PAGE TWO THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE - TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1947, Births IMESON--] Mrs. William Imeson, A rn ce the birth of their William Charles on y, ch 30, 1947 at the Oshawa General Hospital. ; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Quil- ig ie Marion Groves), are very happy to announce the birth of Juels daughter on Sunday, March 30, at the General Hospital, St. Catharines, Ont, In Memoriam = lov! memory of my MANY in 8 who passed nephew, away api ,» 1945. Tis the | Hbuse of love and remem- son, Mar an hew one of the best. Toe IoTs that he missed on life's high- ways, find in God's den of rest. May, De ngly oi by his Aunt Flo. Hawley. ' MANN--In loving memory of our dear son and brother Larry, who went away suddenly April 1st, 1945, Two lonely years have drifted by, To speak our thoughts we will not try; But one treasured gift we do retain, Your eyes in memories frame, A beautiful memory dearer than gold, Of a son whose worth can never be told, To those who knew him, all will know How much we lost two years ago. --Sadly missed and fondly remember- ol by Mom and Dad, Jack, Ray and Lois. Cards of Thanks Mr. and Mrs. J. McMaster, Gibbon 8t., wish to thank" Dr. Bayne, and nurses of the children's ward, also nds, , and for flowers, cards and other gifts, during Barbara's recent illness. Mr, Clarence Bell wishes to thank Dr, ° Maroosis and nurses of Oshawa General Hospital and friends for their thought- fulness during his recent illness. Danish Tenor Heard at Ajax H. M. PIPER Correspondent Ajax, March 31 The Ajax Church was well filled on Sunday evening to hear Gunnar Knudson, Danish lyric tenor, who had with him Rev. Cairns, Mrs. Cairns and their daughter. We are quite certain the small Ajax Church building has never contained such grand volume of music as was heard when .Mr, Knudson filled it with his glorious voice. Rev. Cairns, with his piano accordion; his daughter on the piano and our own Mary McRae on the church organ, accompanied the congregational singing of the grand old Gospel hymns. Rev. Caims spoke on the "Second Coming of the Lord." For all there having "ears to hear" his message should not soon be forgotten. Gunnar Kaudson and his party came to our church by invitation giving of their time and talent en- tirely free of charge. We feel sure that all who heard them feel en- tirely grateful. The Ontario Street Ladies' Bridge Club gathered "last Thursday eve- ning to give a swprise send-off to one of their number in the person of Mrs. Norma Ogston who will * henceforth be residing in Toronto. _ Vi Noland was the lucky winner of the prize for having the highest bridge score. Miss Esther McRae, Reg. N., of York Street, spent the week-end in Buffalo, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. S. Sandercock visit- ed in Cobourg over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. R. Upton, Ontario Street, visited their parents in Wellington over the week-end. We are pleased to hear that Mr. Neill, 4 Ontario Street, is gradually recovering from his bout with pneumonia. Wartime Veterans Lead Peace Fleet Ottawa--(CP)--The eight opera- tional ships of Canada's peacetime fleet are commanded by an impos- ing array of veteran officers of the Royal Canadian Navy. Their decorations include a com- mander of the British Empire, a Distinguished Service Order, 4 Dis- tinguished Service Crosses, a mem- ber of the Order of the British Em- pire, six mentions in dispatches and a United States Legion of Merit. Few major war areas were missed by them, and at one time or an- other all served in the Battle of the Atlantic. Captain of the fleet's largest unit and senior Canadian naval of- ficer afloat is Commodore Harry DeWolf, CBE, DSO. DSC. of Bedford," NS. He commands thes 18,000-ton aircraft carrier, H.M. C.S8. Warrior. The HMC.S. Haida, a Tribal class destroyer, is captained by Acting Lt.-Cmdr. F. B. Caldwell, who entered the navy at Amherst, N.S, in 1934. Acting Lt.-Cmdr, J. C. O'Brien of Montreal is captain of the destroy- er Crescent. A communications expert, he took his early training at oval Military College, Kingston, nt. Capt. EK. F. Adams of Victoria and Acting Lt.-Cmdr. R, L. Hen- nessy, DS.C., of Ottawa, are both former commanders of the famous wartime destroyer Assiniboine, Capt. Adams now commands the * cruiser Uganda and Lt.-Cmdr. Hen- nessy the destroyer Micmac. Senior destroyer captain in the fleet is Cmdr, H. 8. Rayner, D.S.C. and Bar, captain of the recently- commissioned Nootka. He is a na- tive of Clinton, Ont. Lt.-Cmdr. B. P, Young, M.BE., of Halifax and Acting Lt.-Cridr, J. E. Wolfenden of Taber, Alta. both started as ratings in the Royal Ca- nadian Naval Reserve. Wolfenden still is a reservist, the only com- manding officer who is not a mem- ber of the permanent R.C.N. ees se------ IN NEW YORK HARBOR Bedloe's Island in New York har- bor, on which the Statue of Lib- erty stands, was named after Isaac Bedloe, its first owner, granted land prior to 1670. ° tn -- "PIONEER BERRY Seventeenth century pioneers found the cranberry growing wild among beach-plum and bay-berry bushes in clearings behing the Ply- mouth settlement, Hits Politics At a press conference in New York, His Holiness Mar Eshai Shimum XXIII, patriarch of the Church of the East, charged that theAssyrians and other independent national groups in the Middle East are be- ing "sacrificed on the altar of oil." The Assyrian leader said his people are innocent victims of power poli- tics, Y.P. Members Attend Meeting At Welcome M. HORN Correspondent Hampton, March 31.--Relat- ives from here attended the fun- eral of the late Mr, Wm, Lam- miman in Oshawa, last week, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Peters and Ralph, Toronto, visited his fa- ther, Mr. A. Peters, who is on the sick list. Mr. and Mrs, J. R. Reynolds and sons, David and John, visited relatives in Toronto on Sunday. A number of our Young People attended a conference Camp Re- union at Welcome on Friday night, and report a very profit- able and pleasant evening. Regular meeting of the Wo- men's Institute will be held this Thursday afternoon in the church basement, Mrs. Rev. E, S. Linstead will give a talk on their work among the Indians at Muncey Ontario, West group will be in charge of the program, There will be no meeting of The Young People's. Union on Friday next, Our pastor will con- duct a Good Friday service at 8 o'clock in the church basement, to which all our congregation are invited. Our Union will visit Trinity Young People, Bowman- ville, this Monday night. Our pastor's message at the Sunday evening service was on the theme of the "Cross" and "Redemption"--and the "Forgiv- ing Love of the Father." An ap- propriae duet "Ivory Palaces" was sung by Mr. T. Salter and Mrs. Hilton Peters, and a fitting choir selection. Next Sunday sac- rament of the Lord's Supper will be administered at the Sunday evening Easter service. Special musie. The Young People's Union on Friday night was not largely at- tended owing - to some of our members attending the Oak Lake Camp Conference re-union at Welcome, and other activities elsewhere, The president was in the chair and opened the meet- ing with the hymn "Rescue The Perishing," followed by the Lord's Prayer. Business was con- duced. An invitation to visit the Maple Grove Union on Wednes- day night, April 9th, was extend- ed and accepted, program com- mittee was appointed for same. The Worship service was prepar- ed by Eileen Wray and opened with quiet music. Those taking part were, Alan Keetch, Grant Williams and Jean Kersey. "Come Let Us Sing of a Wonder- ful Love" was sung. Orville Hind- man presided for the program which consited pf a piano solo by Fay Reynolds; the topic on the "Life of Tolstoy" by Audrey Ker- sey and a piano solo by Jean Bal- son, "He Leadeth Me" waw sung and the meeting closed with the Mizpah Benediction. Hear Defence (Continued from Page 1) said. He did not know, however, if his son had had any nails. Mr, Glecoff claimed the nails he had were bought in 1945. In his own defence, Constantine Glecoff said he had telephoned to the W.P.TB. in Toronto before the sale to ascertain what he could sell them for. He claimed he was told he could sell the nails for what he could get for them. He claimed he had bought one keg of nails in Montreal for $25. Glecoff also claimed that W. N. McLennan, Toronto W.P.T.B. offi- cial, paid him a visit on November 23, last, when Mr, McLennan told him a pathetic story about n:eding nails and offered him $5 for the keg. He also said D. M. Alloway had offered him $15 for the keg but he had not sold them to him. In cross examination by Mr, An- nis, the accused said he had made no profit from the nails. It was also brought out that after the al- leged sale that Glecoff had bzen to see W.P,T.B. officials in Toronto on three occasion, and was told by o:- ficials that he could sell the nais for what he could get for them, Mr, McLennan was called by Mr. Annis in rebuttal and tes'itied that when he saw the accused in Osh- awa he was asked $2 for the keg of nails, In order to permit of the evid- ence of W.P.T.B, officals in To oa- to being heard in connection witi Glecoff's statements of consulting them, Mr, Annis asked that the hearing be further adjourned. Magistrate Ebbs conc: rred ond adjourned the hearing until April 10th, fa -. - Farmers' Market | Local Grain -- Lo.al selling prices for grain $29-$30 ton; shorts $30-$31 ton; baled hay $18-$20 to..; s{raw $16-$18 ton; pastry flour $2.36 a bag; bread flour $2.90 a bag. Dealers are paying no set price. Wheat, $1.26 a bushel; oats 53. B6c; barley 65¢; buckwheat 75- 80c. Cheese -- Toronto, April 1---(CP)--Whole- sale cheese quotations were un- changed here today at: first grade large paraffined, colored 22 3/16 cents. 1b, white 22% cents, both F.O.B. factory. Fruit -- Toronto, April 1--(CP)--Whole- sale fruit and vegetable prices here today supplied by White and Company follow: Domestic: Cabbage orange cra- tes 35-50c; mushrooms 5 lb, car- crates 50c; mushrooms 5 1b, car- tn $2.65-$2.76; radishes doz. 40- 50c; beets bu, 50-65¢c; green on- ions doz. 35-50c; Ontario new po- tatoes 75 1b. bag No, 1 $1.10-8§1.- 25; carrots bu. unwashed 75-85¢; washed $1.00-$1.25; turnips un- washed bu, 50-60c; waxed tur- nips 50 1bs., 90-81. Imported: Calif. asparagus $7- $8.50, Calif. oranges $5.- 256-$7.50; Messina Italian lem- ons $5-$5.560; Florida grapefruit $3.50-$4; Texas grapefruit $3.50- $4; pineapples $5.76-$6; Texas spinach bu, $2.25-$2.50; Calif. cauliflower $3; Calif. lettuce $5; Calif, carrots crt. $4.765- $5; Calif, green peas $4.75; new cabbages crt. $3.76-$4; Florida celery $6.$6.50; Yams $4.50; sweet potatoes $3.75; beans Fla. plentiful Valentine $8.50, Livestock -- Toronto, April 1--(CP)--Cat- tle prices were firm in early sales on the livestock market here today. Good weighty steers brought $15-$15.25, good butcher heifers $14.25-$§14.75. Veal calves were steady at $16-§17 for choice with plains downward to $12. No price was established for hogs, which closed previously at dres- sed, grade A $22, grade Bl $21.- 60. No sheep or lambs were of- fered, Unsold from yesterday were 100 head of cattle. Re- ceipts: Cattle 180, calves 90, hogs 260, Hogs -- Toronto, April 1--(CP) Grade A dressed bacon-hogs were unchanged at Hull $22 delivered, unsettled with no prices estab lished at Stratford, in markets re- porting early today, Produce -- Toronto, April 1--(CP)--Prod- uce prices in the spot market here today were reported as follows: Churning cream unchanged, No. 1 Ib. 41 FOB, 45 delivered, plus 10 cents subsidy. «2, 2nd grade 39. Butter solids unchanged, grade 40, 2nd grade 39. Eggs: Receipts ample, trading brisk with Easter coming up, de- mand particularly keen for break- ing stock; wholesale to retail, A large 39-41, A medium 37-38, A pullet 36, B 35-36, C 33-34; country shippers quoted graded ezgs, cases free, A large 36-36%, A medium 34-34%, A pullet 32-33, B 32-33, C 30-30%. Honey -- Toronto, April 1 -- (CP) honey quotations were unchanged here today at: 24 1-lb, glass jars $4.82; 24 2-lb. glass jars $9.12; car- 1-1b. white No. 1 $4.92, # -lb. white No. 1 $9.26: White Nod $3.04; 8 6.10. white No. 1 $8.67; 2-lb. Orange Label 24 $8.36; 2-1b. Red Label 24 $7.98; bulk 160s Golden Amber $6.98. 1st --- Not Remaining Brings $25 Fine A fine of $25 and ccs's or one month in county jail and suspen- sion of his driver's licence fcr six months was imposed on George Gillespie, 300 Watson Street, Port Whitby, by Magistrate F. S. Ebbs in Magistrate's Court this morning. The accused pleaded guilty to a charge of failing to remain at the scene of an accident in which he was involved last night. Donald McMullen, 366 Ritson Road, testified that he was driving west on Bond Street and rassing Church Street when a grey, half- ton pick-up truck proceeding south on Church street came through the stop sign, Bond Street being a through street. The truck hit the back of his car, swinging it around. "By the time I stopped the car," he sald, "the truck had disappeared and it didn't return." 'The back fender and gas tank of McMul en's car were damaged, Chief Owen D. Friend testi'ied that when the accused was arrested he sald he hadn't stopped because he didn't think he had done much damage. The rim of one head- light and the fender were damaged on the truck, which is owned by the accused's father, FINED FOR ASSAULT Harry Williamson, 130 War- ren Avenue, was found guilty of a charge of dssaulting Helen Coo- per, 130 Warren Avenue, by Ma~ gistrate F, S. Ebbs in Magistrate's Court this morning and fined $10 and costs or ten days. Willlam- son is a roomer at the Cooper house and was advised by the Magistrate to get out of there at once. "It is an unholy alliance, it seems," said the Magistrate as he passed sentence, UNFORTUNATE ERROR A most regrettable error was made by The Time:-Gazette in connection® with the death recently of Mrs. R. B. Dawson when the pic- ture of her husband was used, Mr, Dawson, it should be pointed out, is enjoying his usual health, | i Today's Short Story GREEK MEETS GREEK By Norman G. Adlington al 5 old boy wasn't much of a housekeeper," said 'Digby dis- paragingly. He wrinkled his nose in disgust as he looked round the grubby parlor, with its moldy fur- niture. Near the window a stuffed l~ather armchair showed by its contours that it had seen more service than was good for it, but it was minus the layer of dust that had been allowed to accumu- late on everything else. Digby hooked it forward with his foot, and lowered his plump form into it. "Your uncle used that chair a great deal," said the other man in the room. "Almost any time of the day you could see him sitting here by the window." "I thought it looked a bit clean- er than the rest of the stuff," said Digby. "I guess he kept it dusted with the seat of his pants." The other man looked shocked. He was country bred, and old- fashioned enough to believe that no ill should be spoken of the dead, whatever their faults, "It was hard for your uncle to get around." The cold disapproval in his voice was not lost on the plump young man in the chair. "He was crippled with arthritis for a long time before his death." "He could have hired someone to clean up for him." "Your uncle did not like strang- ers about the place." "It looks like it." What an in- heritance! A lousy hundred bucks in the bank, and this bunch of junk." His companion looked at the furniture with a less critical eye. "This stuff will sell better here than in the city," he said, with a professional air. "In a littlc town like this there are lots of homes where this stuff wouldn't be | 4 out. | behind, When she was lost to sight of place." "You're an should know." "I think you'll realize more than you expect. The sale's well advertised." Digby looked skeptical, but did not say anything. "There's one more thing." The auctioneer looked doubtfully at the man in the chair. "I: wouldn't hurt any if you put in a little work on your goods. Brighten them up some." "Are you crazy?" Digby looked at him in horror. "Me clean up this mess?" The auctioneer shrugged. "You'd be in pocket. Besides, you could hire someone to do it for you," he said maliciously, turning Digby's own words against him. auctioneer, you She talked as fast and as furious ly as she cleaned. . knows?" "I know a woman who'd be glad to help out for a dollar or two. "Oh, all right," said Digby, un graciously. "But I won't pay more than two dollars." Having gained his point, the auctioneer's manner thawed a trifle. "I'll tell her to call around in the morning, My man may as well come around at the same time, and list the stuff as she cleans it up." "Make it after lunch," growled Digby. "I don't get up very early." 2 " ; The auctioneer"s clerk was a silent little man, who trailed. be- hind Mrs. Jones as she worked, compiling his list. There was no-~ thing silent about the good lady with the duster. She talked as fast and as furiously as she cleaned, and it bothered her not at all that Digby completely ignored her. He sat in the old armchair, looking sullenly out of the window. He was there when the excited wom- an rushed into the parlor from the kitchen, clutching an old tea- t with a broken spout. "I wuz st goin' over the chiny--" she managed. to get out before Digby snatched it from her, Jammed up into the spout was a wad of greasy bills. Digby helped Mrs. Jones to such purpose after her find that their task was finished by midafter- noon, but nothing else turned up. While she worked the good lady kept up a running monologue about recluses who distrusted banks, and died leaving thousands of dollars stuffed in lows, or sewn in mattresses. ere had been fifty dollars in the teapot. "I guess that was just Uncle's housekeeping money," said Digby regretfully, as he paid Mrs. Jones off. With a generosity utterly foreign to him, he gave her five dollars instead of the agreed two. From the parlor window Digby watched her hurry toward Main St., the little clerk trailing yards a grin dissolved his pudgy face. His little scheme was working fine. Mr. Digby was a very sharp customer. He was quite certain now, the sale would be well adver- sed. It was. When everything was over, a bewildered auctioneer faced Digby. "You made over twelve hundred dollars," he said. "I can't understand it. Such pri- ces -- that mattress, for instance, It must have been the advertis- ing." "Could be. for that junk. "What about the house?" "Five years taxes owing on it. The town can have it, Guess Uncle was on his beam ends when he died." The little clerk interrupted ner- vously, "You forgot the chair," he said, "Oh, that." Digby had occupied it until the sale was over, and it had been overlooked. "Guess I'll take it back to the city as a me- mento of dear old Uncle. Unless it's worth ten bucks to either of you gentlemen?" The auctioneer looked at it dub- iously, then shook his head. "I'll take it," said the little clerk." "It may be full of dough, Who said Digby facetiously, as he took the money. It was several days afterward that an imate of Digby's boarding house read aloud*an item from the paper. A man in a small town had found a large sum in War Bonds hidden in a chair purchased at an auction sale. By an odd coincid- ence, the finder had been active in the Bond drives during war. His fellow boarders were suspicious, they thought the coin- cidence a bit strained, but Digby only swore horribly when asked his opinion. (Copyright) It's a lot of money Negro Couple Beaten By Four U.S. Whites Lithonia, Ga. "April 1 (AP)-- Police Chief Edward L. Foster said today that a Negro and his wife were taken from their home by four unmasked white men last night and flogged severely. The woman was shot in the foot. . The chief said that neither the man, Aggie Herndon, 46, nor his wife, Lottie, 40, could give any reason for the flogging, except that one of the band accused them of stealing. Herndon, suffering from a severe gash in his head, told police the following story today: The four men, dressed in over- alls, came to his home and demand- ed that he open the door, "This is the law," he quoted one of them as saying. When Herndon opened the door, he said he asked the white men: "What's the trouble?" i e "Them things you stole," quoted one of them as saying. "If you're the law, search the house," Herndon said he invited them. "I've got receipts for every- thing here." Herndon said one of the men then picked up his shotgun and told him and his wife to get into the car, 'Then, Herndon said, they drove to a wooded area where the men ordered him and his wife out of the car. His wife was shot and one of the assailants placed his foot on her neck and beat her. Herndon said he was beaten with a pistol, flashlight and blackjack, but broke away from his captors and fled to a friend's home where he telephoned police. The woman wandered through the woods after the men left her and was found by police this morning at a country store near here. Police took her to hospital, Transvaal Farmer Keeps Up Search For Missing Link Johannesburg -- (CP)---Equip- ped with a few sticks of dyna- mite, and aided by some native helpers, a Transvaal farmer, who, for 44 years has lived within a seven-mile radius of Sterkfontein, is conducting a search which may any day place him in the interna- tional limelight. He is I., T, van der Nest, and each day he spends searching for something which many scientists consider of more importance than the rich gold reefs situated around the koppie where he works. He is looking for a skull the most elusive skull in the world-- the "missing link." Van der Nest has been digging and blasting among the layers of stone on the Kromdraai koppie for three months, and already he has unearthed for Dr, Robert Broom, South African scientist, several lorry loads of valuable fossilized remains, Recently a blast of dynamite unearthed a slab of stone which contained a perfectly preserved skull. There was great excite- ment among the few men who have now got the "fever" of won- dering what the next rock will hold. Although Dr. Broom handled the skull as carefully as the man who found the Cullinan diamond, it was not the "missing link." The present search is the result of the accidental discovery of a skull by a Kuropean boy on the farm on which the kopple stands. * Mr, van der Nest is not particu- larly interested in justifying Mr. Darwin or exploding the beliefs of the learned men who are look- ing for the "link." All he knows is that the work is interesting and important to science, Use Times-Gazette classified ads for quick and sure results, the | New Envoy Kenneth Alfred Greene, 50, member of an Ottawa general insurance firm, becomes Canadian high com- missioner to Australia in an Otta- wa announcement filling vacancies in Canada's foreign service. Mr. Greene succeeds Mr. Justice T. C. Davis, who was appointed two months ago as Canadian ambassa- dor to Ch Sugar Up One Cent Per Pound Otfawa, April 1 -- (CP) -- Latest moves in the government's policy of orderly decontrol touch- ed rubber and whipping cream today and allowed a cent-a-pound increase in sugar prices as unof- ficial predictions forecast a step soon to lift price ceilings on an- other wide range of articles both in and out of the Canadian house- hold. In quick succession these an- nouncements came yesterday: -- 1. Effective today sugar ad- vances a cent-a-pound for all size packages at all trade levels to an average of nine cents a pound for refined. The Prices Board ascribed the increase to 'greatly increased" costs of raw sugar. ; 2. Effective today limitations on butterfat content and the num- ber of grades Qf cream sold to consumers are removed, Price of cream and fluid milk remain a matter of provincial milk control boards, 3. Effective today government control of rubber, except for price and export restrictions, are lifted. This means the distribu- tion of crude and natural latex returns to regular channels of trade for the 'first time since Aug, 26, 1941, Close on the heels of these an- nouncements, an informed source said an announcement could be expected shortly lifting price ceilings from a large range of ar- ticles from household goods, in- cluding frigidaires and ranges, to bicycles and used automobiles. He said though the "final de- cision" had not yet been made, it was possible the order--expec- table probably this week--would lift possibly a third of the goods now under price ceilings out of that category. The informed spokesmen sald the latest test of goods to be re- leased from control would con- form to the government's policy of "orderly decontrol" and that . decisions on just what would be released from price ceilings would only be given final appro- Aussie Tax Slash To Benefit Labor | 4 Jrbsmn-sy a By WILLIAM STEWART Canadian Press Staff Writer Canberra --(CP)-- Australia's 1,- 000,000 modest wage-earners will re- ceive substantial relief from heavy taxation next July when the Labor government's proposals for reduc- tions amounting to $100,000,000 be- come effective. ! The Parliamentary Labor party has approved the cuts, as well as in- crease rebates for dependents, and pension increases for widows, inva- lids, disabled servicemen and re- turned men maintained by the gov- ernment while they study. Relief from taxation whose war- time level was probably not ex- ceeded even in Britain has been sought for several months. Two cuts in the past year were given by Prime Minister J. B. Chifley who is Australia's treasurer but neither was regarded by labor unions as sufficient. Under the latest proposals men earning salaries of $15,000 or more a year will receive a reduction of about 10 per cent and still pay more than half of their earnings to the government. But men and women earning between $640 and $1,600 a year who make up about two-thirds of the country's taxpayers will get a real benefit. The proposed $100,000,000 tax re- duction amounts to 26 per cent of the federal government's revenue from income and Social services taxes which are collected jointly. Aid Single Persons The social .services tax starts at the rate of 1% per cent on salaries lower than those subject to income tax and under the proposed scale it will continue to take effect on a single man's earnings of more than $335 a-year. However, income tax paid on earnings more than $640 for a single person will not be col- lected until earnings reach $800. At present a single person receiy- ing $1,000 pays $128 income tax and social services tax, compared with $176 at the wartime peak, and under the proposed scale will pay only $90. A man with wife and two children earning $1,000 now pays $38 com- pared with the wartime peak of $55 but will pay nothing under the new scale. A man with wife and one child will pay social services tax when earnings are $900, instead of $560 at present and his income tax will not start until his earnings are $1,640, val after close inspection of the various factors in the price con- trol picture so as not to cause spiraling prices and inflation. instead of the $1,100. : An Australian with wife'and two children and receiving $3,200 fo pays $700, compared with $900 di ing the war, and will get a cut The Australian system of rebates for dependents differs from the Cas nadian system of dependents' emptions. In Australia, the earner's tax is calculated on his income and then rebates worked out according to amounts specified for the different categories of depend- ent are granted. 3 At present, rebate of the tax on $320 is granted for a wife. This amount will increase to $480 under the new plan while the amount 4 first child will rise from $240 to $3. and for other children from $95 to 160. 3 Amount of the pension increase decided on is 80 cents weekly. It will apply to old age and invalid pen- sions at present $5.20 weekly, wi- dows pensions now $4.20 to $6 week: ly, and living allowance to student servicemen amounting to $5.20 a week. "+ = present minimum ¢ London--(CP)--Mrs. P. H. Mal mour one of her tenantg alleged, made up songs about her boarders and "sang them in a loud voice" It was reported she had agreed out of court to pay one tenant ($280) damages and ambther £20. | Mrs. H. 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