Jted Mrs. Peter. wlutedwknow. "I think that old Snake lost FRIDAY. V A .. THE GUARDIAN. WN n.. Seasoned , Timber w Dorothy Council 1:.- &AP'lET.8l'V!N "Good grief! Uncle Tim. think ef a.nybody'e being hardy enough totake awalk on a night like thisl Here. let me get to that fire." Aunt Invinls yawned and went in bed. ' "I suppose you must. be wonder- ing what brings me here?" Can- by asked. "Aunt Lavinia told me you'd given up your job in the bank be- cause you had broken your en- gagement. I failed to see the con- nection. oenby nodded seriously. "That's the way it was. It was terrible. see here, Uncle Tim, since it's you. I'd kind of like to have you mow the straight of it." Canby stirred in his chair, reached for the matches, lighted his pipe and began his story. "Well, I guess there's no doubt about it. I gave; Mildred a raw deal, and I'm S0l'l')'l for that." i "What ever was the matter with her?" "That was the point. wasn't anything the matter .-ier. She was the worlds nicestll What's czilled a. perfectly lOVel.V, girl'!'' . "But. Canby, how did you ever: get engaged to a girl that didn't rutt. you any better than that? Did she grab you?" Canhy groaned and slid farther down on his spine, "No, I did the grabbing, such as 'twas. Nobody was to blame but me. she's too much of a lady to grab anything, let alone a man. Good griefl I never want to look at a girl again." There with llevives in The Lemay Disappearance MONTREAL, Oct. 80 -(CP)- Contradictory statements about the fate of pretty Huguetts Le- may have revived interest in the mystery of her disappearance 10 months ago in Florida. Georges Lemay, her well-to-do, 26-year-old husband, came out with a statement that he has proof she is alive. Montreal lawyer Raymond Daoust, a brother of the petite Montreal beauty who was 24 when she vanished at Key West, declared the Lemay family "does not be- lieve she is alive." James O. Barker, Florida sher- iff's deputy who probed the dis- appearance, said at Key West: "Evidence indicates she is dead. Blood-stained garments found on the Tnmiaml Trail were identified as having been in Lemay'a car.” Lemay issued his statement when a newspaper dispatch from Key West. said he had declared in a telephone interview that Mrs. Lemay is alive and he planned divorce action against her in Jan- uary. Lemay confirmed the interview. He added he would prove that the "blood-stained garments" men- tioned by Deputy Sheriff Barker of Monroe County "never existed elsewhere than in the imagin- ation of a policeman eager for publicity." What brought up the case again months after it was half- forgottgn was Lemay's statement last week-end he would go to Miami to clarify the disappear- ance as soon as Barker is out of office. Lrmay said he had been in- formed Barker's term of office was due to end "ln a few weeks." Barker said today at Key West Timothy looked down from the lighted window of his warm safety. and said patronlziiigly, means no more, Canby, than that you weren't in love Wllvh l'lEl'-"tfull file on he is suffering from arthritis and has resigned his deputy's com- ”All this i mission. He added he is turning over the Huguette Lemay's "That's what you think." said disappearance to Monroe County Canhy. laiiihorities. 'W'hat's all this about a tripl Barker van a key figure in po- srnund the world? Did Aunt La-yliceyi-westlgntlons of the mystery Vmta t-1,-eam 2,1-mt?" Erariter in the year. He entered "No, I told her. Why, the point'tbe case when the Montreal wo- banklng buslnessiman vanished Jan. 4 after she is, I'm off the too. I don't like it. I never had liked it, so when I got up my nerve to wave good-by to Mildred, why, while I was about it, I kiss- sd my hand to the bank, too, I told 'em just what. I thought. I brought up a deal or two Ifd help- ed them hush up. T115 Banking Sommissioner was there. I called him a name. Gosh, that did me good. Well, before that, l'd realizcdi Sm everything I had. and put it in- to travelers' cheques. so here am. free, male, white and twenty- seven, with the world before me as long as five thousand six hun- dred and seventy-four dollars and sixty-one cents will last me. Well, what can you do with a capital of five thousand six hundred and ieventy-four dollars? I ask you. All that came into my head was one of these world cruises - there was a folder about it on the coun- ter in the place where I got my travelers' cheques. Maybe I'll find me a job in Indo-China. I want to get in some skiing somewhere, too, l'v;- never yet had enough. Maybe I'll go to Norway." "wen. anyhow, we've got to get to bed tonight," said Timothy. Canhy picked up his suitcase and followed him towards the Itairs. Alone in his room Timothy pulled a chair up to his table, umbled for paper in a drawer, took out his fountain pen and be- nm in the large square handwrit- ng familiar to two decades of ilicademy students, "My darling Susan. I am just back from your Ilfl home-yes, I went all the way in to the old house on foot .. and the reason I did was because . . ifter a moment's hesitation he tore up what he had written. :hinking as he pushed away .i'rom the table, "If there is one thing a man wants to say with his own voice and his own arms, and one thing a woman wants to hear and ieel, not read off a piece of paper At the breakfast table the next morning they ate in silence till Aunt Lavinia said, "Take that last piece of bacon, Canby. It's not sc had as most American bacon. Burgess Bedtime Continued from page lo ?:3nT1y7.nEt.7tE76-i- grows to large ixvas reported to have left her hus- ihand on a bridge where they were ifishintz to get warmer clothing ifrom their car 100 yards away. That was the last seen of her. , A Monroe County grand jury ilnst March declared after hearing ievidcnce, including Barker's testi- imony, its belief Mrs. Lemay was fdcad. The jury suggested Lemay, by ltben back in Montreal, should go lto iMami to appear as a witness y”and waive immunity when so .doing." The husband refused. His word that he would return -to Key West after Barker left loffice was his first public state- ment since then. icomes from the Rollins farm. l Canby fell to thinking and came lout of it with. "How come there's :still a farmer smokes his own ba- con? Out in the packing house lcountry where I've been, they say they can't afford to." ' "Well, they can't here now, of iccyurse." said Timothy. "But. how'd they ever do it? That's what I'd like to know." It was a subject on which Tim- othy had thought a good deal. He launched forth: "Well, general farming used to pay here-just labout as it did anywhere. of lcourse there's still dairylng. But dairying's like everything else. It's only the big combinations that can hold their own. The indivi- 'dual farmer hasn't 'l look-in. Still, there's something rather in- teresting in the air there, the co- operative movement." Canby said. "Well, I guess I'll go out and bat around the old town, and sea if I'd know any- body.” y "Hold on!" said Timothy. "You haven't looked at the thermome- ter. You don't. know what to wear yet." They went to a window together and looked out at the tube of mer- cury. Cenby whistled. "Twelve below, with the sun shining like that!" They walked together to the hall closet where the wraps were kept. Canby got down on his knees and began to rummage on the floor of the closet among the overshoes, rubbers, and skates. Wearing Timothy's red and black windbreaker with the sheep- skin collar turned up, and Timo- thy's cap with the ear flaps pull- slzo. In fact. fully grown Ringneck Snakes are so small that folks not acquainted with them might readily think they were little more than babies themselves. Peter didn't know what to say. mu upset what he had been so sure of. That old Snake couldn't possibly be their mother. Would so. have taken somebody else's babies into her mouth to protect them? That would be hard to believe. '.Do you know what I think?" "What do you think?" Peter her .. dimer. but they didn't get way her mission before they use up as-in." Iewasasoodsuessonthspsrt Mrs. Peter. ES ed down, and mittens and lumber- men's socks and pace. he went out as Timothy started up to his study to answer the persunl let- ters which in term time always piled up on his desk waiting tifl a so-called vacation allowed him to turn from one kind of work to another. Timothy took the cover off his typewriter, looked at the keys; de- cided to clean them. decided it would take too long. and began to write. He pulled another letter to him. read it, thought for s moment, put a sheet. in the machine and be- gan. "Dear Bud: I believe if I were you I would tell that girl . . ." when two stories below him the lunch bell rang. He sprang up so eagerly as to ti his -chair over, and went downs s' s as fast as ht lame knee would let him. ' Oanby was there. his face red- 1 awed by the cold. To be continued ,. IILATIVI IIZI lurope forms about fllsth of 211;" lsniinsurfsce of the 11 e.- I cover! i Assistants And Cabineillewards O'I'I'AWA - (OP) - A House of F is member appointed par- liamentary assistant to a Minister is about half-way to a cabinet post. Exactly half the eligible list of Parliamentary assistants appointed since the office was established 10 years ago now are members of the Privy Council. Ten are members .with port- folio in the present cabinet. An- other. former Fisheries Minister Mayhew. has Just been appointed Ambassador to Japan. Prime Minister St. Laurent has 10 Ministers with portfolio-heads of Government departments--and two without portfolios. started In 1043 Since April 29, 1942, when the first of the Parllamentaiy assist- ants were named-to help war- burdeneci Ministers of Defense, Finance. and Munitions and Sup- plies-30 members of the Com- mons have been appointed. Of those, two died, two were ap- pointed to the bench, two return- ed to private life, one went to the Senate and one to the provincial political field. Of the remaining 22 still in the field 11 obtained cabinet posts and 11 are still on the Job as Parlia- mentarye assistants, in line for later cabinet jobs. Thus it would seem that the proper target for an ambitious young member of Parliament should be e. Parliamentary assist- antshlp which, the record to date shows, gives him a. 50-50 chance for a place in the Privy Council. Get 54,000 Extra. The job is an interesting one for a private member, apart from the chance for advancement. It adds 34,000 to the s6,000 a private mem- ber receives in indemnity and ex- pense allowance. A Parliamentary assistant is a member of the House of Commons chosen to help a cabinet Minister handle his legislation and esti- mates in the Commons, reply to questions for him and otherwise aid him in the conduct of his de- partmental duties. He does not attend cabinet meet- lngs. He is just 9. private member who gets extra pay for doing extra. work which keeps him busier than the average private member and keeps him in Ottawa longer. In the United Kingdom Parlia- ment his opposite number is a "parliamentary secretary" who does exactly the same sort of job but gets no extra pay for it. The Un- ited Kingdom official takes his compensation in experience and the hope for advancement. Hold Important Posts Former Parliamentary assistants now in the cabinet, in order of their appointment, are: Defence Minister Claxton, Trans- port Minister Chevrier, Health Minister Martin, Finance Minister Abbott, Resources Minister Win- ters, Veterans Minister Lapointe, Mines Minister Prudham, Citizen- ship Mlnlster Harris, Fisheries Minister Sinclair and Solicitor General Campney. The 11th was Fisheries Minister Mayhew. Parliamentary assistant still on AUTOMATI noon sumac: .. Take it" any-stop mo- tendlng drudgery-yet have a better-heated house. Cole- nun Oil Floor Furnace sits in the floor, is any to install quickly. Bums low cost oil. No fuel to carry, no ashes to mess up the house. We have a size to give YOUR home, too, real "wsrrn-floor” heat at low cost. Listed by . Underwrltgj, Lgizorstories. F. A. S. Voting Mahsralali, Takes Throne Remote Bhutan ea By Adrienne Tb:-rel! NEW Dsiltl-II, India, Oct. I0 - (Beuters) - Moon-faced young Miharsjah Jlgmie Dorll Wsngchuk Monday formally acceded to the throne of Bhutan. a remote Hima- layan state visited by few white men. A solemn Buddhist ceremony in Pare. the religious capital. ushered in the 24-year-old MaharaJah's reign over the mountainous. ls,- 000-square-mile ares edged between Tibet and India. It is known to the west as "The Land of The Last Horizon." A 1040 treaty with India granted Bhutan intemnl independence but provided for Indian guidance in foreign affairs. The feudsllstic state has no main roads, no taxes in money, no national army, no political parties and virtually no foreign trade. ' Foreigners are barred from the state unless they have the Maharajah's permission to cross the border. The new ruler over 300,000 per- the job, in order of their appoint- ments, are: George Mcllralth (Ottawa West) Trade and Commerce: P. E. Cole (Verdun-Lasalle) Labor: Robert McCubbln (Midd1esex West) Agri- culture; J.W. MacNaugbt (Prlncc) Fisheries; L. A. Mutch (Winni- peg South) Vetersns' Affairs; J. A. Blsnchette (Compton-From tenac) National Defence; William Benedlckson (Kenora-Rainy River) Transport: J. G. Leopold Langlois (Gaspe) Post Office; Jean Lesage (Montmagny-L'Islet) External Af- fairs; Dr. E. A. Mccusker ' (Re- gina Cliy) Health, and John Dic- key (Halifax) Defence Production. Younger Group Although Parliamentary assist- ants are generally younger than the age class formerly selected for the cabinet, their promotions have not altered the average cab- inet age which in 1943, in a cab- inet of 20, and today with a cab- inet of 22 (both including the Prime Minister) remains within a fraction of 56. Average age of the 10 present Cabinet Ministers who were former Parliamentary assist- ants is 48.6, and the rest 60.8. On April 9, 1942, the then Prime Minister, Mackenzie King, an- nounced appointment of the first Parliamentary assistants. Such a scheme had long been advocated and provision was made in the appropriations some time earlier. The first appointments were to provide assistance to Min- isiers of Defence, Finance Munitions - departments heavily loaded with war responsibilities. The prime objective was to re- lieve busy Ministers of constant attendance in the House and of numerous routine matters connect- ed with their parliamentary du- ties. But the poll of talent so creat- ed has, in practice, set up a sort of preparatory school for the Privy Council. OIL HEAT New Costs and 4 olemcm l Floor Furnace tow JII WW orlIAlill”:g.;iouvIIiItli 0!” JONES , FURNITURE and APPLIANCES 129 Kent Street ' sons is the eldest son of the late ah. sir -ilgmia Wsngehuk, who died last lurch. The young uahsrajsh toured Britain in 1950 to scqualnt himself with western life. one of his first stepsin trying to modernise his land was a recommendation that Bhutan inaugurate a. postal system and the use of stamps. The Mhharejah studied the British penal cede-a far cry from Bhutsn's usual,way of dealing with criminals. Condemned men are sewn into bullock skins and tossed in the river to drown. One of the few white men to visit the "Last Horizon" was Lord Waverley. In 1037 when he was an- John Anderson. he travelled by pony across a 10.600-foot-high pass into Bhutan at the invitation of the late Msharsjah. In the..entira trip through the state. "we never saw a wheel of any kind," he said. The people, mostly of Tibetan origin, make their living from agriculture, wood-carving, basket- maklng and the production of fine swords and daggers. VAST CONTINENT The distance between extreme north and south of Asia is 5,350 miles, and between east and west 6,000 miles. MEN'S WINTER many. long years. Callwiaisfflaorlsi increase lnfirsi 9 Monihiof T952 O'I'I'AWA. Oct. so - (GP) - Canadsrs exports Jumped by -more than sseo.ooo.ooo in the first nine months of 1952 as a boost in vol- ume of shipments outweighed the impact of weakening prices. Shipments rose to a peak of as.- l80,s00.000 for the nine months from 52.818.242.000 in the similar nine months of mm, the Bureau of Statistics reported Monday. Officials estimated the current trend may lead to s new high for the year. surpassing the previous record of almost 54.000.000.000 leached a year ago. ' Shipments were higher to virt- ually all parts of the world. with the exception of the United states. Canada's top customer. which has placed an embargo against Canad- ian cattle and meat because of foot-and-mouth disease in Saskat- chewan earlier this year. The trend toward lower prices continued in September. Average prices of Canada's exports dropped almost five per cent from Septem- OVERCOATS to 49.50 GREENDAL'S smash 'em out . in the nick of time! from a big showing, you "choose rrue English fabrics. you choose from Elysluns. Fleeces. Tweeds. Melrons .. you choose the Greatest Overcoat buy in many. a CHOOSE ANY STYLE. ANY COLOR FROM 2 BIG SALE GROUPS ...; bar a your ego, but .velune'1nxnped about 10 per seat. 1111: increased the value of the month's shipments to 341,300,000 from ss2a.soo.ooo last year and helped provide the 13-per-cent boost over the nine-month period. However, in s previous prelimin- ary statement, the Bureau estimat- ed imports during septembsr at sm.100.000. up from sa1f.50o.ooo last year. With imports -outpacing exports. I 87,000,000 deficit result- ed. The only other monthly deficit this year was A slight I700.0001d- versepbalance last May. Despite the deficits, monthly surpluses brought the nine-month surplus to ssss.2oo,ooo. a vast im- provement over the ssz3.soo,ooo tligegiclt. in the first nine months of During the nine-month period, exports to the U. S. slipped to Si.- 'l00.000.000 from 01.717.000.000. There were increases in most commodiuu except wood and paper products which declined 541300.000 to 3791.- 000.000 from sas1.ooo.ooo. and ani- mal and vegetable products which dropped of sharply to sl!0.000,000 from 905,000,000. Shipments to the United tKing- dom rose significantly to 5580.000.- ooo from 840,000,000, led by a 084,- 000,000 lump in agricultural and vegetable products to s20i.192,000 from :ls'I.000,000. lumped to om.ooo.ooo from -3234,. 'OC'Ii(OBERv 31. .1952 ' life was never such Fllil before! Navabfi Hill -- . dewlutbap then. ssndswnow K gut II din. sari?" e redder blocs soaiiil dii-.' MIILLIAMS PINK PILLS 000.000. while shipments to Latin America climbed to :3oz,ooo,om from sl32,000,000. .- BRIGIITEIT PLANET Venus, several times brighter than any star. may often in mg ales to continental Europe 4.50 , , 9.50 Now. man. you choose in daylight with the naked eye, MEN'S 39.50 ZIP-IN LINING TOPOOATS As usual, G1-eendal's" give you plenty to choose from - - - as usual Green- dalls give you the great gets Canada's greatest ...und branded that way! this season's best shades and the men that buy: one. Topcocti value ................ .. MEWS 22.50 Fur Collar, Lined. JAOKETS.i.12.95 est values! That's why the crowds truly flock to as (ilreendal Salem Choose your Winter Goat today, choose from s. glorious array - - - all, every one sale priced beyond all equal. Imagine, all wool fabrics in up to the minute styles at such prices - - - By all means come Today or Tomorrow These 49.50 values come 27.5 24.50 10tmWO0L GABliIiDliiECMEii'S 2 mos suns Y”! 9i-'”"a"l9ed 10095 WW-7' E"9ii-"ii G”b""dl"9 T0PC0a" Mostly darker shade: for Winter wear, but some lighter in shades tool English yarn-dyed Worsted:-all with extra trousers, which as you know, lengthens the life of your Suit. On sale today .................... .. 37.50 sovsi 12.95 Fur Collar, Line"tl,JAOKETS . .,s.95 Punt value that defies equ . carry them away at this lo all The crowds will w, low price ............. .. 5.95 MEN'S DRESS mus MEN'S10.95,BREEOH.ES Genuine labelled English cloths in blue: and browns, also Never, never in all history, such a price-smash! Genuine line all wool Tweeds . . . here's Pant value to 8.95 . . .here'r English "Tuff Twist"-guaranteed 10096 wool. cl cloth that really-stands herd weuri We bought too many, so we take it "on the nose" now .......................... .. 5 4.95 THE BIG SALE FOR REAL VALUES GREEN DAUS N0 Wonder The Crowds Stormed The Citadel! I when ladies see a vast siocit like GREENDAUS. sale-priced from stem to stem at the start of the season . . ,. the crowds were sure to flock in . and they did! A Supre,me,i Unmatched , 01 Ladies Winter; Coats T9 39.50 '!lere'stlie'.lopooatbnyofa.ntnn..-..1..;..,g T uh .., Zip-in the has quilted lining for Winter, up s in e on - -L - 312:0: 01:33., prey, fieigei Greendels chop down tits p on on M5 .9 144 or. areas: ............. .... Hg -24.50