are trying to force the present mili- tary leader, General Nsgulb, into dictatorial practices in order to create greater cleavage within the country. Russia also operates directly in Ethiopia where the Soviet em- busy employs some 2,000 part time and volunteer workers in ad- dition to its own staff, and where a Russian hospital lndoctrinates some 400 attaches each year for work among the people of the Sudan, Somaliland, Uganda and Kenya. The report describes Eth- iopia as the main training ground for Communists in East. Africa. West coast Communist leaders are mostly trained in Britain, whose Communists also provide the inspiration and direction for the movement in Central Africa. French, Belgian and Portuguese do their share. The broad strategy is "Africa for the Africans," ”Back to your tribal gods." and "Out with the white man." In the Middle East. it is to get Britain away from Suez. In North Africa, to oust the French. Infiltration of consular, police, communication and other public services already has begun on a major scale, along with the fam- iliar actlvity in trade unions. "Against this united force," says the M. R. A. report. "there is the unorganized materialism of the West, which aims to use the eco- nomlc resources of Africa to bol- ster the strength at the Western democracies. . ." To offset this situation, M.R.A. has sent teams into many of the countries, seeking an answer to local conditions through the ap- plication of moral principles. They are competing in European uni- versities for the minds of the African students who, sent abroad for training in leadership back home, have been so actively pro- selyted by the Communists. second search was made undo the old post office building. georges Boulanger, secretary of the Soclete Samuel do Champlain, said the society believes Obam. pialn's remains could be found un- der pavement at the intersection of Buade and du Fort Streets. Work- men found three tombs there in 1880 but they never were nvestig- ated. " The society now is trying to raise funds for the search. Mr. Bouianger said srcheologist Wilfred Jury of the University of Western Ontario at London has been approached to conduct the work once the money is available. several hundred thousand dollars would be needed. CURITY FOR YOUR Arab llefugee ' Problem Aired , in U. N. lijaie (31 Norman Alheedisel NATIONS. N. Y.. Nov. 2 -(OP)- Arab-Israeli disagree- ment over aid to Arab refugees of the Palestine war was renewed In the United Nations recently. In the General Assembly's special political committee dele- gates of Arab countries insisted that return of w0.0o0 Arab re- fugees to their former homes in Israel is the only solution to their problem. Israel, which has offered com- pensation but refused to permit the Arab refugees to re-On!!! Israel, will reply later. The Arab delegates started the argument during I debate on the report by John Blenford, director general of the Relief and Works Agency for Palestine. Canada participated in the de- bate and said its generous im- pulses in donating to Arab re- fugee ald might lose some warmth if more countries do not contri- buts. ' David Johnson, Canada's per- manent U. N. deltllle. llld "11 is neither sound nor equitable if certain great power and I small number of other states consume almost the whole financial re- sponsibility for a project that bears the imprlmatur of the Un- ited Nations." He noted that Can- ada has contributed 33.000300 10 the refuges fund. Britain, the- United States. France and Turkey proposed a re- solution to boost the refugee aid budget for 1952-53 to 523,000,000 from 318,000,000. Arab delegates said the fund should be at least 527,000,000. In the first political committee. Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vlshinalty held up the debate on the Korean question by sending word that he was not ready to, speak. He said he might be ready by Wednesday to answer the ad- dress by State Secretary Dean Acheson of the U. S. who laid the Korean conflict at Moscow's door. Delegates speculated that Vish- lnlky is either awaiting word from Moscow on the line to take in answering Acheson, or that he is trying to out-do Acheson's two- hour and 42-minute presentation. Charge Doclor Had No licence HIGHLAND, N. Y, Oct. 31- (AP)-A young navy veteran who ran a flourishing medical prac- tlce here for more than two years was accused today of prac- tising medicine without a license. Louis Mancinelli-"Dr. Man- cinelii" to hundreds of townfolk -was arrested and is free on 3100 bail. State Attorney-General I&than- iel Goldsteln said Manclne1litreat- ed patients, issued prescriptions and signed death certificates. He said Mancinelli told police he had spent several years at a Michigan University, but had not completed medical studies. Mancinelli, Z5. is married and the father of two children. The State Department of Educa- tion said it began probing Man- clnelli's credentials after the Vet- erans Adminlstratlon and the Un- lted Medical Services received bills from him for service: to vet- erans and could not find him list- ed in the state registry of phy- slclana. Conviction carries e. maxlmuin LOVED ONES? Consult Us . .. I"iipI;l:'IiKiiimt,' MAIIUFACIIIRERS IIFE INtil,II-TANCE COI.'liANW tors are getting job aboard Nor- senteaee of . 8600 and a you in osm C (or) -4- A guiiwuiz number of female wholes open- the Tonsberg Navigational School are is women. KNI3 IIIIIE TEA Sflniulaiing (lll(I dolicioin! OUT C OUR WAY I IAN D from... i Th iiooisiis iiAiiowAnE if COMPANY LIMIIIIIED DISTRIBUTORS Choose Ye This Day ALL YOUR NEEDS FOR WINTER! Saturday Night. friends seeing the bare counters and racks. must have thought we were about sold out! Today. it's a different story . from huge reserve slocks. we've piled out newer. even greater values! 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