4 ei Dr. a M_ Good a Cana- Gian Colombo Plan surgeon, _ treats a man for what he be- lieved were injuries following a spectacular fire department ex- DOCTOR WAS FOOLED four hours of makeup work— stumbled from a burning trail- er. He treated all four before realizing they were faking. “I've | never seen anything like it,” plosion and fire demonstration in downtown Hamilton. The doc- tor, not aware of the scheme, happened by as four men—made up as accident victims with _ TIMELY NOTES ON FUR TOPICS ‘Fur Sales in New York last Monday. The official report stat- @d that females brought excep tionally strong prices, with price comparisons to June selling. The high limits placed on the furs ‘by owners prevented a greater turnover of goods, it was point- | ed--out. Goods were described as being “end of season’ mer- ise. Mink selling will begin simul- taneously in Montreal, Winnipeg and Vancouver on December 7th, ‘With the first seasonal offerings -of Canada Mink Breeders Assn. furs. Great preparations are be- ing made to have these sales fea- tured; so as that they will be --broucht to the notice—of— *tial buyers throughout Canada. . Emphasis has been placed on quality goods, and: it i$ expected that the collections offered will be very expertly graded and will be at least 80 percent sold. | MINK UP Ed Gold. writing. in ‘Women’s Wear Daily” states that the 1958 domestic mink crop advanced 82 percent ih price, compared with the previous year. The 1958 average was $20.96, compar- ed with $19.38 average the pre vious year. Pastels, more than ever, indicated their domination of the market. With almost two million in that color, alone, pro .duced, and representing almost 38 percent of the nation’s total mink production, pastels advanc- (ed 173 percent over 1957 price Jevels. Virtually holding even in 1957, @s compared with 1956, with an average of $19.98, pastels jump ed to $23.43, thanks to the stead- fly improving levels of commer- cial types of females, and the strong finish im the April-May period. The powerful pull of darks was again amply demonstrated. Fol- lowing the big dip in 1956, which Brought the dark average down to $14.94 the item’s fortunes have clearly taken a healthy turn. In 1957, the average climbed sharp- ly, moving to $20.41. It was up again this past season by 15.3 Percent to $23.53. Financing Of Trade Deficit Said On An ‘Unstable Basis’ TORONTO (CP) : A total of 30,000 mutation mink} Fashion acceptance of this skins of all types was 63 percent | shade in garments, and the price ‘Sold at Hudson’s Bay Company | pressure generated by the trimming trade, were key fac- tors. Sapphires continued their de- cline, moving below $20.00 for| wASHINGTON (AP) —Within he said. “They had me com- pletely fooled. One man simul- ated shock so well I thought he was going to die.”". (CP Photo) Two Summit Meets Seen Probable Soon BY JOHN M. HIGHTOWER | actly what he wants while West- ern goals are far less definite. | |shovel in the yard of his modern |fairs department’s representative OLS a yee ee / business writers. his observations of eo By TOM HENSHAW YELLOWKNIFE, N.W.T. (AP) Indians in black-leather jackets and heavy, muddied boots hunch over beers in the plush cocktail lounge of the Yellowknife Hotel and debate whether to go to a An off-duty miné workers if Uranium City, Sask., checks the red devils and one-eyed wobblers in his tackle box and hops into his mahogany speedboat to do lonely battle with the giant trout in Lake Athabasca. A five-year-old boy plays con- struction worker with a toy steam ranch-style home in Thompson, Man, At the time he was born, Thompson was virgin forest. Teen-agers in slacks and sad- die shoes feed dimes into the juke box at the Buffalo Park Cafe in Fort Smith, N.W.T. Top rock 'n’ roll favorite: Halfbreed by Marvin Rainwater. It was just another _sunshiny fall day amid the green and gold forests and clear blue lakes of the new North American frontier Canada’s vast, booming and forbidding northland, whose un- tapped mineral resources stand high in the whole continent's eco-| nomic future. MODERN FRONTIER “This is a frontier?” grinned Frank McCall, the northern af- in Yellowknife. “‘There’s so many autos around here that we're thinking of putting in stop lights the first time. This once fancy- category shade in fact, fell below every color category except sil- ver blue. In 1956, the average stood at $25.48. A 9.4 percent dip in 1957 took the item to $23.08. This past season, the decline in- creased to 16.3 percent, and the average dropped to $19.31. Problems in satisfying the fa- shion customer in terms of color and the continuing increase in production were held responsible in a large part for the situation. Whites collapsed from their Having advanced to $35.72 1957, against the general price in the next two months, not one but} Therefore, some highly placed and parking meters.” two summit conferences may be diplomatic authorities say pri-| There are, by official count, held in an effort to discover some | Vately it would be a good idea |787 motor vehicles in Yellowknife ee BlNorth Canada Country ais Visited By Newsmen to the busy airport or to the sand- jstrewn nine-hole golf course, Fly by bush plane from the Pas, Man. over miles and .miles of forest, jakes and muskeg and suddenly the town of Thompson (pop. 2,700; expected pop. 8,000) with its prim little bungalows and gemotric streets springs up out of the sea of trees. A striking feature of the Cana- dian nofth is its isolation. The rest of the world in general—and Edmonton ,in particular — is as to northerners as ‘‘the out- PWA TO ARCTIC The queen of northern trans- vort is the airplane. Pacific West- ern Airlines (PWA — known lo- cally as “please wait awhile’) Operates as far north as the Arctic Ocean. The people of the north country are inveterate travellers, mostly by air. It’s not unusual for a fun- loving fellow in Yellowknife to fly down to Edmonton (600 miles; $106 round trip) for a weekend of frivolity in the big city. A housewife in Thompson— luckily in spur distance of the Canadian National Railways Hudson Bay line—has a six-hour train ride to The Pas and then a 2%-hour flight in order to go on a shopping spree in Winnipeg. The larger towns in the north country boast telephone service. But calls to the ‘outside’ are impossible. The “‘outside’’ begins in McMurray, Alta., some 250 miles from Fort Smith. There are five television sets in Yellowknife—but no -TV station. Set owners spend their time fid- dling with the dial, hoping that freak atmospheric conditions will bring in such odd places as Den- ver, Seattle or Anchorage. If re- ception is good, they'll call in the neighbors to help with the view- ing. Such a spirit of helpful co-oper- way of negotiating Fast - West|for Western leaders to get to-|‘pop. 3,500) — and no access agreements to end the cold | actin and decide what they want | roads. But you need a car to get ation and sharing is high in the north. ee ae Se ee ‘ 7 . eee eee ee ee ay oe Se ee ees The Guardian, Charlottetown, Tues., Oct. 18,1959. 15 ST, JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP)—Pre- mier Smallwood said last week new laws to govern conditions in camps of the two Newfoundland pulp and paper companies are be- ing drafted. “These new laws will be intro- duced into the House of Assembly at the next session, sometime next winter,”’ he said. They will be drawn up by cabinet members and deputy ministers. His statement followed by a day publication of 14 resolution; passed at the first convention, of the Newfoundland Brotherhood of Woods - Workers (Ind) in Grand Falls last week. The premier was instrumental in formation of the loggers’ un- ion which replaced two locals. of the International Woodworkers of America (CLC) after they were decertified by the legislature in March during a strike. The more than 13,000. The IWA claimed 11,000 members. ASK IMPROVEMENTS Many of the NBWW resolutions dealt with camp conditions. They included suggestions there be no cutting operations from July 1- Aug. 15 because of ‘extreme heat” and elimination of two-tier bunks in the logging camps. Mr. Smaliwood said an order- fm-council has been passed ap- pointing NBWW organizer Doyle Sharpe ‘‘chief camp inspector.” A former vice-president of the Newfoundland Federation of La- bor (CLC) and once an executive of the Anglo-Newfoundland De- velopment Company, Mr. Sharpe played a major part in organiz- ing the independent loggers union. “Tf he accepts this position he would take up his duties at the end of the present month,” Mr. Smallwood said of the inspector's appointment. “‘A number of ex- perienced men will be appointed to ‘be camp inspectors under Mr. Sharpe.” Improved working conditions, higher pay and shorter working Diplomatic officials now ‘con-| Such a strategy session might sider a distinct possibility a gath- | be held by Eisenhower, de Gaulle lering of chief Western leaders, | and Macmillan if time permits, perhans in Wahington, in ad-|Or they could send their foreign | vance of a meeting between ved gy ore into a meeting. allies and Soviet Premier Nikita| When Eisenhower visited Eur- and make a start on disarma-|2nd how to go about getting it RELIGION | ment. at the Geneva summit meetings. BY VERY REV. GEORGE 4 AND LIFE C. PIDGEON, D.D., LL.D. ~ First Moderator of the United Church of Canada Khrushchev. This East-West ses-|0Pe prior to his September talks | ‘sion will almost certainly be held | here with Khrushchev he also); siGNAL FROM HEIGHTS, i Bie - |ealled on West German Chancel- GIVE DIRECTION President Eisenhower {s under- |!0r Konrad Adenauer. U.S. offi-) Pwo men had gone into a track- | stood to favor opening the meet- | Cials recognize that Adenauer, |jess wilderness to find a party | trend, the item apparently suf-|jng with Khrushchev before mid-| because of Germany’s strategie fered doubly in 1958, declining December. Of 10 davs or two | Position and vital importance in 33.5 percent to $23.76. , weeks duration, if progress fusti- | Europe, would have keen in- Two members of the brown | fed such lencth, it would bring terest in Western planning. family; topaz and palomino-buff, |ingether Minister Macmillan ang| At the moment nothing has both ‘registered gains following | president de Gaulle. 1957 declines. Silver blues, pearls | and miscellaneoups or unlabelled WAY CLEARED goods followed: anticipated paths.| Macmillan’s re-election Thurs- The silvers dropped slightly to|day, ending a period of uncer- $14.43 as their fashion star con-|tainty over Britain’s political fu- tinued to descend. Pearls figured| ture, cleared the way for a to drop sharply as production in-|sneed-un of summmit-conference creased sharply, but the average | negotiations among the allies. remained a healthy $28.51. One of the things they have to Unlabelled goods showed unex- | decide is exactly what they want pected strength, advancing 16.2 ty cet out of the new phase of | percent to $17.07. The gain was | Fast-West relations that seems to cue to the interest in trimming pe opening up. Some are calling merchandise and in miscellane- * » new era of hich-level per- ous pastels. Gun metals dipped | -nnal diplomacy. Whatever it is slightly, showing the least fluctua- | ince ta ‘che a tion from the previous year. | Khrushchev v What happened was that better | goods were strong, while off-color | merchandise dipped fairly sharply. These two factors almost balanced one another. The aver- age was $24.18. Our mink breeders will, we feel sure, admire the energy and | interest shown by Ed Gold in | producing the price averages of | mink pelts for the season. “To do so, he would have to have the results of all the sales in the United States for 1953, and also all their gradings. No doubt he | has a system which arranges for By ALFRED CHEVAL BRASSCHAAT, Belgium ‘AP) Feter Townsend introduced his heiress fiancee to reporters Sun- day and said they hope to marry } — Canada’s|made tg restore full convertibil- | the compilation of each auction oo. Fs }within three months or so. But sale following its conclusion. he conceded that religious jtroubles still dog his romantic life. The former suitor of Princess Margaret was asked whether he planned to marry dark-eyed, 20- year-old Marie-Luce Jamagne in a religious ceremony. ‘J would rather not discuss Introduced Io Press trade deficit is currently being fi-|ity of overseas currencies into that point,” replied the 44-year- manced on a very unstable basis, |dollars would be of little help to |old Townsend, “it is too delicate Lester B. Person, Liberal leader, | Canada. |a question.” said Monday in an address to the! “The nature of the deficit, as | Marie-Luce is a Roman Catho- International Business ‘Systems | well . as its size, underlines our|;;. while Townsend belongs to Conference, growing economic dependence OM ithe Church of England. It was Capital inflow, an offsetting fac- |the United States. Townsend's status as a divorced fer to the trade --deficit, has | “This has increased during the | jan that forced a reluctant de- shifted from longer - term to|last two years in spite of assur-|-icion from Margaret to end their shorter-term movements. he said. ances that the trend of trade, and | nance in 1955. Giles os {hence the dependence, was going | 2 ‘Thi 1 | ast § the atti- Dt daria caouek ote me ¢ te be reversed. At the moment | vie of a hens Catholic new production facilities means|W°, 27 More dependent on the| -hurch to a Townsend religious that our increasing indebtedness a ae oe ee ceremony this way: will not be accompanied, as in| : agthe- ment than ever before | «4 Catholic priest can marry oar: Een a: la Catholic girl to a divorcee un- the recent past, by corresponding | reduction in imports or increase! EXPORTS TO U.S. jless there is a special dispensa- In the first eight months of this ,tion from the holy Pope, and in exporis. “Imported capital is being used there must be special reasons to . more and more to finance im- ports and public expenditures. There is also the capital that has come in merely because it has been attracted by our high inter- est rates. “Tt is quite evident short-term capital movements of this kind are of a highly volatile character —they are often referred to as ‘het’ money—and that return flow | out of Canada is possible without | notice.” DEFICIT RISES ~ In the first half of 1°59 Can- ada’s deficit in non-merchandise transactions, such as payments of interest and dividends, had risen to $422.000.009, and the deficit in erchandise transactions to $335.- Bo 000. a total of $837,000.000, the second highest in Canada’s .his- tery and likely to »bécome the highest for the full year. A disturbing feattirc, Mr. Pear- son said, is that there new is no lenger a surplus with overseas countries to offset a deficit with the United States. “If this were to become per- Manent—or long - continued — we would certainly be in serious trouble.” Mr. Peerson = stated. “And any progfess which may be - b? year, Mr. Pearson said, Canadian | ; j ; exports, compared with the same | Justify such dispensation, | period of 1958, increased by only | pyRgT UNION VALID? jone per cent and decreased in} : INIO} ] q ; ee; | ‘However, the question ts August. ‘Phis'’ included ‘‘a substan- | wits ’ the Ca ok olic church tial decrease’ in exports to the! : ; eddi <4 ; would consider the first wedding United Kingdam and all other of Mr. Townsend as valid. In my oo except the: United | opinion it is not likely, as nor- States. : , : i ould “The American market — sot | mally he Coe ete not consider valid a wedding not performed within the Catholic re- ligion by a Catholic priest.’ Townsend was married in 1941 to Rosemary Pawle in the Angli- can church=-He divorced her in 1952 on grounds of adultery. They had two sons, who live with her. She later remarried. Mrs. Jamagne said Saturday the wedding would be early next | year. one on which we can always rely —saved us. Now we are more d pendent than ever on that single market.” ‘In the eight-month period im- perts increased $367,000'000. of which $231,000,000, or 63 per cent, came from the United States, and $41,009,000,-or 11 per cent. from the United Kingdom, Mr. Pearson said. “In other words, imports are | being diverted not to but from on ori Taited Kine iat iFrench, partly in English. He Siete, which i ome mite Cited ssid ne. Spoke Prench “most why our exports to the United |*"e time with ae eee _ Kingdom are decreasing.” {speaks only & little =a. ; ; |\SETTLE IN FRANCE _ In their attitude towards Amer- Townsend said they probably ao Same ae eae settle in France after the schizophrenic a . wedding, possibly in Paris. He ae ____. | said he is considering working on PIONEER AREA documentary and semi-document- Concord, capital of the Newl\ary films for a Swiss producer. England state of New Hampshire| Townsend's longisit hair showed was first settled im 1632, touches of gray and his face had Townsend spoke partly in| jactually been agreed on among | Washington, London, Paris and |Bonn. Hence all talk of any kind of summit conference is specu- lative. Yet diplomats concede in | private convsersation that if the negotiations are to be carried out this year, some high-level con- | | clusions as to the time place and! nature of the meetings will have to be reached soon. Eisenhower is ; ! planning to go! to Moscow and tour the- Soviet Union next May or June. He clearly thinks of the East-West summit \conferemce as taking place before that time. 1 lof hunters. They knew the gen-| eral direction which the hunters were likely to take, but to locate, ithem in that vast area was their problem. After hours of travel through | the fofest, one of the men was} completely -exhausted. His com- panion made a bed of boughs him under a tree. and left) him there to rest while he climb ed the top of a hill from which a signal might be given. He reached the summit. and with a ‘series of shots from his rifle, he gave the hunter's signal. Far across the’ valley, the sig-} nal was heard and answered, and | in a few hours the men met. The| signal from the heights enabled the ‘men to meet in the valley. It is from the heights \of spirit- ual experience that the prophet for |souls see the direction that men Fiancee , flost the boyish look of the days iof his romance with Princess | Margaret. with a good-sized diamond. She | said it was her engagement ring | from Townsend. The former RAF pilot has been reaming the world, writing a book and making a movie, since Margaret announced four years ago that she would not marry him. He said he now is living in| Brasschaat. “IT am almost a Belgian, I have been living so long in the coun- try,”” he said. Marie-Luce cleared up the mat- ter of her age, which has been variously reported. She said she was born July 3, 1939. Nicknamed ‘Mosquito’ by” her friends, she te slim, long-legged and slightly taller than Town- send She has dark, almost black hair} and black eyes. Something of a tomboy when she was younger, she had little schooling after suffering shock in the bombing of Antwerp. She likes horses and has been a frequent winner in jumping contests. She is fond of ballet dancing, at which she is said to be very good. Townsend and Marie-Luce met for the first time at the fashion- able Brussels Riding Club about five years ago. He later met her at the fashionable seaside resort of Le Zoute. He took her along as a secretary-photographer on his second world tour. | MAUGHAM REVISITS MARSEILLE, France (AP)—W. Somerset Maugham is on his way to the Far East ‘‘to see the coun- tries where I lived 30 or 40 years ago.”” The 85-year-old author 1s aboard the French ship _ Laos, which will make stops at Aden, India. Ceylon, Singapore, South Viet Nam, The Philippines, Hong Kong and Japan. 3 TO NAME SECRETARIAT OTTAWA (CP)-—-The_ secretar iat of the proposed national con- to We named shortly it was learned Friday. .The secretariat will meet with the various prov- ‘inces 2bout the corfere teolf, which has been billed for 1960 or we servation conference is expected | of action must take. It was in his hours of commun- yn with God that Abraham heard God's call to lay the foundation of the elect nation. It was at the burning bush that Moses received God's com- mission to lead an enslaved race nto liberty. In precisely the same way, iSamuel was guided to select Saul | and David as God's instruments for creating a nation out of the scattered tribes of Israel, and Jeremiah was called to save a Marie Luce displayed a rin8 |remnant out of the wreck of that | nation for perpetuating God's work of salvation through the wreck of that nation. It was as true in ancient as in modern times that “God moves in a mysterious way His won- ders to perform.” A PURPOSE | _ But the key - truth fs that 'God 1s in action always and and that there is a purpose behind all that He does. Those accounts of God's per- sonal intervention in human af- fairs are like a golden thread in the events of history. What wick- ed men intended for evil, God turned into good. Often the seffish ambition of conquerors was overruled for the emancipation of the enslav- ed. The attempts of human greed for ts own satisfaction have been overruled to provide for the needs of the poor. Dives and Lazarus had differ- ent destinies in the world be- yond, but the number of cas- es in which the working out >of Dives’ selfish plans has enrictied Lazarus, reveal an unseen Hand directing the efforts of man to- ward objects beyond his ken. We are all children of Destiny, each of us a link im the chain which runs through the eternities. “T shall be satisfied when TI awake in His likeness’’ is an in- spired assurance. But. also—I shall be surprised at what God will have done with my poor ef- forts. . The Great Artificer fits every plan we make and deed we do into its place and never loses sight of His Divine and Eternal ends. I see men of faith in Canadian politics. I am not going to dis- cliss their policies, but I have confidence in the men. Whatever a good man may seem to be. in the eyes of the world, the fact remains that God is with him and He will let none of his words fall ‘to the ground. : I am only one of a million, but I am in God's hands. It is not what .I. am or do that will count in the long run, but what He will do with me, And when the same God works toward the same end through the millions of whom I am one, the everywhere, of His wisdom and might, and will draw its quality from His ere A WINDOW . L A hero of the faith lost his ficht for the betterment of his contemporaries and their chil- dren. But there was a window in his prison cell through which he could see the stars, and as he watched them move in their courses he saw that ‘‘for the ev- erlasting right the silent stars are strong.” This consciousness of human beings that they are part of an eternal process marks them out from “the beasts that perish.” The desire of their hearts is for fellowship with Him who gov- erns all these powers in the in- terests of His children. Many of us have committed our lives. to this faith. We have lived by it and we expect to die in it. It is based on our know- ledge of Him who has saved us from our sins, and who can be counted on to ‘“‘keep that which we have committed § to Him against that day.” If it should prove unfounded, then for us the moral umiverse would be in ruins. On its complete fulfilment ts built a future glorious , beyond anything the mind of man can conceive. Coup Broken In Venezulea CARACAS, Venezuela ‘AP)— The Venezuelan government an- nounced Monday it has smashed a revolutionary conspiracy against President Romulo Betan- court and that 40 persons are un- der arrest. More arrests are ex- pected. secretary, said the plotters were fellowers of .deposed dictator Marcos Perez Jimenez, who is living in exile in Miami Beach, Fla. Velazquez said the plotters planned to assassinate Betan- court, Vice-President Raul Leoni, Admiral Carlos Larrazabal, army chief, and Gen. Carlos Luis Ara- que, commander of the national guard. The guard is Venezuela's national police force, A series of bombings in Cara- cas was connected with the plot, officials said. Juvenile POLICIES | AGANADA LIFE t POLICY for -@ specitic purpose: * fic Joey Says New Laws Drafted To Control Camps In Woods hours were demanded by the Newfoundland Pulp and Paper mills have both signed contracts with the NBWW. They said they would close the mills before meeting IWA demands. One NBWW resolution expected to stir up controversy authorizes the union executive to seek af- IWA. A. N. D. and Bowater’s ae i drrtne Ste strike AND. packed a ae et aed party ip the last provincial @lee- tion opposed legislation cur tailing The IWA. FISH STEAKS LONG EATON, England (CP) A truck delivered one fish to a store in this Derlyshire village and four men lifted the 640-pound halibut on to a trestle table, where it was cut into some 2,000 steaks. COURTS FOR “DANGEROUS” AMMAN, Jordan ‘Reuters)—A royal decree issued Saturday aw thorized Prime Minister Hazza Majali to establish new state se- NBWW claims a membership of | curity courts to try Communists and other “dangerous” Jordan- ians. The courts are expected to ibe set up early next month. filiation ~with the International Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (CLC). The CLC supported the IWA FOR CAPITAL GROWTH Assets of the funds are invested in a wide range of Canadian common stocks selected for long-term growth potential. Investors Growth Fund combines the advantages of common stock investment and full-time professional management, FEATURES .~ @ Automatic, free reinvestment of dividends : Cumulative investment plans | Variable income plans Income tax credits G. F. Cameron Division Mgr., Summerside J. C. Montgomery District Mgr., Charlottetown Their future starts now If you are the father of a young family, you are probably planning great things for the future of your children. It is up to you to help make these plans come true. There is one thing that you can do now . 33 start them on a Canada Life plan. This will give them a tidy sum to help with their education or provide a measure of security for them through life. Now they have the precious advantage of being young and never again will be able to create an insurance estate at such low rates. Consult a career representative of Canada Life for the best plan for your children, Ramon Velazquez, Betancourt’s’ A CANADA LIFE C/tesurance Company 16-54058 PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BRANCH Phillips Building R. E. Younker, C.L.U. 111 Grafton Street, Charlottetown District Manager 3: Hi. MO iciissse phicacdiiias isacickasanbisieet vcharlottetown ree Fe | BST TIVTT IT Ter eis eee &s mi B. COPPUIRETE iii iiciiais babsascsceneeteccesssss i: OORESIOD WW. ©. CASE | ii ik ace deishiciescissiiiicsss: ORR PAUL BIENVENU prominent Canadian business Canada’s board are: Paul Bien A. E. GRAUER Ford Motor Company of Canada, Limited has added three leaders and one of its own top executives to its board of directors. The new members of Ford of venu, of Montreak, president and managing director, Catelli Food Products Limited; A. E. Grauer, even 1916, joint result will be the product of Vancouver, chairman of, the board and president, British ' HON. ROBERT H. WINTERS a a JOHN D. KING Columbia Power Corporation; Hon. Robert H. Winters, of Toronto, president, Rio Tinto Mining Company of Canada Limited: and John D. King, of Toronto, vice-president, sales and advertising, Ford of Canada. Rhys M. Sale, president of Ford of Canada, announced the appointment of the new directors follow- ing a special meeting of the board in Toronip, tt tl ss