A Maxims of! a More Man Hurry too much and you'll B stick halfway. 16 PAGE gar imwoa-rioivs norm iron aonsszmnivr WSIow Progress At London By AITIUI GAVIION LONDON (AP)-Franco. thrice u-waded by German hordes. Tues- dgy proposed a seven-nation arma- ments authority to put the brakes on any runaway West German rearmament. Britain. the United States and C 4 promptly op- posed i-hi Dllll. Premier Pierre llendea-France made the French proposal at the opening of a nine-power conference ..n granting West Germany sover- gigniy and rearming. the Germans uiihlfl the North Atlantic Treaty Oiganizltloll. . Difficulties cropped up but key dcicgaiiolil expressed cautious op- illllliln that agreements in prin- rllii" may be reached by the end iii the week. west German Chancellor Konrad Adcnauer called for an end to the nearly 10 years of occupation of his country by British. U. S. and French troops. He renewed the Bonn government's offer to join NATO and an enlarged Brussels alliance. He promised to limit west German rearmsment to the quota fixed by the French-killed EDC unified army plan. t TROUBLE IN BONN Adenauer. in trouble at home at- tor a demand Tuesday night by his chief coalition partner for com- plcie West German sovereignty and emphasis on German re- unification. evidently was seeking quick and tangible benefits to his cmintry from the conference. Two major problems arose dur- ing the session: l. Mendes-France proposed that the French-German dispute over the Saar be settled as part of a "package deal" that would include an agreement on West Germany. Jti-ier delegates feared this would :.-implicate the conference. The French and Germans have differ- lng ideas about the future of the Coming Events! "Regular Dance Orapaud Rink. Wednesday night "see Mr-a Lawson Dance, Hamil- inn I-lall..septembe Ioth. "Card party. Central Royalty hail. Thursday. Sept. 30, 8:15. "Unloading Acadia nut coal to- day atyldlildlllo.-t'llll'FWll. Gillespie, .. "Buying and "cleaning timothy .e tally. laccuigan A Ieyl "1-lot Chicken supper and lesser south Itustioo Hall. ootober ma. "Dance in st. Andrew's Hail, lit. Stewart. every Thursday. "Dance. K017 i-lell. GWYIOWVH. Wednesday. September "Dance at Mt. Ryan lvlail at .inhnaton'a River ovary Friday. f'.urke's orchestra. . ' "Reserve Thursday. November lath for Trinity Church Turkey Supper and Baaaar. , "Reserve Wednesday. November tiih for Goose supper. Crapaud Hall. Proceeds St. John's W. A. "Chicken lupper in the Preach River Hall. Wednesday. so tember zmh. supper starting at 4. o p. in. sponsored by St. Thomas W. A. "nuying live chicken and fowl weighed and paid for. at your own home. Contact my stores for prices. Amos P. Gallant. nustico. "Due to death in the commun- ity, chicken supper advertised at Ft. Theresa's Wednesday night has been cancelled. "Dance I-lowattls Wnahouse. North Wlltshire, Friday. Oct. in. Music by Roy McKenIia'a Or- rhaatra. "New Glasgow Christian rhurch. hot chicken dinner in hall. Wednesday. Sept. A serv- lns from 5:30. , l "Dance, West loyalty rlali. Wednesday. Rollie llacKenaia'a Orchestra. Canteen Service. 9.30 to I230 standard Time. "Oarleton Players present their 8 act play 'tAunt Juuahy on the WI!" Pa " in Olyde River Hall. Frida October lat. at I10 p. in. Sale 0 candy. "Texas Ralph and his Augus- tin Cove Skylinera will be in Alton hail. Wednesday. Sept. 2 at 8:30 .m. Admission to and 3. Dance a ter. "Come to springvale woman's institute chicken and ham supper in Irookdeid Kali. Thursday. Sevtember soul. from I. "Rtaerve as t. 30 lforsli hall old time fiddlng and step-dam clns competition. Valuable prises. Innera to compete in Char- lottetown. Ipoillored by the We- men's Institute. .the- . -vE supper served 11 The Po '5 apeirg : I coal and steel producing border territory. . 1. Combined U. 5.-British-Ger man opposition to-Mendea- France's plan for a European armaments authority. Instead they want NATO to control the West Germairbuild-up. Adenauer. with full British-American backing. pro- posed giving NATO more powers. Mendes-France. Adenauer. Brit- Foreign Secretary Eden and . S. State Secretary Dulles met privately. The Big Four agreed to instruct experts to work out a for- mal program for ending the Brit- ish-U. S. - French occupation of West Germany end establishing that country as a full and equal Provinces Decide is WINNIPEG (OP)-An int.ei'pro- vincial conference of highways ministers agreed Tuesday not to seek exclusive control over extra- provinclal highway transport tra- velling within their own boun- daries. In a resolution passed at the conference's second day, the prov- inces agreed not to seek an im- mediate constitutional amendment to give individual provinces this control, but decided that the is- sue should be on the agenda of the next interprovincial conference for consideraton after further ex- perience with present legislation. The conference arose from fed- eral legislation passed last. June which was individual provinces jurlsdicton over inter-provincial and international commercial traf- fic on the highways. but leaves the federal government constitu- tional authority and the right to intervene if it wishes. ' All provinces except Newfound- member of the Western alliance. The timing and details still must be worked out. DULLE! GIVE! WARNING Dulles spelled out a thinly-veiled warning against delays. A confer- ence source said he called atten- tion to he U. S. Senate's unan- imous r olution authorizing Pres- ident Eisenhowei to end the Ger- man occupation. Mendes-France. the source said. suggested that he may want to refer to his parliament some tech- nical proposals dealing with Ger- man sovereignty. Mendes-France's statement was not clarified. But it. Continued on page 2 Col. 3 Against Exclusive Control Over Highway iranspori at the conference which concludes today. The conference also agreed that no representations should be made to Ottawa "at the present time" for amendments to the new Motor Transport Vehicle Act. other resolutions included agree- ment that: Provinces should retain the priv- liege of issuing a restricted com- modity licence to federal carriers. Provincial registrars of vehicles should be requested to adopt a common prefix to indicate that the holder of the licence is is fed- eral carrier. The provincial boards be per- mitted to restrict federal carriers in respect to route. points of des- tination and of origin within their own province. Provincial boards should not at- tempt to control rates charged by federal carriers. The provinces should retain the right. to license all federal car- land and Quebec are represented Heavy lnvesior 0 WASHINGTON. (Reuters) - R. A. Butler. Britain's chancellor of the exchaquer, said Tuesday the United , our has set itself the speoifici., cfeofconstruoiingits economic: policy. that it: cm con- tAnua,.t.o bl I. oubstatltial investor overseas. particularly in the Com- mon saith. Bu ler spoke in a panel discus- si n on the ... spedts for private tetnational investment at. the World Bank meeting hsre.. "The resumption of the United K m'e- traditional landing for dove opinent. overseas at so -early a stage after the disruptive effects made ossibie by me rapid re- covery of its production. helped by the generous usletence of the United States and Canada." he as . It was as yet much too early to think in terms of ' free- dom of movement of capital. "That comes only after other freedom. such as freedom to con- veri: one currency into another and freedom of trade from quota rc- strictiona-both of which would tly stimulate international cap- tal movement. We intend to press forward wlth those objectives." All! MOB! INVESTMENT "It is for governments generally, and finance ministers in partic- ular. to see that improvements are made to encourage foreign invest- ment. particularly private invest- rnent. lutler said the two really im- rtant contributions he would in to make to the panel's think- ing were that countries needing Boiling Poi May Have Caused Deaih NTRIAL. (CP)- Police said Tuesday a boiling pot and window draft may have been responsible for the death of Mrs. slmona Pou- lln. 40-year-old former Quebec City hairdresser. whose body was found Monday night in a gas-filled flat. round unconscious in the same flat was 1-Ienri Allain. 15-year-old tinemlth. He was taken to hospital where his condition was reported Lieutfifenri lrancoeur. assistant head of the provincial homicide uad, said Mrs. Poulin and Mr. ngapparently had been prepar- ing an eve meal when the aisle on gas burner went out. A window was open and a draft blew the fumes into the room where the fully-clothed body of Mrs. Poulin was found on a. bed. Allain was found in an easy chair in another room at the front of the flat. A. kettle of water” and JV pot"?! on e s e. e the burner which had bei W ki mrr caiuioa (CF)--Viacount' swin 9: Datrylae Canada tour. no is on regard to lritaia Oct. r us. seosoiarz. or atevtieuftx-1.: cogn- men , . V- air gvitlgtay 1:3. a threw-week with to Canada; the Common- rela office announced . Lord lwinton will-vial! Itaatreai and Quebec in his cross- of a shattering war was largely le riers. Says U. it Aiming Ai Becoming verseas Again capital should act in a way thht. would give confidence to the in- vector. and that countries able to lend the capital should not ar- range their affairs in such a way that service of the capital- was made extremely difficult or impos- aible. Another speaker on the panel, George Humphrey, U.l. secretary of the treasury. said the free world must be ever mindful of the ex- tremely low standards of living in many parts of the globe and must co-operate in every practical way to bring modern science, tools and technology to bear on this prob- in. But. he noted, private investment was not made for philanthropic reasons. It was made for profit that was freely available fto the investor on principal that was safe. News Briefs From OTTAWA. (GP)-Prime Minister Yoshlda of Japan left here by train Tuesday for New York after a two- day courtesy visit to Canada's cap- ital. FREDERICTON. (GP) - The death of Lynn Gay. 7, will be in- vestigated ai. an inquest hers next Wednesday. she died in hospital Monday night after being hit. by a truck while she played hide and seek. BELIZE, British Honduras (AP) --Reports trickling over storm- battered communications indicat- ed Tuesday that hurricane . Gilda wrought negligible damage on a sweep'over the southern part of this British colony Monday. MONTREAL. (CP)- Charles G. Pare. president of the Quebec Home Buiirlcrs' Association, said Tuesday this city's home-biilldlng industry is threatened by a. plumb- ers strike now in its alai. day. DENVER. Col. (AP)-- President Eisenhower -niesssy allocated at.- OEABIDITFIOWN, CANADA. WEDNESDAY. BEP'1'llMBEB 29, 1954 To Seek Dominion Prince Lik C x Covers" & Edward island e The Dow PRIOEIG Charter For Joint Economic Council. . Prime Minister Tells iiiile Giii He's Sorry OTTAWA (CP) - Uncle Louis took a sobbing eight-year-old girl into his arms Tuesday at Ottawa's Union station and said he was sorry. Prime M i n i s t e r St. Laurent apologized to golden-haired Jill Winnett of Ottawa because official- dom had prevented her from kiss- ing her grandmother goodbye. The incident occurred two or three minutes after Prime Min- ister Yoahlda of Japan left Ottawa by train for New York following a two-day visit to the Canadian capital. Canada's fatherly. 72-year-old prime minister said his official goodbyr to Mr. Yoshida. As he left the concourse for the station rotunda he saw Jill crying. Mr. St. Laurent asked the mother. Mrs. Mary Winnett, wife of Capt. Harry Winnett of the Royal Canadian Navy. what had happened. Mrs. Winnett, whose husband re- cently was posted to Ottawa as deputy engineer in chief at naval headquarters. said her daughter had not been able to kiss her grandmother goodbye. because of the Yoshida ceremony. The grand- mother. Mrs. E. M. Guest of Oi- tawa. was on the Montreal-bound train. on her way to Plymouth. rig. Mr. St. Laurent put his arms around Jill and said he was sorry. He walked out of the station chat- ting to her and stayed at her side until he arrived at his car. As Mr. St. Laurent drove oil. Jill still was sobbing. IIDENT ITAQ Illlldmg nmwyoiix can-:a&re'Ly ll. 59. prominent ate a actor. and ar of silent films. d ed Tuesday. His stage erformances l n c lu d e d "Good ye Again." "Ten Minute Alibl." "The Second Mali." "Mar- gin for Error" and "Lady in the Dark” with Gertrude Lawrence. His last Broadway appearance was in i910 in ”i Like It Here." FIRST STORM HELENA. Mont. (AP) -- Snow, rain and winds charged into Mon- tana Tuesday with the first storm of the season. ”-it Snow plows were called out in Montana to clear some mountain 000.000 for hurricane relief in Maine. The president's vacation headquarters here called it an initial grant. roads. Home”And Abroad SAINT JOHN, N. B. (OP)-The comeratone of n 8120.000 St. John valley-west Fundy rehabilitation centre for the blind on Manawag- onlsh road was laid Tuesday by Lieutenant-Governor D. L. Mac- Laren. : LONDON. (AP)-A strike of ship repair workers spread Tuesday. threatening a big tie-up of the London docks. some 3.000 to 4,000 were affected by Tuesday's decis- ion to stop work. Already 8,000 are on strike. TORONTO. Automobile Workers (OIO-COL) Tuesday deadline of Sunday for Canada's Windsor plant. PARIS (R.euters)- Nearly two- thirds of this country's population are satisfied with bustling Prem- ier Pierre Mendes-France. a pub- no opinion poll showed Tuesday. WASHINGTON. (AP) - The international Monetary Fund Tues- day voted to oust Oaechoslovakia. its only member from behind the iron Curtain. cn'Dec. 31 unless the Czechs meet their obligations to the agency before that date. (OP)-The United of America act. a. strike Ford of ity out of a. nebulous haze of needed" to give the council 9. its feet. Their advlsor. Walter P. Ra- leigh. executive vice-president of a similar council of six New Eng- land states. said "they wrung every possible bit of progress from the, meeting. It would have been impossible to accomplish more. I was very. very impress- ed." SUPPORT PLEDGED At a morning session presided over by Premier-designate l-le.nry. l-licks of Nova Scotia, Premiers of all four Atlantic Provinces pledg- ed their support. Premier Hugh John Flemming of New Brunswick said "it's such a. step in the, life of the community we must of ne- cessity derive an immense amount of satisfaction from it." - Premier J. R. Smallwood of Newfoundland said his Province would go "gladly with her sister Provinces of the. Atlantic." Premier A. W. Matheson of Prince Edward Island said he was "happy to co-operate in any way possible." Mr. Hicks. who will take over the Nova Scotia government Thursday. said "we shall do our best to find our position and co- operate to the fullest in any Giveaways Noi Solution For Farm Surplus OTTAWA (CP) - Agriculture Minister Gardiner said Tuesday Canada cannot solve its economic problems by giveaways. But he had no comment on an Australian charge that the United States is threatening foreign farm livelihood with proposed "bargain basement" sales abroad of Ameri- can crop surpluses. Sir Arthur Fadden. Australian governor of .the International Monetary Fund. is reported to have said in Washington Monday night the recent U. S. decision to dispose of part of its agricultural surplus stocks abroad roused "the ugly spectre of subsidized ex- porta.' Mr. Gardiner said there are times when Canada "ought" to give away some of its surplus food. but "so far as I am con- cerned. we cannot solve our econ- omic probiems by giveaway! " Former Hitler Field Marshal Dies IONN. Germany. (Reuters) - one of Hitler's field marshals. Maximilian Von Weichs. died at Roesberg Castle. near here. Tues- day night. He was 7:. Von Weichs was supreme com- masider of Hitler's Balkan army group at the end of the war in 1945. Von Weichs was arrested after the war together with other for- mer German field marshals. He was not tried before the Allied war crimes tribunal at Numbers; and was released in November. ms, because of a heart disease. JUVENILE! SMASH AUTO! QUINCY. Maaa.. (AP)- A navy guard discovered Tiiesday that juveniles apparently broke into a hangar at deactivated Squantum air base Monday night and smash- ed id navy automobiles inside the big shed. Damage was estimated unofficialy at dl5.000. (By Gerald Freeman. Canadian Press Staff Writer) HALIFAX, (CP) - Twelve earnest men Tuesday brought the Atlantic Provinces Economic Council into real-' They decided they could raise 5330.000 ”as soon as it's They appointed one committee to get the council in- corporated with a Dominion charter and others to find and hire a brainy ”man with a mission” to keep the project on good intentions. start. plan" to help the provinces. At a luncheon for the 40 del- egates. Ira B. Macnab, president of the Halifax Board of Trade. called the formation of the coun- cil a 50-year-old dream come true." The afternoon session, attended Continued on Page 2 Col. 4 Children Safe After 30 Hours lost In Woods FRANZ. Ont, (CP) - Two young children who spent 30 hours lost and terrified in the bush near this railway com- munity, 195 miles north of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont... were tucked in bed Monday night without fear of wolves or bears Wilfred Tangle. 5, and his sister. Carol, 10. of Franz. be came separated from other chil- dren Sunday as they played at a la'ke north of Franz. Before they were found at noon Monday by two forest rangers. the children had hudd- led in a tree for 24 hours, were soaked by an all-night rain, and listened to wolves and moose they could hear but not see. Carol described the exper- lence as 'awful." She said "we could hear the wolves howl all the time and we thought they would go us. Wllfie and I prayed and prayed. I cried a lot. but Wllfie didn't cry." Found Guilty Of Manslaughter MONTREAL. (GP)-Sequel to A drunken orgy in an -east end field. 53-year-old Loo Poitras was found guilty on a reduced charge of man- slaughter Tuesday in the razor- blade slaying of I-Irlen Chateauvert. In a statement read by a. dectec- tlve in court. Poitras told of a heavy wine-drinking bout that pre- ceded the death of the 62-year-old woman in a foundation pit in the city's east. and May 14. Medical authorities testified earl- ier the victim's throat. had been slashed and there were indications of teeth marks on her body. Her lower lip had been torn away. Mr. Justice Wilfrid Lazure. in his charge to the jury. recom- mended convictlon on the reduced charge. stating it was evident "this was not a case of murder.' The Judy returned its verdict with- out leavlng the room. Date for sen- tence was not. set immecllately. iefiisi leader Bevan Ousied from Executive Of British Labor Party By Fraser Wighton SCARBOROUGH. England (Reu- ters)-The British Labor party Tuesday ousted leftist leader An- eurin Bevan from the executive and approved support for the gov- ernment's policy backing West German rearmamcnt. But. party leader Clement Attica obtained, only a narrow majority of votes for German rcarmumcntl at the party's annual conferencc here. Attlee and his moderate leader- ship had to heat off a violent at- tack on the plan by the party's rank-and-file led by backers of Bevan and other leftists. . Victory by the margin of about 250,000 card votes in voting by delegates representing the partys 8,000,000 members did save Atilee from the dilemma of a complete switch on the policy he has been advocating in Parliament for months. But it also made clear that there .is far from unanimous support here for a rearmcd Ger- many. The official resolution that talks should be held with other Eu- ropean socialist parties on how best to rs-arm Germany was car- ried by a vote of 3.270.000 to 8,- 022.000. BEVAN OIJSTED The secoiid day of the confer- ence. also saw the departure of Bevan from the party leadership in which he has served since the end of the Second World War. The strident, 57-year-old Welsh- man met. a. crushing defeat in a contest with Hugh Gaitskell. chan- cellor of the exchequer in Attlee's last cabinet, for the vacant post. of Dirty treasurer. The job carries a seal: on the executive committee, the party's ruling body. Bevan atteinpiinghia first toil: of popularity with the full party membership. had been expected to lose but Gnltskellls poll of 4,336.- 000 votes was even heavier than predicted. . Party rules prevented Bevan from seeking re-election to the ex- ecutive committee as the repress- entatlve of the local Labor parties which for years have returned him to the governing committee with Egg Production in Canada Up ofi'TAWA.' (CF; w Hens were busier in the first six months of this year than last. The bureau of statistics es- timated Tuesday they laid 26.237.- ooo dozen eggs in August. up from 23.484000 dozen in the same month last. year. That lifted output for the first eight months of i954 in 250.- d35.000 dozen from 234,250,000 doz- en in 1953. LONDON (AP) - Communist China has made and successfully tested its first airplanes. Pciping radio said Tuesday. The broad- cast heard here did not indicate the type or number of planes in- volved. The first trial flight was reported made Jilly 28. 15 lap Divers Search For 800 Bodies Believed Entombed In Ferryboai TOKYO (Rollin-rs)-Fifteen div-' era Tuesday began the task of trying to raise 800 bodies. believed to be entombcri in the ferryboat Toya Maru, which was swept to destruction with nearly 900 other ships by Saturday's typhoon. The official toll of dead and missing Tuesday rose to L610 and the sea continued to wash up more bodies on the wreckage-strewn shores of l-lakndate bay in north Japan. More than 50 of the dead are By JOHN LEILANC - TORONTO (CP) - Left-wingers in the Canadian Congress of Labor Tuesday got their annual drubbing at the CCL's convention. Communist - supported proposals were batted down right and left by a big majority of the 850 dele- gates in a day of political opera- tions that also saw the CCI. de- cide to renew its ties with the CC? party on the politicbl front. Major entitled action was the decision of the 400.000 - member congress to -continue its support of the Communist - fighting Interna- tional Confederation of Free Trade Unions. I move that was taken over the protests of leftists in a shouting debate. As a follow-up to that step. the s threw out a left-wing re- oa Oat called for tbe.CCL x : cal to send delegates to a forthcom- ing conference of the Moscow- dominaied World Federation of trade unions. CCF LINK APPROVED Leftists also led the opposition to the CCL renewing its long-stand- ing political association with the CCP party-which the congress calls the "political arm of labor"- but again they were swamped by a top-heavy m orlty of delegates. some of the CL -'alegates. too. turned on federal bor M',' t Milton P. Ore gave him the first booing of is political career and the first any federal minister has got from a central labor or- ganisation convention since the same CCL booed the Humphrey Mitchell here in 1047. Mr. Gregg came into the con- vention hell to deliver his annual address to the congress in the mid- dle of the (.13! scrap. when many of the delegates were to filhiull Ditch. g late Hon. W Nvlrmsd vol I CCL. Left-Winggers Get Drubbing some applauded him. Others booed. There were cries of "what about the arbitration?”-a refer- ence to the fact that the govern- ment rscently pressured rail un- ions Into accepting arbitration of their contract differences with the railroads. AIME!) AT UNEMPLOYMENT Later. president A. R. Masher of the congress said he thought the booing s aimed at "the inaction of the government on unemploy- merit" rather than personally at the minister who is a former uni- versity president and Victoria Cross winner in the First World er. For himself, Mr. Gregg made no reference to the booing in his speech but said later to a reporter: "Heck. it just made me feel more like one of the boys,” in other actions Tuesday. the congress: l. Adopted a resolution deplor- ing "anti-labor" legislation in Que- bec. Z. Decided against setting up a labor newspaper. 3. Took a stand against night openings of retail stores. 0. Adopted a.reaolui.ion calling on the federal goncmment to abolish the senate. 5. Defeated a recommendation of its resolutions committee calling for nonconcurrenu in a resolu- tion asking for the elimination of capital punishment. 0. Turned down a resolution de- manding compulsory milita ry training. 1. Expressed opposition to the granting of court injunctions in la- Americana. One is a Canadian The coast guard announced that the 4.300-ton Toys Maru. which sank in I-iakodate bay. was one of 875 ships inst in the typhoon. The disaster figure is the highest in Japanese maritime history. in addition. 3.467 ships were damaged 130 grounded and 154 set adrift. RECOVERY DIFFICULT Reports from Hakodate boy said that the bodies of ill non-Japanese had been recovered from the sunken Toya Marin. The ferry was believed lo have been carrying 62 foreigners-including 57 American servicemen. their dependents. and two Canadian ciergymen-among its complement of more than 1,000 passengers and crew members. The divers said recovery of the other 800 bodies still in the ship will be difficult because the water is rlark and muddy and the ships portholes are nearly all blocked with furniture. A spokesman for Japan's na- iinnal railroad. which operated the iii-fated train ferry. said the com- pany would assess the diver's re- ports and decide whether the hull of the ship should be forced open to facilitate the recovery of bodies. A Canadian missionary. Rev. Donald Orth. said two clergyman friends of his were heroes of the Toys Maru tragedy. lie told of the "calm and heroic" last actions of Rev. N. Dean Leepet of Canton. ill, and Rev. Alfred Stone of Tor- onto as the ship went down. Both were drowned as they tried bor-management disputes. 8. Decided to press for the 40- hour week for federal employees. to comfort women and children lwhiie huge waves battered the W huge majorities Bevan's supporters. although de- pressed by their leader's personal defeat. were consoled by retaining five seats in the 28-member exec- uiive. The effect of Tuesday's res.rm- ament. vote is to keep the Labor party in step with the Trades Union Congress which provides five- sixths of its membership and which recently approved German rearmament by an equally-narrow majority. But with the whole Labor party so obviously still split it is an un- easy situation for the party lead- ers. Moreover. Bevan losing all off!- clal position in the party means he will be able to campaign more freely in public for his policies of Ollvosliion to German rcarmam.-ant is Retiring HOLLYWOOD, (AP) - Betty Hutton. 33, said Tuesday she is retiring from show business "in. 551150 I lust can't take the heart- break anymore." She said that after a Las Vegas night club engagement she will quit performing and devote her time to being a mother. "I'm tired." she declared. "Thli business is not as glamorous as it seems. it can be just as heart- breaking as it is glamorous. . . "There are other things in lift besides money. I haven't been able to even see my kids. When they were younger I could take them with me but now Lindsay is eight and in- the third grade and Candy is six and in the first grade.” .. Betty has been unable to find a movie that she wanted to do and has been off the screen four years. She was disappointed in her first TV "Spectacular" show, "Sai.lns and Spurs." insiders believe part of Betty's unhappiness is due to the failure of her two marriages. She was divorced from camera manufac- turer Ted Briskln. father of her two daughters. Her marriage to dance director Charles 0'Curren appears ended, although he did the dances for her TV show. HQ WHO ; I HE.Si1”A'1'E5 I5 13.055!-:0 TORONTO (CF)-Minimum and maximum temperatures. M in Max Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 42 Vancouver .19 60 Victoria . 49 M Edmonton 37 3'! Calgary . 32 37 Regina . . . 4.1 45 Winnipeg 47 54 Toronto . . . 55 72 Ottawa .. 54 0.1 Montreal . . 51 M Quebec City. . ca -- Saint John. 37 - Moncion . 40 - 1-lalifax 43 - Fredericton . . .. so - Charlotfotowsa 42 BI Sydney . . . . . . 44 63 Yarmouth .. dd, 6! St. John's . . . . . ll dl HALIFAX (CF) -- The weather office here says clearing weather will cross the Mai-ltimea today but there will be increasing cloudiness by' evening. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island. lower It. Join river valley. eastern N. I. coasatiea: clear becoming cloudy this evening: not much change In temperature: iig ht winds. law- Ilgls at Fredericton so and-I. Saint John 4! and 00. Charlotte- towsa 48 and O0. Manolo: 40 and C. High tide today at Giarlottetewrl at 12. Id p. m. hammer-aide tide eighteus din- utea later than Charlottetown. High tide today at the IQHI share at no a. m. aad.'i.I.p. I ferry. - - sunriaaatoday stl.Uo.I.&C utsatI.lIp.I "' 1.4”