ny DON now Canadian Press staff Wrter Tlbbo. nlnglcal research station here. Dr. line industry. can an SOLVED 'tlt may he 10 or 15 years." says n.-,iTlbbo.” But the problem can be solved in time." Time is becoming ever more precious to fishermen whose boats return with herring so small they all them "trash." Sarliines. or young herring. play . major role in the province's toastal fishery and once were the -nainr factor in s herring industry earning annually between 36.000.- WI and s9.oon.ooo. t”aunei'ies prefer packing a foIlr- ltslt ran weighing two to three nunres. "They're packing up to 26 fish 1. n can now," says Dr- Tibbo, "and the weight is It!!! only three In Memoriam MR8. ALDEN GAMBLE on September 14.1955. Mrs. Alden Gamble (nee Reta Wallace) of Cascumpec passed from this life after an illness which began more than a year ago and came to an end in the New England Deacon- ess Hospital. Boston, wher eshe had been a patient for three weeks. 'l'he eldest child of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wallace. she was born at Cast-umpec twenty-five years ago. in 1952 she was married to Alden Gamble. Besides her husband and her parents. she is survived by a little son. Ronald Elmer. aged one William; and one sister, Helen Wal- lace. Reta loved her home and her church. To each she quietly con- iibuted much that was worthwhile ind in doing so she found happin- pss. During the long months of ill- ncss she received affectionate care from her family. comfort from the ministry of the Church and the lcllowship of friends. and skilled treatment from kind physicians and SUFECOHS. .-in unfalierlng Christian faith gave her an inner peace which manifested itself in patience and good cheer and enabled her to ap- proach the end of her earthly jour- noy with serenity and the hope of all true believers. in her heart. The funeral, from the home of later parents on September 17. was conducted by her minister. Rev. Murray Gardner. Hymns were ”The Lord's My Shepherd" and "The Sands of Time are Sinking." A duet "Shall We Meet Beyond the River" was sung by Miss Hclou Bryan and Mr. Alvin Ashley, The theme of Rev. Mr. Gardner's message WES "The Comfort of God," The ::L.:"7z.i;t'”": I ey s a c . ed.” (Matthew 5:4) omfon ppallbearers were Messrs. Burton iewart. Kenneth Leard. Charles Gordon. Gordon Warren. Gerald a cross-eyed bun tnoose may be grand sport at the time but finding a place for the mounted head is more dif- iirull. There were no takers wlu-n Sam Taylor offered his trophv free to any club or in- illlllllllil but Newspaperman Clark worked out a Illipnsnl plan with the railway nmpnnv as lhegoat. Another "Wills anecdote told by I re- ailrr of quiet humor. Get The tamlarrl -- on sale now. oom- lcir with magazine. I2-page oval and 20 pages of comics llilr ten cenul i!IteShtItIlard ST. ANDREWS, Ni.B. (Cl:-The "liilerheffniliswlliiinioutifellzf 1" the Ilrdilwherrinz fisheries. :m was: is a long way from which yielded ioo.ooo.ooo poundsol solution. say! I lleulll 0' "19 l0l- fish in one record year. it struck --11'; going to be quite a time swiftly. heme any positive answers are found to the questions that Will this year the catch amounted to give us the key. says Dr. S. Noel s.us.ooo pounds. Over the same year: two brothers. Henry and 0' and one-half ounces." CATCH DROPS BEARPLY Whatever the cause of the slump During the first six months of period last year the seines and As biologist in charge of herring wiers dotting Passamaquoddy bay myesligallohl at the Atlantic bi- and the Bay of Fundy snared 11.- 0?0.000 pounds. and the full year's Tibbo leads the search which ltis catch in 1954 reached 62.000000 hoped will end the iamne looming pounds-a total described by Dr. over the once-prosperous herring Tlihbo as average for the past 2) fishery and its supplementary sar- years. The big handicap in the year- round herring fishery this year is the absence of large fish. "Theylre travelling in large schools of small fish." says Dr. Tlbbo. Scientific explanations put for- ward by the ocean-going detective for what he prefers to call fluctu- ations. rather than a decline, are a poor survival rate from 1954 spawning and the possible move- ment of herring too the areas WIDESPREAD Bunvnv Although the herring hunt has been underway in the Gulf of St. Lawrence area for nine years. it was only launched here about a year ago. snub-nosed boats prowl the fish- Missing Herring Mystery Long Way From Solution to Labrador and southward to New Jersey, gathering lnlormatitm to salvage the floundering meal ticket of thousands of coastal fishermen. Researchers ve four biz Ob- jectives: loca on of spawnilll areas; homes of herring 9001111- tions; factm-s playing I III?! ll fluctuations and abundance: and effects of weather and water con- ditions on the fish. While science moves slowly to- ward a solution. fishermen from Deer and Campobello islands in Passamnquoddy bay and communi- ties stretching along the Bay of Fundy coastline are fighting 30? survival. Ernest Wentworth. skipper of the 42-foot Inis and Maud. says he has been fishing 'Quoddy for 35 years "and there's never been a season as bad as this." p His words echo feelings ex- pressed the length and breadth of the fisheries- "Sure, I've seen this happen be- fore." says Wentworth. "But its never lasted three or four years in succession. There hasn't been any- thing worthwblle in 'Quoddy since 1951. "If this keeps on for a couple of years we'll have to give up fishing. That's a pretty hard proposition for a man who's been in it a life- time and has no other trade. Wentworth sets the present price for herring at beiwew 38 and 39 for 1.000 pounds. Dining an aver age year. says Dr. Tlbbo. huring prices run about tun cent a in lanes that stretch northward OYSTER BAY. N. Y.. (AP)- Mrs. Ann Woodwa u was walled off by hysteria and shock Mon- day from any detailed recital of the killing of her millionaire sportsman husband. Further pol- iee questioning awaited her doc- tor's go-ahead. Her story that she accidently shot William Woodward Jr. Sun- day will eventually be weighed by a grand jury. a reliable source said. regardless of the outcome the police investigation. It would thus be left to die mm Gamble and John Rayner. Flower bearers were Messrs. Win fred Bridges. Lorne Icard. Gordon Leard. John Locke, Horace Gam- ble, Ivan Wallace. Roy Bell. Wal- ter Wells. William Bell. Harold Ash- ley, Wayne Locke, Frank Bryan. Boyd Macwilliams. Hillard Bell. Floyd Hardy. Lorne Yeo. Robert Johnston. Lloyd Wilkle. John Webb Arthur Arsenault and Everett Hud- son. ' Cemetery. Insist locbelier litr better CAllFl'.lFlNtA URANEE (s7:gshmere... aadgat-nsup& PRODUCT! OF CANADA PAPII COMPANY l Macxay. Walter Hudson. Douglas 3 1.1- g -H - 1 Rlx. Russell Bonyman. Charles den-Ettlcae I ee cashm usds&eh'ys-imasonely. Cadmscse'jiIivleIable hp&,y&w,&eaIsd ....ntn-isut.-noss-- wdaw&h1&Q&” pound. Probe Of Millionaire's Death Needs Wife's Story grand jury Woodward to decide whether died sccidently 0 whether he was slain. There wl no police suggestion of murder. The 35-yearold Woodward WI killed at his bedroom door by a shotgun in the hands of his svelte, blonde wife. She said she saw' her husband only as "a man in the dark" and mistook him for I prowler. ”Ars you at al J this death at this time " Nassau county detective chief Stuyvesant Pinell was asked at a press con- ference. "No." he replied. "However. that opinion is subject techange." . Earlier there has been gossiptl of friction in the 12-year man- riage of the one-time Kansas farm girl and the social registu bllilgblood. At the time. Pinell sa : "We have come across nothing in between. "I shot my husband-I thought he was a prowler." Mrs. Wood- .- ward cried hysterically Sunday Interment was in the Cascumpec on the scene of her husband's pre-dawn death. OI1 fe qualitg.. value. cidenoe of polio in Canada. Preliminary "substantial reduction" in the num- ber of paralytic polio cases among sador hotel. medical research laboratories in Toronto. friea' work on Canada's Salk vac- cine. In H the first Canadian wln- I ner- sreat mllority received two shots. Reports Polio Incidence Reduced By Salk Vaccine Nsw vonx (CP)-Health M.in- deuce points to a substantial rcduo later Paul Martin said Monday tlon in the amount of paralytic than is no doubt that Inlk vaccine pollolny!-ll”! Bl 3-50 ”” contributed to this year's low in- who have been vscclna ," he "Maw Win" ” ' INCIDENCE DOWN chlldrenwhohavebeenvaccinatled. this Ye-r-444 we-I "WW4 I0 1,. mm . lunch”, lg an Amp”. far-was about one-quarter of the average for the last fiv: years. Barring a serious outbrea in the 0 ..."?.2 'n"??'n'2i't2Z.'i.?.'.il; l3..l.?."..',.nexz few weeks. was probably mdudhm Dr. Robe" D. Demes would be recorded as the second um,” dine. 0' we Cmmaughg lowest year in a decade. to time whether the Salk polio vac- The award. formal presentation clue conmbllted ” ll” ,l?w mdi of which will be made Nov. 17 in dBPCe,,0' P01") 'tl:;1kY::l'- Ma”: Kansas City, carries a cash value 5md' I d” "oi t h egedc” of an” ad mcomiz" Dr. Deg anfy;ctdoubt that i as a some Mu-an um any prior to mi, 16 have been immunized, it is evi- seumr. polio outbreak nearly 1,. dent that other factors have con- ooo,ooo Cgngdjnn chudm, were me. tributed to the encouraging decline -cinated with Salk serum, and the in WHO this year-" "While it is too early to draw ficial to state definitely that one final conclusions. preliminary evi- of the Salk vaccine had . duced A Handsome 0iier- said. The i idence of polio in Canada "I have been asked from time D "However, since only about one- lfth of the nation's children under Martin was the first Canadian of- porn mqgqw. in as country this issued but federal Health Secretary year. A final report on its effects inltelevislon interview that "all indi- my mdusn-y, amounting to 27 per the United States has not yet been insert name and address of person to whom calendar is to be sent, also name of person ordering. it more than one is Scenic Splendor plcroltllll. CALENDAR - 48 large Views ol Scotland in allils i . y The Famous SCOTSMAN CALENDAR, famed the world over for i956 is made available to the readers of this newspaper at the low price of 75c. Order them for your own personal pleasure, or to be sent to friends for Christmas gifts, Calendars will be mailed direct from: Edinburgh, Scotland to any ad- dress. Orders must be placed not later than Saturday, November 5th to insure delivery before Christmas. The remains of the old Bridge of km, Perthahire enclose with the coupon. i (Enclose Cash with order) desired, write particulars on separate sheet of paper and I . Mail or present your order direct to The Guardian : nuns: INDUSTRY Wool is Australia's biggest prim- The Guardian Psge 11 Wed, Nov. 2, 1955 Maroon Folsom said Sept. 4 in I cations are that it is effective." cent of annual world production. A. x..s It's easier to paint It's easier . i . We-. to clean up after! .4" with Super Kem-Tone paint it yourself with The superior Latex Wu" Pd!!! Oiuper Kent-Tone washes of! Roller-Kouter or brush under the tap. Ospota on Home or woodwork vanish with a wet cloth. I 22 beautiful ready-to-use colon. Ali Your Dealer About TIE NEW IN TUHH KM.” Morefbenlwleauttldmnlu 1'eChoosehnIn RICH AS VELVET . . . TOUGH AS RUBBER One of the famous Kent Paint Producfa 0 Ready to use. otllldos on like magic with "Roller-Konter or brush. COM coal covers most surfaces Including painted walls and wullboord. Dorian III I matter of minutes without laps er streaks. Furni- lure can go back the some day. 1956 Scotsman A glimpse of the Bulmoral Castle from the River Dee. Address cleanaolesseelenessassneeet Orderedby