i i MONDAY. liiele Zeke and Pile-had tile same idea About the only difierence was that Fido buried bones all over the place in broad daylight. ‘Uncle Zeke used to plant his liard- earned savings out by the barn in the dark of the Your modern “buried treasure" may be in a much safer place. Ordinary methods of saving are fine, as far as they g0, hut they are subject to what too often happens to the best of human intentions. A Canada Life contract goes further. Have the nearest Canada Life representative show you liow one dollar can do the work of $3.00 in terms of a guaranteed retirement income. WLCANADA LIFE ~———7%we/W 5W”! Isles-entail». s. w. witus moon. Both of them could—and did-dig into their savings whenever they felt the need. 1 CABLE MIXUP STARTS HEAVY therefore been necessary for the RUN ON HIDES government to impose restrictions on sales until a satisfactory alloca- tion had been utozttcd out. A restriction was also placed on BY J1‘- GRAHAM (Canadian Press Staff Writer) \VEI_LINGTON, ttz- Oct 5 — (CPI —- How a mutilated cable 19¢? W i! Specttlalzve orgy q! calf- filllfi buying ‘iv Canada, Australia and other countries o'er told in the New Zcalapitl House of Repre. sentativcs bv the Puiltiiirc Minister Waiter Nash He was explaining festriotions whit-ii have been placed on the sale of lilacs, pelts and skins in New Zciiiand. The flood of OFQEPS from abroad. Mr Nash said, resulted in the sell. fttg forward of irtore than half New Zealand‘; output or calfskins for the present year in two days. Mr Nash said the Dominica's tvas traditionally States and Catn- quantities going in the Us.” < ., ates prices ymiogl to a point where titer becamg purely speculative nrd ‘were unre. ated to value A :abie was received frcm _Bri'ain asizina for 350.000 calfskins from Nrw Zcalund in the DFPWH? W?" Wfri-itirxttely the cable was ilil :i in transmis- f~l(‘-ll_3,l‘~.'i tho time rcqtilrcd to m- icr l‘, hat-l: to London PPSUltECl in iirws of til." ;'<i'tl‘. rcntllinfz Can. nda. thc Uili"‘.'l States and Aus- t-riilln before inc inntw was clan‘ tiled. The fflstlli. trzis that orders to blly Cfllfrklllb iTWIICd iii from 3195i; oouirtries at. -i.l SIYiS of prices up to 54 cents tier pound. Orders were lilaccd for 280.0% for Canada. 166.. 1100 for Auslrztlizi, 45.000 for Bei- irium, 6.000 for lioliand. 2.801 for France, 20.000 for the United States and 20,000 tor Britain. This meant, Mi". Nash said, that insufficient cat- ltiits were left. to meet. Britain's need; and New Zea... land's own requiremeris It had Free Estimates aml "11121 and Britain. l .oLs were removed l , from here Booklets on request. ‘o ch" the price to be received by sellers in New Zeaianci This was fixed at 43 cents per pound The differ- eitce between this price and the speculative Dricvis being offered would be paid into the Bobby Calf Pool. where it. would be held for the benefit of producers. HE'S RICH, HARD T0 GET DAR $ SALAAM. Tanganyika. Sept. 30 -Dr John Thornburn Williamson turreed up today as perha the world's nchest. most eligibe bacheecr- but marriage. minded girls will leave to go to Tanganyika to catch him. FABULOUS STRIKE He's 5 feet, t0 inches tall slim. dark and handsome He's single. And he's lust turned up the world's rhhest diamond mire —a fabulous strike that. should be more valuable than the Kimber- ley Mines which have produced more than 51.000.000.000 worth of gems in the ‘est half century. The trouble is that Williamson is shy He won't leave his mine. which is deep in Africa. 500 miles He works l2 hours a clay He won't. see invone except a few government officials. and they must go to him People who have met him. however say he's not entirely anti-social He keeps his radio going every minute he's awake-whether he's working or resting His house has few furrisiilngs. but they include expensive in rugs and etchings. KINDLY NATURE v Williamson's acquaintances re. He's INSULATE . . . so oviancossia uzxr wmranas FUEL SHORTAGE REMEMBER, we hav that all types of fuel Enjoy more comfort, and burn less fuel Insulate with Mineral Wool. D- J. CHEYNE, Care Guardian Office. NORTEHRN INSULATION COMPANY 0F CANADA LTD. Murine, Home and lnduelrfai Insulators will be in short su lotte St. e been warned by our government pply next; winter. CALL US NOW ! port he has a kindly iiatum, snd has provided extra facilities for his 6,000 mtive workers. After writ-king hours, he reads the classics and books on geology. He has a doctors degree from lVicGill University in Canada, and may be writing a book about geo- logy. V '1 hat will be about rocks-includ- ing diamonds. of which he has plenty. REPORT CANNIBALISM IN NXGERIAN JUNGLE LAGOS. Nigeria, Oct. 3 - A gruesome story of murder and cannibalism in the Nigerian lun- gle growing out of tribal enmity unfolded in a Lagos courtroom! when ll natives were arraigned mi a charge of murder. All were convicted and sentenced tiodcsth. The fate of Jamieson Limo Etuk. Owerri Province school- teacher. after he left his home to arrange for a family feast was learned shortlv after his murder and reported in news dispatches from a Nigerian settlement. But it was not until the murder trial‘ when an eyewitness of the crime told his storv from the stand that details of his death were teamed. For more than s year enmity existed between the Ibibios. the tribe to which Etuk belonged. and ille Ibos who blamed the Ibiblos for the mur er of their chief. The boundary line between the tribes‘ lands is the river which divides Owerri from Calabar Pro- vince. It was in Calabsr shortly after crossing the stream where Eluk died. Six men attacked the school- teacher with clubs at the top of c hill up which Etuk hm pushed ill! bicycle. the witness testltiectl clubbed unconscious. Etuk wasl dragged lnl0 the bum and exhdb-i ited before members of the Ibo tribe. Then his bodv was out up. 51359311 as his first strong bid for THE CHARLUI l-l: Balls For Statement 0f Policy I: JAMES M0000! Press 8 party today called overwhekmng- ly for s concrete program and s statement of policy with which to so " t propaganda“ and rally the electorate ssnlnst the Labor Government. At the ssmol time d oliurcnfli, party esder m wer- time Prime ltflnistiét‘. said than! "all the burden" of upon the United States. Ho re- nswed his pies for the establish- ment of s United Ststu of Itur- one. Following this afternoon's livflt’ session st the party's 62nd annual delegates speculated . Churchill would ssy tomorrow in his scheduled sd- drsss in answer to the fuflous- demands from the convention floor for s statement of policy. Speaker after speaker todsY rose angrily and said sthere mil-Kt be clear-cut leadership and aflrm policy. They declared that the leadership and partv policy mil-Iii i» able to mower question: such ss what the Conservatives would do with s rationalized industry if they were elected. While the conference was going about its business encrueticsily- Anthony Eden, deputy party iesdq er and former foreign secretsry. outlined his polic views in a speech at Liv uo Mr. Eden out ined a trl-partlte Canadian ts! Writer other war in ssvon or eilht years BLAO Lance, mglsnd. unless the nations of the world Oot. 6 - Britain's conserve/save reach s ood- s em t thst will Winston Hfiythil restoring, ten passengers and more than 200 world peace should not. be throwni 1199011116111! 01 Cimdll" system for industry with the state leading but not directing a psi-t-. nershln of management and inborn Management would run industry‘ with government help, advice snd assistance. he said. “I believe that with proper tin- derstanding, the organizing DOW!‘ of modern government can be de- veloped not to obstruct and to stultifv free enterprise but to help it adapt itself to chanting world conditions and to realize the hltlh- est levels of production." Labor too. must 1011i ii‘! U" drive {@1- production, he said. The labor unions’ fear of unemploy- ment could itself contribute to that vefv unemployment. Wildcat strikes were in part caused bv the feeling of union members that thev were losing contact with their leadershili- ' A5 Mr. Eden is one of the men closest to Mr. Churchill. Conser- vative circles here interpreted his the Darty leadership when M'- Churchtll decides to retirc- I! W35 also believed that Mr. Eden's speech was made with his chiefs approval. Another phase of today's meet- unanim- ing saw the conference ouslv endorse resolutions 0h ill"; need for maintalnim impel" preferential tariffs and advocating Dominion status for India. L, s, Amery, g, former cabinet minister, told the conference lhiit imperial preference mad-e possibhe the malsi" devfllobme!" 0i t; Canadian automobile industry B11 resulted in Canadian trifle 50d other suDpllgs being available dur- l ’»‘ '1 . lnqAnlllid Jilin. he said he believed the British Afmv could not h?!" taken the field as early in 1e w“ u, it did without the cars and equipment Canada 51.1001184- Tnnjghfs meeting also adopted resolutions criticism! 10¢ “we Union Congress‘ ctosedfhop cam- Dailln and expressive "a" “"1" lSamuel Gerson, 41. of wwiu GUARDIAN Food Board Is Answer To Atomic Bomb i KAI-FAX, Oct’ B —(OP)— Ani- gre ‘provide ealth standards for the ,world was forecast by Sir John [Boyd Orr, Scotch director general ‘of the United Notions Food and Ageleultups Organization. who lei-rived hero today sbolrd ti" F . ' The liner docked almost M hours ahead of schedule with 600 civil- service- men. Included in tho passenger List were Miss Rhonda-is Kelly. winner of the title "Miss Australia", and the Jooss ballet troupe. , Sir John, who is on his way to a conference in Washington, said that only on the matter of fond was then s chance of world agree- ment, adding that only s world food board will be the answer to the atomic bomb. "Either we will have wsr in seven or eight years and we will all be blown to hell. - . or we'll have world co-operation." He expressed doubt that ti. Paris peace conference woul reach a successful conclusion. “Such treaties will only last as long as they suit any particulat- nation. » “Nations will never co-operrite on the matter of boundaries. But they will about something as con- crete as food." ‘ Complete Grown Testimony In Espionage Trial OTTAWA. Oot 5 -—lCP)- The Crown finished with its star wit- ness today in the trial of Harold Montreal and Ottawa, a former munitions department official who is charg- ed with conspiring to communi- cate confidential information for Soviet Russia. Mr. Justice G. F, McFarland of the Ontario Supreme Court ad- journed the trial until Monuay.i postponing defence examination of stocky Igor Gouzenko, 27, form- er cipher cleric for LtpCol. Nicolai i Zabotin, the former military at- i tilche at the Russian Embassy and allegedly the head of an espionage ring said to include the Montreal- born Gerson, In his second day on the wit- ness stand befqre a jury of 12 men. Gouzenko completed ld-mti- ficatlon of 28 documents he took with him when he fled the em- bassy Sept. 5. 1945. Thirteen were outlined Thursday. the other l3 today. All have been made public previously, Most of those submitted today referred to Russian requests for information and to information provided by Dr. Allan Nunn May. British scientist now serving a 10-year term for espionage. in- clucilng obtaining samples of uran- ium, atomic bomb ingredient. which were flown to Moscow from Canada, They were submitted to estsb- lisit the breadth of the conspiracy in which the accused is said to have been involved, The trial of Gerson, a genie-pica] engineer and graduate of lvbGill coo any week-day afler Thanksgiving- against infizi BANK ,0 , _ , ' i ' ' working with Conditions: ieoevéry You can buy your Csnads Savings Bonds at your local B ofM branch for cash, on the Monthly Savings Plan, or on the Deferred Payment Piss. Any number q/ our n4] will be glad In give you full particulars. DID m est-ii" in the covernments firm" cw pmgmm University. began Wcdnesd-iy after Mr. Justi-re McFarland ruled that it; would not be in the interests of justice to try him jointly with '_ l; ll ~s presented to four other accused. including J. S. trEtulSl-ltutstatusr the murderedflieiining, his hrother-in-laiv and chief. it was related. and his clo- colleague as a munitions deputi- (hip? and parts of the dismantled ment employee, bicycle were shared H1110“! the murderers. cooked and eaten. Ottawa Reminder lie Application For ' iFamily Allowances SUITS fIORK Ill JIIST 2 SECONDS OTTAWA, Oot 5 —<CP)- Per- sons with children under 16 yenrs who now are not receiving f-lmlly allowances should make immed- iate application to meet income tax revisions effective Jan. i, the health department said today. Under income tax revisions made in the budget l-ist June and cffcc- ttve with the 1947 tsx it is assum- ed thst all taxpayers with child- ren under l6 receive the allowan- ances and the exemption for each child is fixed at $100. Previously. taxpayers who were in higher brackets and whose al- lowances would have been entire- _ RILIEVES NEURITIC——NEURALGIC ' a i~ siarirl"la.i'eei".a® 1y offset by tsx could either coi- Ilfs bu“? and least the allowances" and re sy t em or not take a owsnces. n- CHEAPER to cler the existing arrangements small families with income of not more than $3,200 receive no belo- fit from children's allowances. The department said in todsy's statement that a number of fain- ilies receiving less than $3.200 hsd not taken the benefits because the amount they retained would be prevent trouble than to correctit Saint John, NB PREVENTIVE MIIITEIIAIIGE WILL KEEP YOUR negligible. i "This will no longer be tho the de tment llld, “Be- Iinninl in 1 '1 the taxpayer will be allowed a strsi hi: $100 exempt- ion from taxable ncoms for eseh child under 16 years of no and may also receive the full family can rrr " illfiiifi'“iiliillry?'""’"°“ " "m" i msoom unmann- . t AIAITB tlluvmano It's costly to wait till NfltL, you must have your csr . ST. Jfitl. Oct. 4 _ (GM-A naonumoiat. to Olillolmo repaired. It's far better j "l" '9” W" :0 give tit rlpgular" alt- (‘roaming en on o esp n - - good running condition. ‘MQQYJE, ‘NW4’ h, I never took pisos because the was boo buoy with slur. It hss amt-w- »- mtaeeara..~.m.aa.c s. Preventive Maintenance i‘ "W" m" not . ntnof It-stmdsw ssttilsttsndwss I M ' m do» it» pawl» F"?! "°' 11.’. "P" "fil-seaswii. f" '- Charlottetown mififlimuiltveieiadllila Pa? Newfoundland signal from Poldhu on Riglandls southwestern tip 1,900 miles from The message eon. tsted of the sir-gle letter "S" Morse code and was received dis- tinctly many rimm during the day's epoch-making experiments in But the world at. first was skep. hesitant ‘Ilioznas Edison dcsoribed it newspaper fakm. to accept it tioail, of such magnitude was the claim New York newspapers were and even as a As the truth spread across the Maroon‘ world, messages began to pour in from kings. princes and emperors. The limelight of the focused on Newfoundland and the nventor. Oddly enough. Newfoundland for his experiments n response to a distant pica from ts misister cf fisheries, T J Mur- phy. The minister had publuned a chart illustratmg scenes of wrecked steamers and other ves- sels which had piled up on the is. 06011.11 W115 chose B0 Piano's iocky stores Getting in touch with Marconi, he sought croc- tiori of a wireless telegraphy sta- tion on the dar-geraous ccast. The inventor accepted the in. vitation, landed in St. John's early fir. December, iillil and began set- ting up his equipment. He n-ad previously transmitted a sending messages 400 mites" A wed: latex-he hr outdid himself witflhreception of the signal from P ‘u. In. the Second Great War. he we; first employed in the joint plim. ning stafl under the chiefs of stat! in London and subsequently oii the stafi‘ 0f the Ccntral Norwta- ian Expeditionary Force. On his return to India at the end of 1940. he took over com. mend of the 17th Indian Infaiitn- Brigade and later was appointed deputy director of military Opei». ailons at General Headquarters. Recently he became deputy chici -——————————— of the general staff. EVEREST MOUNTAINEER _~_______ COMMANDS AT muons: WOLFVILLEZ. N s. Oct. 4 —(CPl NEW DELHI. Oct. 3—tCP)— —-T'nerv was m coffee. ahavine or washing for half of the resid. ents of Wclfville today after rm water inalti burst and left the western section of the town with. out water. Town authorities have Mai-Gen. J. G. Bruce. D.S.O., the mountaineer who. with Oapt. G. I. Finch. set up a world re- cord in i922 by climbing within 1.800 feet of t-hc peak of Mount Everest. has recently been ap- arranged to deliver water to hos- lpoirrted Lahore Area Commander. pital by truck while the main i: i General Bruce fought in the being repaired arii if necessary s [First Great War and on India's delivery service will be arranged North-West Frontier in 1907-38. for private homes. l el lite ‘eloltlolltllljdaifyfiil this thriller cereal flavor! 1. Yes, even before the first “nickelodeon” with their flicker- ing silent films and piano accompaniment, that one-end- only Grape-Nuts flavor was n big favorite on breakfast tables all over Csnsds. Inst look st tko ‘nourishment Post's Grape-Nuts Flakes give you! Carbohydrates for energy; proteins for muscle; phosphorus for bones srul tooth: iron for the blood; and other food essa- tlslsl Surely here's s lersskfsst trsst your lsnifly nesdssndwfllsnjoyt Piakupspseksgsof really-toast, nourishing Post's Flakes today. You'll appreciate tbs ooonony hhsgisutslsopsoks .Andrsclpesforeoob and other ood gs undo with Post's Gnrvflm Filli- m m mu recha- iiitiilet serial Today that sslno glorious flavor is s “double feature" -you eon enjoy it now in honey-gnldm, curly POSTS GRAPE-NUTS FLAKES ss well ss delicious, chewy Post's Grape-Nuts. And it's sll goodness that comes from two golden grains-wisest and melted barley-specially bladed, hsksd’ and toasted, for _' rioul lover and ossy digestion. ‘ifgeliuts Flakes Ahsblsllsswdhsb 9"‘