PAGE TWO THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1948 Deaths SANDERSON--A¢ the Toronto Western Hospital on Wednesday, June 9th 1948, Reverend Arthur Resting at the chapel of Morley Bedford, 159 Eglinton Avenue West, To- ronto. Service in the chapel on Fri- day at 3 p.m, to Brampton cemetery. In Memoriam memory of a dear WEEKS--In lovin father Ernest away June 10th, 1946. --Sadly missed by his son Bill, daugh- ter-in-law Kathleen and family. (Wel- land). } % N.Z. Protests Color Bar Hint Auckland, N. Z. -- (CP) strongly are New Zealanders im- bued with the view that the native inhabitants of the country, the Maoris, are full citizens with ex- actly the same rights and privileges as Europeans, that any suggestion ®t a color bar being drawn against them is indignantly opposed. An indication that Australia might make a proposal to exclude Maoris in pursuance of its "White Australia" policy drew an immedi- ate angry response in New Zea- land which almost caused an inter- national incident between the two dominions, Actually there are only a few hundred Maoris living in Australia and the White Australia policy has been virtually ignored. as far as they are concerned. However, the Aus- tralian minister of immigration, A, A, Calwell, recently ruled that a Maori ex-serviceman married to an Austtralian woman would not be allowed to remain permanently in Australia. The statement drew protests from Maori leaders in New Zealand. "Apparently Australia likes Maoris only in wartime, when 'they will fight, but does not like them in peace," said Princess Te Puea, one of the most influential Maori lead- ers. Even more significant, however, was the strongly-worded comment of Prime Minister Peter Fraser of New Zealand. He said he felt cer- tain there must be a serious inis- take in the transmission of the re- port, Richmond | Sanderson, of Whithy, Ont., beloved i husband of Vera Nairn Sanderson. . Weeks, who passed | 946 -- So | | Amnesia Victim 'Regains Memory victim Howard Wise recovered | memory Wednesday sonal and family matters to him. May 31. | to his doctors until Wednesday. Mrs. Wise greeted him: you know me?" He replied: wife." Mrs. Wise believes a bad fall dition, Two Seamen (Continued from Page 1) west Steamship Company vessel. Melville" Thompson of Sound and Stanley Landin of To- ronto were charged with intimida- tion and obstructing police. Horace with intimidation. Police said 30*C.S.U. men arrived in Collingwood last Tuesday from Midland and removed the rival Can- adian Lake Seamen's Union (Ind.) crew from the steamer A. A. Hud- son, The crew was returned to the cial Police and the ship cleared for the head of the lakes. COUNTY HOME SOLD Belleville, June 10 -- (CP) --The County Council has accepted the offer of $300,000 for the County Home from the City of Belleville. This will 'include the home and 75 acres of land which adjoins and which was annexed to the city some council to divide the land into building lots and these will be sold to home builders. , STRAWBERRIES APPEAR | home-grown strawberries of the {current season were offered on the {local market today at 60 cents a box." A vender of the Brighton [district offered 35 boxes and they | were quickly snatched up. Today's Short Story THE SEEMLY WILL By KERRY LEE STORM OON, if he had plotted well, |! nephew, | Gerald Trask, the would be rich If he hadn't--Ger- ald dared not squandered five years as the old man's 'companion. Sunlight slant- ed through the leaded window | panes. and one shaft touched the edge of the old man's picture, Josias would have loved that. "It i# seemly,'" he would have said, looking down at the five of them, gathered like vultures, waiting for Barringer to read the will, | Josias with his eternal seemliness! | | eG eyes, probably the only one of Five heads swivelled on five necks as the young lawyer cross- | : ed the deep rug to the grama. | ©0€ not to be trusted with money. phont, set a record and started | it spinning "Mr. Trask," said Steve Barringer, h¥% &yes on Em- | believe he had | Gerald's glance snaked to the boy sprawied in a chair.. Joe was a wastrel and Josias had known it. "...For three years, you ill have an income of $1,400, Joe. The cheques are made. out. You must cash them when they fall due, Joe, because they expire. You will learn now the value of mon- ey, and may it benefit you. The cheques are payable--daily." Gerald saw the subtle change in the boy. Panic. The record spun into silence. | Barringer turned it over. Only Emily blocked the way for Gerald--Emily with her tear-fill- them sincere in her mourning. But "Emily, my, dear," the words were gentle, "I am leaving you $2,000 a year when you marry ily, the daughter, "wanted to tell | you about it himself." The two sisters, Gertrude and Agnes, stiffened on the love seat they were ironically sharing. Young Joe opened his heavy-lid- ded eyes. Gerald forced his mus- cles to relax. He reminded him- self he was through listening hour after hour while the old man read from his diary, through pre- tending he was dutiful, and un- ambitious for money, through living a lie. "The voice of Josias spoke quiet- ly, of the things he had loved, setting the scene. Gerald, who had known him best, could almost im- agine kim saying, "It is the seem- ly thing to do, to talk -a little first ...like this." And, above the mantel, the leonine head was bent and the hands with the blue vein- ing were poised over the open | diary, as if about to turn a page. | Ah, yes--the diary! Gerald felt a spasm of laughter. Now Josias was reading the will. "My sister Gertrude," the tones clipped as in life "--you will remain in the house so long as it suits you, and with sole com- mand of all but the left wing .." 'Gertrude, sitting straight as if her stays were too tight, looked smug. Agnes, who also wanted the property, began to shed crocodile tears Into her handkerchief. "...a superb manager, Gert- | rude," the voice was saying, "and I am sure you will be able to ex- tract decent living from the house and grounds. Try hard to make you nothing else." Gerald's breath came in a gentle sigh. In his mind, he garb- ed the domineering sister in cali- | surrounded her with | co and chickens. "To - Agnes," the voice said, "goes the left wing and, shall we say, a junior partnership in the | house. She will share the meals | and wheedle from her sister what- | ever else she can. I am sure, dear sister, you will succeed. You have had practice...." Gerald, his hopes sky-riding, could see no flaw in his role. He had .been so unworldly that old Josias had believed him on the | verge of taking holy orders. Holy orders! Only for Josias had he stayed--and five hundred thous- and dollars. "Joe," said the voice, "my son Joe. ..I now give you what I nev- you in my life. I give you" inde- pendence." A | | ; Steve Barringer." The lawyer biushed. "Sorry, Steve," said Jo- | sias. "I know you meant to ask her, but you've such a small sup- ply of nerve." Emily gave the lawyer a bird- like glance. And now came the words Gerald had dreamed of. "Gerald, my friend, I entrust my fortune to you." The nephew smiled. "First you are to have my diary, because it will mean most to you. The key is in tha vault under my name." Gerald gloated. The diary a | was a symbol of the rightness of them pay, because I am leaving | his intrigue. It was seemly that he should have it. : | should, er had tha strength of will to give | "Then; Gerald, I want you to take $500 and buy something as a remembrance of me.... You will object, I am sure, but do this for me. As for the rest--there is nearly a million dollars in my es- tate. This I bequeath to you in trust to turn over to the hospital you choose as most deserving or, if you decide to carry out the plans you mentioned, to the reli- gious organization you wish to | enter...' The faces of the others were | biank of understanding, but Ger- ald who had understood him so well, heard the undertones. "This is the last thing you can do for me, Gerald to take your wishes into consid- | eration." whisper. "It is seemly that I I've always understood you, Gerald, you and your intri- gue." : {Gopyright). "I guess you are my time ago. It is proposed by the city | A -- p---- Belleville, June 10 -- (CP) --First The voice sank to a | Holdup Suspects Leave Jail Toronto, June 10 (CP).--Amnesia 11S in a Toronto | hospital as his wife described per- | Wise disappeared from his home | He entered the hospital June 2 and was a complete mystery Don't suffered many years ago may have | contributed to her husband's con- night on charges arising from the | boarding last Tuesday of a North- | Owen | Winsor of Collingwood was charged | | Hiding their faces, James Shane, Toronto (second from left), and William Short, Lond: Ont, h fled | to Provincial Police constables Harold Graham (léft) and John Rowcliffe, leave Lambton County jail at Sarn ship Wednesday night by Provin- | ia, yesterday, to be charged with armed robbery of the Thedford branch of Canadian Bank of Commerce. Marx Grandsons Differ in Views And Mode of Life By CARL HARTMAN Paris--(AP)--One hundred - years after Karl Marx issued his Com- | munist Manifesto, his two-surviving | grandsons differ .sharply about the | true heirs of his teachings. Dr. Edgar Longuet, a prosperous /sician in the Paris suburb of | Maisons Alfort, is a staunch Stalin- ist. Only recently he returned from six weeks of celebrating the Mani- festo"s anniversary in Russia and in Poland. His brother Marcel, a nearly | penniless former newspaper man, lives with his bedridden son above | a grocery store in a poor section of | Paris. Marcel criticizes the Com- munists fo rsuppressing the opposi- tion in Russia and believes the | Marshall Plan "can be very useful." The brothers are the sons of | Jennie, the younger of Marx's two | daughters. She married Charles | Longuet, a French professor in | England, who later brought his | family to France to live. At 69, Dr. Edgar Longuet keeps up his medical practice but is no longer active in politics, although he leaves no doubt where his sym- pathies lie. His pleasant house and { garden were a shelter for leading { Polish ' Communists = fleeting the | Gestapo during the German occu- pation. For his help the Poles dec- | orated him with the Order of | Poland restored during his recent trip. Dr. Longuet himself had a close call in 1940 when his name was | | found on a list held by a man the | Germans had arrested. | "They called me for questioning," | he said 'over a glass of the vodka | | given him by his Polish friends. | | "But . . . they never did find out | | who my grandfather was--in fact | | they seemed impressed when I told | | them I had a grandparent born m Germany." | Bourgeois Home | Dr. Longuet received a reporter | | and photographer in a large, sunny | dining room. The table was neatly | set for an appetizing French | bourgeois lunch. He reminisced { about Marx as a kindly old man | who used to come to see his grand- | | children at Argenteuil -- then a | | well-to-do residential suburb on the | | Seine. | The eldest of the family was | | Jean, who later became a Socialist | | member of the French chamber of | | deputies. He died in 1938, Jennie, named for her mother, lives with | | her brother Edgar. Neither she nor | Marcel was invited to Moscow. Marcel came to be a political re- | porter for the biggest dailies of Paris. He worked with Georges Clemenceau when the future Firsg World War premier ran the nevs- | paper "L'Aurore." He knew ILeon | Blum and Pierre Laval from the | earliest days of their political cur- | eers. Marcel has not worked for any newspaper since the Second | World War began, Recently he lost a small 2overn- | ment clerkship in an economy shakeup. Unkempt, in ragzed trousers and sweater, he stood and | talked politics for half an hour at | the door of his dingy flat. Un- | washed dishes, and scraps of fur. ! niture that must have aated irom | his youth, cluttered the room be- | hind him. | His political stand is far 10 the | left. "Parliamentary democracy is | necessary," he said. "The parties in France today are in ga terrible democracy needs an opposition. It mess, full of careerists. But a strong | needs Communists, just as it reeds | the rightist parties." BRAK SEEDING RECORD | Calgary -- (CP) -- | ers indicate that -- despite the | latest season on record--the prov- |ince is well on the way to a good crop. Farmers beat the | Working tractors up to 20 hours a | | day In some instances 23 hours a | day using lights, for the quickest | | seeding on record. Alberta farm- weather by | | | | | | | REGINA JOBS OPEN Regina -- (CP) -- Jobs are going | | begging in Regina. The local office | |of National Employment Service has 1000 jobs on file and few ap- | plications to fill them, says Leyton | Robinson, manager, f i | OLD COINS FOUND Montreal -- (CP) Human | {bones and .old coins were found by | | workmen excavating a downtown | | rellaing site which long before was | a cemetery attached to a convent. | he coins were dated 1731, 1815 and | Their Wedding Day Today Ex-King Michael of Romania and his fiancee, Princess Ann of Bourbon- Parma, are shown as they arrived at the Beaurivage hotel in Lausanne, Switzerland. Their marriage will take place in Athens today and will be attended by members of the royal families and Greek premier Themi- | stokles Sophoulis, and foreign minister Constantin Tsaldaris. They will be married at a noon ceremony performed by Archbishop Damaskinos in the 'Greek Orthodox church. Communist's Arrest "A Surprise" | Jack Stachel (2nd from left) is pictured with reporters after his release on $3,500 bail. Stachel, 49, U.S. national educational director of the Com- munist party im the United States, was arrested by the F.B.I. and im- migration authorities on charges of entering the U.S, illegally. Stachel said his arrest was "quite a surprise." Local Grain Local selling prices for bran $47- $48 ton; shorts, $49-$50; baled hay, $20-$22 ton; straw, $18-$20 ton; pastry flour, $3.95 a bag; bread flour, $4.75 a bag. Dealers are pay. ing no set price. Wheat, $148 a bushel; oats, 85.20 cents; barley, $1.20-81.25; buckwheat, $1.25. Local Eggs Local eggs: Grade A large, 43; grade A medium, 40; grade A pul- | let, 35; grade B, 33; grade C, and | cracks, 28. Produce Toronto, June 10 -- (CP) -- Pro- duce prices on the spot market here today were unchanged and quoted as follows: Churning cream, unchanged with | No, 1 1b, 68 cents fob, delivered, 72. Butter prints unchanged with 1st grade 66; 2nd grade 65; 3rd grade 64, i Eggs: All available supplies on the egg market here today were in | good demand but prices were un- changed. Grade A large pullet 37-38; grade B 39-40; grade C 36. Shippers quoted eggs, cases free, grade A large 47-48; grade A | medium 45-46; grade A pullet 40- 41; grade A 43-44; grade C 39-40. Butter solids are firm today but | there has been little offered at the | MANAGERESS WANTED FOR NEW SPECIALITY STORE Excellent Opportunity for an experienced saleslady capable of assuming responsibilities of managing a new store in one of Can- ada's largest chains of women's speciality shops. This Store will open in August. Qualifications are Initiative, Enthusiasm and ex- cellent references. Good pay and chances for advancement. Apply in own handwriting to: BOX NO. 534, OSHAWA, Ont. grade and 64-65 for second grade. . | Fruit Toronto, June 10--(CP)--Whole- | sale fruit and vegetable prices here | today were unchanged with the foi- lowing exceptions: ries, pints 25-35 cents; quarts 40- | 50 cents. | Hogs Toronto, June 10--(CP) At | Stratford today quotations on hogs | to farmers were $29.35, to truckers | $20.50. At Hull hogs off truck were | unquoted and dressed grade A were | unchanged at $29.50 delivered. | . Livestock -- Toronto, June 10 (CP)--Trade on | the livestock market here today was | too light to establish prices. Slight | receipts of only 20 head of cattle | and 10 hogs were reported by the | Dominion Marketing Service. Clos- | ing prices on hogs were: Grade A | $20.75, grade Bl $29.35, , . . Fight Fires (Continued from Page 1) | ber, mostly white pine, devasting | 250 square miles. i Near Rouyn in the Quebec fire | area the gold-mining village of | Belleterre was declared out of dan- ger with a fire stopped three miles | from its outskirts, Spruce, birch and | other species of timber were des troyed in four townships 50 miles | south of Rouyn. | More than 100 fires burned in the | Val D'Or area. Some were small, | cthers fairly large. All raced through tinder-dry wood. Rouyn, Que., June 10--(CP)--With no sign of rain, veteran firefighters | today dug in, determined to halt the | march of hundreds of forest fires | burning in many areas of Northern | Quebec. | From the Maniwaki region to the | Lake St. John district the wall of | fire was making steady progress. { Near Rouyn, one veteran bush | pilot reported that he estimated | fires covered an area of more than 100 square miles, At Belleterre, 200 firefighters were successful] Wednesday ins checking the flames and putting the | gold-mining village out of danger. In the townships of Guillet, Dev- lin, Brodeur and Blondeau, 50 miles south of Rouyn, forest travel has been banned although the situation' wa sconsidered "improved." Spruce, birch and other hardwoods were be- ing destroyed hourly in the four townships. One hundred miles north of Man- iwaki, at Forbes Depot, a strong breeze fanned severa] large fires and kept them out of control. In the Val D'Or area, more than 100 fires are still burning, some small and local, others fairly large, spreading through tinder-dry wood. + At Trenche River, 50 miles west of Roberval on the western shore of Lake St. John, a fire was causing some uneasiness for forest rangers. | A Rouyn bush pilot described one | fire: "I was flying north of Amos and noticed a small fire on a farm, When I passed by there a few hours later it had spread across the set- tler's land but by dusk it was still under control. "However, by noon today, when I flew over the same clearing, the fire had spread for about a mile. It was still spreading." | western WHERE DID IT GO? Clarence Bodington Kelland, author; | P. Hal Sims, bridge expert, anxiously watch the fii A golfer's first thought is "Where did the ball go?" J 4 * By ALEX J, MORRISON | If you 'have had any experience | given subject then draw up a chair | and we'll sympathize with each | other. Perhaps you're not inclined | |to sympathize with me because you |their owners deem the matter too abstract or | borihg. Well, don't hang up, we may get something of vital im- your every day Jie. Golf demands ! all of the atterftion you can pos- | sibly give to it and this means all | you are capable of giving to any | one thing at any one time. | This maximum of attention is required for two very good rea- | | sons: first, consistent success at he | right things at the right time. Asparagus $2.75-$3.50; strawber- |game cannot be had without it and | course 'this means merzal second, the real benefits such as | mental and physical relaxation and | refreshment cannot be had with- out it. Many prefer to speak of this | matter of attention as concentra- tion. And the men who engage in | activities demanding the keenest | 'Britons Believe | Ruhr Not Likely To Go Communist | (Reuters) Leading | in the Ruhr are Berlin British officials | 'convinced that in spite of repeaicd | | food crises and the threat of un- | employment as a result of the | Allies' dismantling policy, | the Ruhr would be one of the last | | areas of Europe to "go Communist." | They believe that this sprawling | industrial region, containing more | vital factories and mines per square | mile than any comparable area in the world, will remain faithful to the west in almost all circum- stances. The officials, who themselves ad- mit that they have been surnrised | at the extent to which Communist | propaganda in the Ruhr has failed, base their views on four main | factors: | 1. Reports of heavy-handed Com- munist methods in the Soviet zone. 2. Inborn dislike of the Prussian and an equally inborn belief that the Rhineland and Wesphalia "be- long to western Europe." 3. Contempt and hatred for the Russians, still widely regarded as an inferior race. : 4. The widespread influence of the Roman Catholic Church, led in the Ruhr by the uncompromis- ingly anti-Communist Joseph Car- dinal Frings of Cologne. | These four factors are sufficient to convince the British that they | can count on the co-operation of | the Ruhr as long as mo action is | taken by the west to destroy the confidence of the Germans. SINGER SEWING CENTRE RENT A PORTABLE ELECTRIC home per monen 90.00 REPAIRS WE BUY ables. Cabinets To All Makes of Sewing Machines WE SELL Treadles AVAILABLE NOW! BUTTONHOLE ATTACHMENTS UNIVERSAL MOTORS SINGER LIGHTS SINGER CABINETS SEWING STOOLS SKIRT MARKERS Immediate Delivery on New Machines 16 ONTARIO ST. OSHAWA Your sewing mach. ine--We Pay Cash New and Used, Port- AR III III IIIIIIIIIIIIITIIIIIIIIII XIX XX FR MASONIC DANCING 12 O'Clock ® Dance. to Recorded Music e Dancing: 9.00 p.m. Till 12.00 p.m. Lub IDAY, JUNE Ul TEMPLE Ladies . 25¢ XXIII XIX Ir XI rxrxrrrxIrrxIrrIrIrIrrIrIrImIZI rr rrIrrrrrz=;rzrxzx Admission: Gentlemen . 35¢ AAR RARE RA AA RA A A A A A A A A I EX XX XI XI XX XX I I IX IIIIIIIIZIT 1900000000000 000480060000000000000000000000006004 Grantland Rice, sports writer, and ght of Sims' tee shot. kind of concentration generally are quite ready to agree with my stand 44-441; |in directing and keeping the at- on the mental side of golf. grade A medium 42%-43; grade A | tention of another person on any|{ The minds of writers like Clag- ence Budington Kelland and Grantland Rice, bridge 'experts such as Hal Sims are so active that must. have some the grind of their is afforded in golf nature of the activity escape from work. This since the higher prices of 66 cents for 1st {Portance to your golf as well as |allows for little thought about any=- thing else. Golf attracts attention because it is entireiy different from other activities. Tt is an adventure in many ways. After it has attracted your at- tention it challenges your abili.y to keep up your attention on #e of effort, perhaps the hardest work of all, but it also brings you the valuable reward of relaxation. A pupil re- cently wrote, "After a rcund of golf we suddenly realized that we had completely forgatten all of our many problems and troubles whils on the course." your 31 Seamen (Continued from Page 1) McLean, Orillia; Robert Carr, Owe en Sound; Hubert McNeil, Toron- to; George Battes, Toronto; John Laurin, Valrita; John A. Fraser, Windsor; William Armstrong, Sud- bury; John H. Moungenil, Toron= to; William Kuzman, Coldwater; Aage Antonsen, Thorold; Louis Schmaltz, Thorold; Basil Dawson, Owen Sound and Michael Jackson, Montreal. ADAMS EQUALS RECORD New York--Herb Adams of the Hot Springs Club of the Cotton States League equalled Alex Mon- tesino's feat of getting seven hits in a single game to tie the league record. Adams came to the plate eight times in a 14-inning game with Helena, Ark. FRESH GRADE A ROASTING CHICKENS LB. 49. 5 TO 7-LB. AVERAGE COOKED MACARONI : CHEESE LOAF LB. 39. SMOKED Skinless WIENERS LB. 3 5c VEAL Sirloin -- Leg -- Rump Roast LB. 39. SLICED PEAMEAL BACON LB. 4&9: HAMBURG STEAK LB. 39: 12 Kino-E. -- Phane 1147 RULE 218 3B S