i FINDS $1,000 Donald Wright, 1:. son of Mr. And Mrs. S. W. Wright, of Tuber- mory, was surprised when he learn- ' Id the wallet. he found in a wash- room at the Royal Ontario Museum. Toronto. contained some $1.000. He picked up the Wallet belonging to Jloquea Armand, Paris. France, thinking it was a tobacco pouch. finding papers and money in it. he took ii: to the first uniformed at- tendant he could find. Leaving Massey Hall that night with a group of school children, Donald was met. by Mr. Armand. who gave him a. $20 reward. CONTAGION I Particularly strict adherence to the cardinal TiIiFS of defence against disease l3 urged by mcdiczil llli-fioritles at. scusons Wllf‘)! there is possibility of catching such infco tions as flu‘. Frequent and thor- ough washing or diauds is esscutlal. u is use of clean criting utensils. and sanitary drinking vcsbcls. It 1S also wisc to avoid such DOSSrblI.‘ rli-- ease carrlcrs a~ wmninii towels in public wzisliroruiis. ._____,___._ ._ __....__... ...____ 1W ‘\\ [or those who Appreciate iluaiiiy and Recognize iiailiei fou get both quality and volua here. . . at the More where you tun "buy with, confidence." Bridal ‘Vreatir DIAMONDS Flawless and Brilliant $30.00 up MAN'S BILLFOLD G ' 95 1.27.12‘? ‘Z I /. nvwva WATCHES Bggllfiflllly styled — always accurate. $24.75 ull IAIY RING A w: gold $1 t5 boguty. . to fix n curtwin rod, of course). N. B. Milk Producers Scck Price Boost A SAINT JOHN. N. Bi. Oct. 31- (UH-No decision will be mule concerning an increase in the W1" 951d w milk producers until after meetings at various provincial points, Dr. L A. Donovan. chair- man of the New Brunswick Dairy Products Commission. bald which! following a discussion bBfiWwfl members of the Commission and the New Brunswick Milk Pro- ducers‘ Association. starting tomorrow meetings will be held for the Woodstock. m" mundaton, Compbeiiton. Dalhousio, Baihurst. Newcastle. Chatham. Buctouche. Flexton and Monctnll areas. The latter three are sched- uled fur Saturday. Producers have claimed a 26 per cent increase in production costs since they were granted a higher return several nwritlu ago. Dr. Donovan said the meeting‘! would be with consumers. pro- ducers and dealers. T. E. Desmond, president. of tho Producers‘ Association, said io- night. that prices of feed Brain more soaring as a result of decon- tio] measures and higher labor costs. With prices still mounting. quat e fixed increase at present. Feed mill companies “won't. even quote prices." Mr. Desmond stat.- ed ill reporting a steady decline m milk pl‘0dliI‘LlOIl. ‘Plie producers roped cOf-tn would become stabil- iLCd but. prospect.» u-ere not good and something must be done "as a temporary measure at least." A labor shortage had caused New Brunswick lilflllflfh to cut. their turnip acreage arid depend on uedtern hcet pulp. Now the beet pulp ])l'li‘8 alao was rising stead- ll}. Burma To iiiitain Full independence t t ___ i LONDON, Oct. ‘.17 ~— (AP) —-'I‘he Govcrimieut introduced in Parlia- ' mcut today its bill to grant. full in‘ dependence by next Jan. 6 to Buzrna, storied land or pagodas, jewelz, and rice terraces. At the same time it made public a treaty W1i-ll.iiiC provisional gov- ernment of Burma agreeing to muititaiu lmilZ-tary training missions there. giving Bumia 37 small naval vessels and cancelling 215,000,000 '$60.000.000) of Burmese debt-s to Britain. 4 Britain retained Empire iurii! preferences with Buzrna under tho hi]. lu lihe treaty. ljigllvd last week by Attlec and Burmese Premier lihaklri Nu. the two countries agreed in ticgotlate a commercial [treaty “hi. iilic Clfiiifbi) possible ditto." Bumiafagrs-cd to accept. naval. military and air force missions. from Britain "and not from Hi1?‘ government outside Lhc Brit-nit Commonwealth." “CHEESECA_lV(|£" RECON VERTING 1N LUSH BOOM By SAUL PETT NEW YORK. Oct. 29 - (AP) - Uniled States ‘cheesecake’ is rid- ing a postwar boom. Toward the end of the war, pes- simlsts worried. over the future of the pin-up girl. But her place seems safe now. A man's tastes apparently don't change from fox- hclo to fireside. The biggest. job was an easy con- version from military titles to com- mercial honors. Titus, "The Girl ‘The 33rd Battalion Would Most Like To Spend A Week In An Igloo With" became the Deirymen Association's “Favorite Dish." "The Blonds The 44th Engineers Would Most Like To Engineer" became the packaging industry's “Neatcst Package Of The Year.“ Here and there in the field, a few rebels cry for new ‘gimmicks,’ new excuses for the pictures. But most. of the trade is happy to rc- turri to normalcy, which means; the starlet on the melting cake ice. Or the queen of the festival or any festival you can name. Or the non-bathing beauty studying a Miami alligator. In the process of reconvertlng ity men blandly have returned to their old reliable gimmicks for holidays. news developments, fash- ions and informal shots. have a picture of a starlet in slight beard and slight outfit lean- ing over a chinmey in a Santa Claus pose which the kids would never recognize. producers felt it inadvisable to rc-- i t Once again we have the shot of‘ of I orange I dc Gauile today madc hi» iirst. upon _witli a demand fur dissolution oi, from a war footing. movie public-i Hollywood is trying to clothe its 011i "cheese" with more subtlety, if house’ or ‘building your own beach iAnd the crowning jewels . . . . our exquisite artistically designed modern headwear for ail tastes and needs. Set off your'new wardrobe with a dramatic new model . . . beret, tricorne, dignified type or ‘saucy design. The materials used will intrigue your fancy at sight and the colours will appeal to your taste. These are hats frankly designed for fiat- tery and the prices are surprisingly modest. ‘You are invited to visit this department to- day. MGDRE s. Humanities ' CHARLOTTETOWN, P.‘ E. I. De Gaulle Demands Election In France B)’ Joseph P}. Dynan PARIS, Oct. 37 ~- <.-\P| »- (Jen. bid for rcturn to pom-r in France the National Assunbiy and i110 llDiClilg of new general elections. Hc said the rrsulhs in the mum- cirpal elections. where ill‘; nnli-Lfom- lllilllihi. Rlfiliilllllbifilllflili. riu Pnlillic Francois tltlflfgi party won nmiLv 40 per cont of [the vutr, justlfirrtl For Christmas, you once again Rh“ 3cm“ al . grsphen who has done work for the half-drape publications, says: "It used to be we could shoot. cheese on any pretext, say a lay- called ‘how to paper your not more clothes. Ergo. fewer shots l Chilw’ But 110W W0 Heed H mo"! Iof Cuddles Oorney in a bathing t suit. More of her in tennis clothes (too tight for playing) or one .showlng the young lady fixing a curtain rod (a girl has to stretch i A “ development is report- led from the 325.000.0430 calendar industry. That is that pnintinga of girls with no clothes on don't sell as well us paintings of girl: with’: little more than no clothes on. Ono calendar manufacturer says there will be no more calendar nudes after 1M8. Nudes were only fourth in the sales list. lost your. Bathing girls were second. Fifi-st was o. boy scout calendar. which is always first. anyway. Post-war conditions also hove broiilht joy to the hearts of girlie mun-inc editors who say business now is even better than during the war. ‘ But. even in the girlie main-inc trade. there are alleged demands for lubtioty. Ina Ufload. o photo legitimate gimmick. say, like ‘what the wardrobe mistress does‘? iii-i 0:410:21 iuww CONDENSED 41w) 32mm y Parliamentary suuruea said the Ii immediate cflcct of his rnuve would bf‘ to produce a slight majority for ‘socialist PrcinT-ci" Paul Ramiadierls i coalition cnblnct in a Vote of con- v firlcnct» tn be pcscd when the As- l scmbly cunvcncs tomorrow. l liiicac sources dcclarcrl all "Re- inlhlitziui forces“ worr- opposed t0 d0 (laiiilt-‘s proposal. rind iarcdicted . lliui i310 (Yiilllllllllllqfi. who have bit- itcriy FWSHiiPG Ri'.lill.(il(’.l"5 regime. would absini-n “m” the ‘me l; Lakcii Thurst y. Drtimiilefis statement was at- Iiuikcri immediately by the Com-' inunlsis. l-‘lorlunond Bontr, a spokeslruan for l-he party, said the nroposals were a manoeuvre for personal power backed by reaction- ary capitalists abroad. D6 (Millie said the CcimmunlgLs had lost. "at lr-asi one-seventh of their electors and ma/ny municipal- itice." "Thus. many Citizens who were led astray by these bar} apostles on the road of unhappiness and servi- tude. are expressing their will for nocinl justice and notional renova- tlon." iii.- BE! ROYAL WEDDING IN THOUSAND HOMES By NORMAN CRIBBEN! (Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Oct. 30 — (OP) —- For the first time in history a ‘ Royal wedding is to be. seen in thousands of- homes in the London area by television Nov. 20. Televlewers within a radius of 60 miles‘of London will have a close~up of Princess Illiubeth and Lieut. Philip Mountbatten ll. ofter the ceremony, they walk arm-in- omftcmtbowoltdoorolwlqn , » minster Abbey out into the crowd- ed strcet. Later they will watch the scenes outside Buckingham Palace as the newly-married pair drive away to their honeymoon. Special telephoto camera lenses are to be used so that. within one- fiftli of a second of the Princess and hcr husband leaving the Abbey n. close-up of the scene will‘ be flashed onto television screens. Batteries of three television ‘cameras each manned by 30 tech- nicians will be set. up outside Westminster Abbey and Bucking- ham Palace. Each camera will be stationed within a range of about B0 yards but by use of long-dis- tance telephoto lcnses pictures on the television screen will appear to have been taken from a dis- tance of only a few yards. finest Ever set-n Camera shots will be transmit- ted by cable to tlic mobile unit. about 200 yards away and then on to Alexandra Palace by co-axlnli cables running under the streets. "Recent tests have convinced iis_ that the weddingtelevision pic- tures will be the finest ever seen." a BBO official said. "Never be- fore have so many celebrities liver icievised." Television during the nedoliil ccrcinony’. along with movie-malt‘ lug has been banned by thP Kfli But listeners without. telcvisfol sets will hear running comment- aries from outside the Abbey "it the Palace. Suitable commentators now an being selected by the BBC. ii