l ruasmw. A g g g L Ti-IE GUARDIAN. cr-iAm.o'r'ri:'rowr! . . ,. ., W M ,, H H , , sarramnaa 1; "Finish your food listen in Benny Boss's wife -- only Ta b I e To p 1953 T i ll. ” - n passed Mun! "35 "aw me then,".al-is diree . way about twuaty years. age. should he never some bug, AM h.' n on Afflilal In Canada when they had left their little Marie Boss she was called. never did come back. and re,-.,.,., I! ll dining-room and sat out of doors "1 member her when I was I English folk have gueued n, b” , V L V g ion the patio, the young man smok- small boy," said Felice. "She smok- cause it's an English riddle W, V v c 5 0- ' ' ed and his mother spoke at greater ed cigars, when she could get was easy for them to do so" other people to guess if uum More Prisoners Titan Promised PANMUNJOM. (OP)-Hope that :.ha Reds would ropatriato more non-Koreans than they originally promised. grew Monday as 400 more captives, 150 Americans and 300 South Koreans. were scheduled to return to Freedom. Prisoners returned Sunday told of large numbers of officers and sergeants awaiting repatriation in the Red collection centre at Kac- song. north of here. They esti.mai.ed the Communists actually hold about L200 non- Korean captives at Kaesong. Most are sergeants and officers-U.S., British and few of other national- itlee. Reports From Prisoners Figures originally provided by theReds would indicate that about 500 non-Korean prisoners are still in be returned. But the reports of the returning Paws, if correct. suggest that the number still awaiting repatriation is about 1,050. The Communists already returned tit Canadians, 10 more than they originally promised. At least six more known t.o be prison- ers have not yet been returned. The Reds sent back 400 PoWs have- was staff Sgt. Kenneth E. Kluer of the 3'l2nd bomber squadron. 301 bomber wing U. 8. air force. whose wife lives in Winnipeg. Kisser is the fourth member of the U. B. forces with relatives in Canada to be released since the Korean arm- lstice. Tell of Dissension Prisoners repatriated Sunday told of uissensio between the Chinese and North Korean Com- munists. They said the Chinese often treated the North Koreans contsrnptuously. and the Koreans returned the feeling as best they could. One American said he saw a sign "Chinese go home" chalked on a North Korean wall. In addition to the sergeants and officers at Kaesong. returned Al- lied Pows said there wepb a smaller number of men sentenced to jail by the Reds on charges of violating Communist laws in pris- on camps. The Communists at first claimed the right to compel them to serve out the jail terms, but Saturday the Red spokesman on the prison- er repatriation committee said the Communists would send back all men wanting repatriation. in- Sunday. Among the 110 Americansicluding those under jail terms. Sporting a giay flannel stilt with a blue and white polka-dot iie lTl'l .Being Shark By .1. Ferguson MscNair GIRVAN. Scotland, (Reuters) - Ths majority of the fisher folk in the west coast port. after scanning the moonlit sea by night and being scoffed at by scientists, have re- lucantly conceded ihat maybe their sea monster wasn't really a sea monster at all. Or at least not the kind they had in mind. a fantastic prehistoric denlzen to compete with Scotland's other famous monster up Loch Ness war. The verdict, as most of the mu- scum men had maintained all along: a basking shark, I-fuge. yes. sometimes growing to a. length of 40 feet or more. And grotesque. especially after being battered on the roclu of the surf. But harm- less, and quite normal. A small band of die-herds, how- ever, still maintain that their man- ster ls na basking shark. Led by William Kerr they are determlnkl to catch it. alive. "Lighthouse keepers told me that in-n nirsliis ago the dead mnnster's mite was seen carrying the car- cass of a wild sheep into an llll- explored cave on Alisa Craig." Kerr ' raid. i "Despite the dancer. I am pre- pared to lead an armed expedition tin the lair in an attempt to bring the first time in his life. thing." she began. Felice found his silent parent vol- burl 01 Old h1Bt0l'Y 111 I ill-1801' huh- Felice. by mu" "m””' length than he had ever heard her do so. she was a handsome woman still. and might have wed again, but felt no mind to another hus- band. and had found the nurture and education of her only son enough occupation to make life worth while. "You've told me a onderful "And filled up CHAPTER. VII Continued THE "RIGHTFUI. HEIR" ion, my son. Belike Aylmer would customary user” have thought twice and again be- fore he revealed this story if he'd uble. and her vanished. it happened on returning from the office, after reading Tom's let- lmwn uh” 1 km"-" fer and writing his own reply, that sh” 79"! mwmd nu mom bl” over yheh. mpperguhlel hind them,. dived into the drawer mid hi. mother the story of the of an old cabinet and produced an parrot whereupon she had drop- object wrapped up in silver proper. pcd her knife and fork and stared "L”?k M "Mr" me -"mi ml at him as at a stranger. u5l""-' , "What's struck you dumb, Moth- F”lW' 'JWl9d '-hf l.l"-1” 9”” er?" he asked. "Not this nonsense 3”” mind NW" 'l”'”5 "P”” 5 from Tom, 1-” wrmm md mh, brilliant yellow stone set in gold. mm What ah us he 15 g demi "You never were interested in chap,-r ;our history," continued Anita, "but "Have you posted mu you've got to be interested now. "No, ml mgmormw. An Ehghsh Your grandmother was a. girl call- boat comes into Callao to-night f;gui'i";:w!:g"6y”31dessgmlgaglegmf and I may hear again to morrovi. do. He worked m Fun for Wm brothers called Garcia. That must faced with the choice of getting rid '96 5501” MXW YGIUB RR0 1 MID" of it or moving their village. They P055. Julia Will U19 eldest daugh- poured all over the rotting hulk 191' ill Belllnmln B055r4m0lV” W and burned it. Only the head his generation as 'Benny' - a very was left, and that soon disappear- remarkable man by- all accounts. ed along with the local recluse, 5 He had other children besides Jul- 80-year-old bearded fellow name of lamb. Sun and R daughter-but Tony McTaggart' Git-van figured he i their old mother had lost sight of made off with it hoping to sell it them long before I knew her, and to a museum, but neither the head Couldn't SKY Vi'h9U'19I' U193? W8" I" them, and knew English and had a iblue parrot." "start from her then and what follows?" asked Anita. "i.'hst blue parrot's living yet you IN. Ind 1102'! told his secret, that Benny taught him, to these alien people. He's told them where Benn! hid his treasure when the Gucias got wind that he was playing them false. As to that there's little doubt. Benny took the pains to make up a riddle and teach it to his bird before he went on his last voyage, and the Hand of Provi- dence points in you. R1100. I-I NI only rightful heir. "Stones are etemsl thlnll." lhe continued. "They outlive the hands and necks that wore them. Ind serve one generation after mother. as that tapas served your Find- mother. hundreds of you me: it had shone on the breasts of the Inca priests. There's a hoard of wonders lying in wait for you, no doubt, on that island." "Why for me, Mother?" he asked. . "Because the treasure was gath- ered by your great KFmdll-u'l3l'- And you are the only one left alive with Benny Boss blood in you. It came to you through Julia Boss. and her son, your father, was in the line, and if he'd lived. he'd have inherited anything that Ben- ny had to leave behind. You are the rightful heir of the Boss fam- iiy; and if this story is true and the old. adventurous man hid his property for safe-keelllnz 011 Wm? God-forsaken isle. and lost hi- To be continued elm- Tun as. "imrno crime", 3.. speed queen of the Atlantic, boasts the largest stacks em- buiit: the forward slack is 55 feet high, 60 feet long. Made of ale. mlnum, they are assembled '31. 65,000 aluminum rivets. Regine. to be the safest vessel ever bully the liner contains more Iluminun than any other single stnicttm on land or sea. This light, me”. fire-and-west” -resistant menu. used for lifcboats and bulkheads, decks and elevator doors and . hundred other items. In naval vessels. ioo - meg ., fhc fourteen iriineeweepen no. being built for the Canadian Navy -- aluminum is being used mom extensively than ever before. slead of the customary khaki, Field Marshal Visrouiit Montgomery ar- rived in Ottawa for an action-pack-i Ithe thing back alive.” Raw Story Began nor Tony has turned up so for. live or dead. life trying to find it again. 7-1193 The short-lived legend began Then came srsy of hope. Asec- "Well. Julia wed Pardo, and "18 UBMUYG 1! Y0u11- ” W” V , V. t B .d I ruenrly this month when ii huge car- nnd monster was sighted offshore. that stone you're handling waslshould be found. Not 0110 QUITW5 ell MP-flu" ”5l.t ”.ll.",c01" ed least: was washed up on Girvan's "threshing the sea to foam in its given to her by her father. iimrt Of M. FPUCC. ID Alum” 533”- lrmg mm Cana.d1."'.l ml Hmy ea '.slinre. The villagers gaped and misery" over ilie loss of its moral "The pair had one son and he but Ell- "Sv Mf””-V l”.””"l-V llp.9'?e.d "M ispreaa the Word that "the thiiilz" Still the big city scientists scor-Iwas culled Fclice Fiirdo At tweni.y- ”Lookiniz back We? lime Gamma” N"”""a1 Exhlbmm mlw s 35 feet loiuz. covered with fcd so the fisheismbndined up their-'five years old Felice married me. things." she C0uC1ud0d-"rd 533' ml” T9m"m' Allglm 28' The dew"-V lcnnrse hair. topped by ii giraffe- boats, ready to put to sea and try to and you are the only child that we Benny 30” knew h” W” 30mg my Considers Criticism Of 4 . 27th Brigade Monstrous i Thrprclfems of discipline have ' TORONTO (CPI-Field Mar-i b 1 h . Ihal Viscount Moniaomrw c9nsid- :f,egI;,f,:")f,,m2;l,:h::,r,:,,'bhf,:;?y whiz ”"l””"ld” of .”-we WC” l" illke neck and ending in it i2-foot catch it if it showed again. It has ever had. Your grandparents on have danger and Wubl” '” ””V" '”"""'l"'" C0'"P"Y Olcinldl. "3 "THOSE m0uSlF0uS" 3- Cflllclsm had th. grip; 03 the 27th, The" Ernrolle mild, "Dorm" that the i tall. not been sighted since and the your father's side died not very his Jewels. 30. being 5 Whlmuc” Lid.(Alcan). Of ill? Quality (if l19r50nnPl in NW it uh hh mvemem how Many of ll0”d5 l”- l"'”b1e”l5 He Wendi As the corpse ripened in the opinions of the science men arellong after my husband marriedliashlon of 9. man. he l"V9””d M3 ' p ' EN "V" dwlllle ill” Kmiea” ”'”C9- summer sun liowever. they were being accepted. imt-' but VOUI" great grandmothers-lriddle, and left it behind him for Canadian 27th brigade in Germany lme bad Mm” hive been weed", --and thereby disagrees Wiih tr.-3 stated views of three of Canada: beet-knnwn war correspondents. Discussing an article in Mac- leanls Magazine, by Lionel Shap- iro. Lord Montgomery said ' comment about the brigades mor- ale. was "monstrous because it was untrue." In an interview Thurs- day. he went on: "The Canadian brigade is as well-trained a brigade as any in Germany. But my anger at that article is not because it is untrue entirely but because no Canadian should publish that sort. of stuff about Canadians. Is it not reason- able io suggest that if anyone hears such an opinion he shou'.i go to ihe chief of staff or the minister concerned and state what he believes? "This is what you might call fouling nnc's nwn nest, is it not? I ,wnuld call it. that." Views of Newsmen Mr. Shapiro. a former war cor- respondent. invite that "Canada .is represniiied on the ground in Europe by an indifferent brig- ade-lndiffercnt in military effic- c-ncy. in esprit de corps. in ap- pearance and in behavior" He called the troops "a collection of indifferent. morose, restless char- scters." Ross Munro, form:-r CP war correspondent in Koroa. expressed views similar to Shapiro's. Munro, writing last month for the Van- couver Province. referred to the "grim experiences of last year" with the 27th brigade and said: "One of the fundamental diffi- culties of the 2'lth brigade was the type of man recruited hastily for the formation. Hundreds of Lhom were problem youths had no steady jobs of stability. ,out. There are more experienced Iofficers and NCO's." Really Hot in Field After a visit to the brigade last .P'ebrusry, Bill Boss of The Canad- fian Press wrote that while in the lfield the brigade was "really hot”, lihe men had no intellectual re- sources and "more than a fair share have been 'bad apples” who lare being weeded out but not be- fore they have lowered the local prestige of the Canadian ealdler. A relative minority have won the Canadian soldier here such a label that a decent German girl's repu- tation is gone if she is aeeniwith , one." i . i iUrges Increase ;in Synthetic 9 Rubber ifrices WASHINGTON (Ari-sir syri- .ney Palmer, a leading spokesman for rubber producers in southeast iAsia. made a plea Monday for an llncrease in the price of U. B. syn- .ihetlC rubber. I He told a press conference his hope is to raise the price of nat- luni rubber and with it the in- lcome of 500,000 small holders in i Malaya. "There isn't any doubt," he said. "that the small holders will be easy meat for communism with prices at a starvation level." Synthetic , is selling at 23 cents a pound and whcl, competing grade natural rubber at 21.5 cents. -i5YE'"”sUii'S Sizes 24 to 34 LESS 20Vo BOYS' JACKETS 52.00 to 57.95 IOYS' PANTS 33.95 to 56.95 IOYS' SHIRTS Reg. 51.95 NOW Sl.00 BOYS SHIRTS Reg. S295 NOW 51.49 IOYS' SWEATERS 33.50 to 54.95 IOYS' HOSE 39: and 49: BACK TO SCHOOL BUT FIRST TO GREENDAUS GEE:-Wool & Cordiirof SKIRTS 31.95 and 52.49 GIRLS' DRESSES Jumper and all others Newest styles 52.49 to 54.95 ILOUSES 51.69 to 32.95 SWEATERS Cardigans & Pullovers 52.49 up ANKLE SOCKS 29:. 39: and 49: JEANS a SLACKS 31.49 up MEN'S STORE 144' Of. Gso.,.SO. The GREENDAL co. Ltd. LADIES' STORE WI G..C 9! rubber. he said, now 44895”: When you buy Austin you buy a complete car, ready for the road. There are no extras to buy. Austin's price includes: Air condi- tioning heater, foam rubber cushioning, genuine leather upholstery, non-stall electric windshield wipers, powerful 12- volt electrical system and built!-in directional signals. l I Every dollar you spend in operating cost takes you nearly twice as far. And it takes you in the comfort of a finely engineered, finely appointed, finely styled car. That's why more than 80,000 Cana- dians now drive Austin. That's why you should study Austin value closely. Why not do it? A phone call will bring a demonstrator to your door. 60MPll7I.' and youlve only hgggg to save) 'FnvInslaI and City Inn um in com I'''' DUVAR MOTORS 164 PRINCE s'r. C-HA RLO'l'TETOWN DI AL 7225 . A-40 SOMERSET FOR THE IDEAL ANSWER TO THE HIGH COST OF MOTORING, SEE pl-550