& —" < . NORMAN BERKOWITZ, |: coal mining industry. For the | its use in plastics, fertilizers, graphites and filters. He works in the: council's laboratory at Edmonton. (CP Phote) Coal Industry In Alberta May Be On Verge Of Boo By JIM WHELLY | Cheap plastics for the build-|even richer than explorer Al- EDMONTON (CP)—Alberta’s ing industry could be developed |exander Mackenzie’s notes in- coal industry, heading downhill | from coal. Humic acids; derived dicated when he recorded de- like a runaway mine car for the | from the oxidation of coal, could posits in the-Peace River Block last 10 years, may be on the|be used to turn barren waste- | in 1793 and river banks farther verge of a gigantic boom. lands of clay soils into rich ag- north aflame with coal in 1786. Dr. Norman. Berkowitz of the |ricultural areas. Principal deposits now are be- Alberta Research Council says! ‘My head is>not in the clouds last year’s 2,100,000 - ton pro- on the subject“tf coal,’’ says duction could be boosted to an Dr. Berkowitz, who has made annual 25,000,000 tons within 10 a life - long project of coal re- years. ; search, for the last nine years “We have just begun-to real-| with the research. council. ize the value of coal -as a non-| U.S. STEEL PLANS 000,000 tons, about one-half of fuel raw material,” he says.| Industrial planning bears him ‘all Canadian deposits and five “New—deposits—have—been —dis- out. Coal - burning power sta- per cent of the world’s supply. covered which could be easily tions expected to be operating With the development of new and economically strip-mined, soon at Edmonton, Wabamun coal uses, new markets and DR head of the Alberta Research | last nine years Dr. Berkowitz council, says new uses for coal has been studying new appii- byproducts will revitalize the | cations for coal which -ncide from the Mackenzie district to the United States, paralleling the Rocky Mountains foothills } 4 ° ‘Menzies To Stimulate Australia _ and passing beneath Edmonton. | Known reserves total 48,000,-| | | CANBERRA (Reuters) — Prime Minister Robert Menzies has announced sweeping new Record Can Concluded | | | QUEBEC (CP)—Trial court proceedings in Gaspe Copper Mines. Limited's $5,278,692 law- suit against the United Steel- workers of America (CLC) | has concluded. | The case, considered one of the longest and most costly in | Canadian history, still has a |couple of phases before judg- | ment is rendered, probably next fall, Both sides still are to pres- ent their final pleas Last witness was William Brissenden, general manager of |Gaspe Copper. He was sum- | moned to the stand by the com- pany for only a few minutes. | Ralph Baker, the first wit- | Ress, took the stand September, 1960. | The lawsuit arose from a seven-month strike of Gaspe | Copper Miners at Murdochville, | Que., in~1957. | . Statistics compiled by Joseph | Godbout, clerk of the Superior | Court, show that 355_ witnesses | Were heard. Their testimony jcovered 15,000 pages. Exhibitis |mumbered 823, including 500 by | the company. OTHER FACTORS The legal wrestling made it ~ evident that not only money, } Announces Plan lobe neil For University Gradua And Menzies’ plan called for cuts 'im income tax and sales tax on cars and an in unem- benefits ag weil ? | i 5 | ik ity i? ie | ders banking LISTS i } beads be $i - FF Fett : f ; z z Truly as Canadian as itsnamel CANADIAN Ol WASHINGTON (AP)—A _pos- sible lead towards increasing | the effectiveness of cancer-fight- | ing drugs was reported here | by the U.S. public health ser- | vice. The agency said National Can- }cer Institute researchers have | made new discoveries about the blood supply of tumors “which lieved to underlie a broad strip may be of great importance to |drug treatment of cancer.” | Experiments with trans- planted tumors in rats and mice, a service announcement said, disclosed that ‘‘much less blood flowed through the tu- mors than had been supposed’ jand that this was uniformly. ° |true regardless of the type or New Discoveries Are Made In Treatment Of Cancer 3 1 The health service announce- ment stressed that the findings GASOLINES «MOTOR OILS. di C | as-you-go _ | taxpayers three | ie e | tour months, | ‘This will add £30,000,000 ($66,- | Judge Antoine Laéourciere’s| 2. The sales tax on cars would | verdict is expected to deter. | be cut by 7% per cent to 22% | societies may be held responsi. 16 2-3 per cent. ble for damages or production | 3. Unemployment benefits will | Steelworkers international head. |Taising the total benefit for quarters in Pittsburgh with re | man with a wife and two child- damage that followed. STIMULATE EMPLOYMENT The union, on the other hand,| Menzies said the government The union said the dismissal | ($55,000,000) during the next countant can expect cal; and rumors of layoffs had stimulate employment and busi- caused the walkout. | ness. dynamite explosion and several tended to increase maximum pieces of company property loans to veterans to £3,500 nesses were Mr. Brissenden, increased lending by striker Nestor Henley, union or- banks as another measure to Much-of the testimony during Long-term proposals included the trial revolved around the @ system of investment allow- The number of registered un- employed, which stood at 115,.- the January figures are avail- able, Menzies said. . employment, which represents —made by Dr. Pietro’ Gullino . tin con aa made in laboratory animals, ‘tion. lings (33 cents) in each £1 but other factors, are import- 900,000) to the community's dis- mine whether or not the head | Per cent on commercial losses caused by a strike, |be raised to £4 25 6d ($9.08) | sponsibility for calling the | Ten to £8 12s 6d ($18.98) against said the company provoked the Proposed to make available to of Theo Gagne, president of the | four or five months which could g month, while a mining The strike was punctuated by | To encourage home construc- were blown up. ($7,700) from £2,750 ($6,050). ganizer Roger Bedard and Theo activate new house building, he movements ofthese four. ances of 20 per cent for new 000 at the end of December, will He said Australia is con- and researcher Flora. Grantham | yeainess of confidence, whieh 1 HOOLEY’S ani ww | industries, ($2.20) of taxpayable in the next ant in the case, posable income, Menzies said. | offices of unions or commercial | Vehicles to 12% per cent from | The company charged the from £3 15s ($8.25) a week, | strike and for the violence and | £7 ($15.40) at present. strike. | state governments £25,000,000 Murdochville Steelworkers’ lo-| be spent on public works to eer with bachelor's violence. One striker died in ation, he said the government in- Among the priné¢ipal wit-| Steps also are being taken to | Gagne. added ng and equipment for factor- show_ an increase again when fronted with two problems—un- of the Cancer Institute — were |is limiting buying and produc- EXPANSION SALE CO TWO STORE WIDE and industry is turning an in- and Forestburg will push Al- terested eye on research find- berta’s domestic coal require- ings.” ments to more than twice to- Dr. Berkowitz, head of the day's annual production. The ARC's coal research division, Edmonton station alone will recently announced the success- ful development of a method of transporting coal in existing oil pivelines. ‘ burn 2,000,000 tons a year. The possibility of a big jump in exports is seen in U.S. Steel |Corporation's negotiations with “Coal is not obsolete as was the CNR on cost of a 100-mile thought 10 years ago,’’ he says “Lack of foresight has caused the industry's decline.” ‘/branch line north from Hinton, Alta., to coal deposits at the possible site of a $50,000,000 Alberta once boasted 399 op- coking plant and mine develop- erating coal mines that em-|/ment in the Rocky Mountain ployed more than 10,000 men foothills. Plans call for ship- and, in 1946, extracted nearly ping coke Yo Japan and the 9,000,000 tons — more than four times the estimated production of some 60 mines and 1,500 men last year. RESEARCH OVERDUE “We are doing work which should have been done 20 years ago,”"’ Dr. Berkowitz says. ‘We coal is simply a fuel.” Instead, he says, Alberta coal (formed from buried tropical plants more than 70,000,000 years ago) may produce graph- ites for rocket research and by- products for use in rocket pro- pulsion and nose cone construc- tion. “I foresee dozens of other uses, uses which will attract | many allied ‘industries to the province.’ Coal, says. Dr. Berkowitz, is an ideal source of tremendous quantities of carben required by modern industry. Carbonized coal is used in filtration plants, and this use*could provide an annual”market for 300,000 tons. company's plant at San Fran- cisco. Depending on the applications of nuclear power, Dr. Berkowitz .says, Ontario's coal - burning thermal electricity plants will require 30,000,000 to 45,000,000 tons of coal a ‘year by 1980 and ~ market: High-grade coking coal +might also. be carried eastward, he says, also by pipeliné.- This year he plans to test pipeline transmission of coal near Edmonton with a two-to- three-mile Joop of four-to-eight- inch pipe—a scaled-up version of the laboratory model—and he sees no reason for failure. USE OIL LINES Carried forward by the ofl, coal would be moved in the ex- cess space in existing oil pipe- lines. Dr. Berkowitz says the spare capacity of the interprov- incial pipeline could carry more than 6,000,000 tons ,of coal a year to Eastern Canada. Alberta’s coal reserves are Pearson Sees Grave Problems For Canada In MONTREAL (CP) — Oppost!- tion Leader Lester B. Pearson said here Britain's probable entry into the booming Euro- pean Common Market and Pres- ident Kennedy's decision to seek freer trade between the Com- man market States confront Canada with one of the gravest problems jn her, history Canada’s -response to these develdpments- ‘will our economic and even our po- litical future to a very great degree.’ Mr. Pearson said in an address to the Montreal ‘dis- trict Chambre de Commerce. The Liberal leader, speaking and the United | determine’ Trade Pattern _be prepared to initiate trade negotiations with the European | Common Market and the United | States on the basis of President Kennedy's trade program, a program that we should back to the full. lantic economig community “would not be. exclusive or in- ward-looking and would not pre- vent freer trade with other parts of the free world. Indeed the lar- ger objective must be the final objective.” By negotiating the removal of obstructions to trade, in both French and English. markets abroad and find eco- said Canadian prosperity de- pends so much on exports that the nation has to find some way | of associating with Wesiern Europe and the United States, “this vast commercial bloc Where more than 80 per cent of our trade takes piace.” He recalled his 1958 proposal of a North Atlantic economic community and said it must be . the long-term objective of ef- forts that Canada should start making to promote freer trade. “As a first step in that direc- tion,” he nomic expansion at home stim- ulated He said it is only realistic, however, to anticipate adverse effects on some Canadian indus- tries if international trade be- | comes freer. | Mr. Pearson said the Cana- , dian economy has failed to grow ‘at a satisfactory rate in the last Lfive years. Although immigra- tion had fallen off “to almost | nothing; population growth was | still outstripping the increase in | production of goods and~serv- He said the ideal North At-| us from moving toward | Canada | would acquire access to larger | more efficient transportation | methods, Alberta may soon em- | ploy far more men in the indus- | try than lost their jobs when its mining centres hecame black - faced ghost towns. Radiation Plant Develops Leak SASKATOON (CP)—A special plant at the University of Sas- katchewan tsed to produce ma- terial for the treatment of can- cer has developed a leak of ra- dioactive materials and has been closed, it was announced here. No_ injuries were reported. The plant, built in 1931, was operated by the Saskatchewan Cancer Commission to produce radon, a radioactive gas used in the treatment -of cancer. It is located in the éng : building, of the University o | Saskatchev an. . ‘ Dr:. T. A. Watson, director of the Saskatchewan Cancer Com‘ | mission clinic in Saskatoon, said the leak was discovered early in January when air was found mixed with radon. The leak was noticed almost immediately and traced to a crack in a case which held radium The case was the one installed 31 years ago when the plant was built, he said. No injuries were reported be- cause of the leak, which Dr Watson said scattered radioac- tive dust through the eight by 10-foot room housing the plant, a laboratory adjoining it and a washroom. Only one person worked in | the $20,000 plant. The worker, | who was. not identified, was | checked for radiation and found size of the tumor or the organ * in which it grew. “From these observations,” the report continued, ‘“‘the in- vestigators concluded that less | than five per cent of a drug / ‘injected into the body to treat a liver cancer, would reach the tumor, LARGER DOSE * “This led them to suggest that the effectiveness of drugs may have to be re - evaluated because the dose received by a | in a single treatment \ tumor may. be too- small.” was this: The effectiveness of certain | |drugs in temporarily checking or reducing a cancer growth | might possibly be enhanced by giving larger doses — provided | ways could be found to offset or prevent undesirable side effects | nj v ‘ |to be unaffected, Dr. Watson said. ni Letterheads, — forme, ASSOCIATION FORMED mailers — whatever MONTREAL (CP)—The first yew need in your meeting of the Canadian Asso- business, . 4 yew ciation of Chemical Producers | went the finest | will be held in Montreal in late quality, se — |March, Robinson Ord, chair- man of the founding committee, 'has announced. He: said 38 chemical companies were rep- resented at a meeting in Mont- real earlier this week held to map out the nature of the as- sociation. It’s simple how quickly one | may lose pounds of unsightly fat ight in your own home. Make | this home recipe yourself. It’s . no trouble at all and costs | little: Just go to your drug store and ask for four ounces of Naran ; trate. Pour this into a \pint bottle and add enough ruit juice to fill the bottle. | Take two tablespoons full a day as needed and follow the Naran Plan. | _If your first purchase does not j= you a simple easy way to ‘ Guardian - Patriot ; -1 Central Printery i New Home Recipe Reducing Plan lose bulky fat and help regain slender more graceful curves; if reducible pounds and inches of excess fat don’t disappear from neck, chin, arms, abdomen, hips, calves and ankles just return empty bottle for your money back. Follow this easy way en- dorsed by many who have tried this plan and help bring back alluring curves and graceful Note how quickly bloat disa rs—how much bet- | ter you feel. More alive, youthful | appearing and active, ee for. example, | The implication of the report | tively large doses of such | drugs AA CAR COATS HOOLEY CUSTOMER — ALWAYS A HOOLEY CUSTOMER! Your very first shopping experience at HOOLEY’S will § ADVERTISED FOR 95.00 show you why so many quality minded men’s and boys’ IN NAT'L MAGAZINE wear shoppers have switched to HOOLEY'S. We are big ete sf - enough to give you that individual service that has made us many & friend. Remember also at Hooley’s NO SALE IS FINAL. You may exchange your purchase at your con- venience at either store, Visit HOOLEY’S today or tomor- row, browse to your heart's desire, you needn't feel obli- gated at all. CH’TOWN STORE OPEN FRIDAY TIL 9:30 MONTAGUE STORE OPEN SAT. 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