"Magic Touch" Powerflits Stand- Drive, Neutral. Eugene. and Low ms with all Desoto rirelflite mod- ..sre located in a panel to the left ,1, ii Chrysler of Canada's new of the steering wheel. New safety "Magic Touch" push-button eon- and engineering features this year ml for its Powerrllte automatic include lifeguardsafety door latch- Canadian Wilderness ls Oldest Country In World By WALTER GRAY Canadian Press Staff Writer CHURCHILL. Man. (CP) - The Canadian wilderness is a man iller. kllundreds of adventurers dare parh year to try its bait of tower- jug mountains. vast forests, tree- less barrens and white water. Most come out unscathed, but others go through nightmares of storms. isolation and hunger. For some the trail ends in the wreck- alzc of a plane, at the bottom of a rixer or beneath a snowdrift. Sportsmen can reach the doorstep of adventure by automobile in the Rocky mountains and along the Alaska highway. Airplanes can land them at comfortable hotels, lodges and fishing camps. Rescu- era are usually nearby if they get into trouble. r CHALLENGE OF BARREN8 It's a different story in the barren lands where hundreds of miles sep- araie habitations and the only hu- man likely to turn up is a wonder- ing Eskimo or trapper. That country is not easily con- quc-red. Disaster strikes most frequently at those who come ill-prepared and inexperienced. .-inglls Maciver, veteran Church- ill trapper, advises against any person travelling through the north- land unless he has a guide. On his own travels a long-handled ex and a match safe are the prime pieces or equipment. Tile ax is used to cut wood and little protection against hordes of black flies. Food was a problem because their packs lacked variety. "If you eat the same food every day, it begins to build up to the insecurity of the situation," Grin- nell said. After Moffatt's death the youths lived off the land "which was good psychologically." "it eased the tension greatly. We knew we would be able to survive." Tom Lamb. veteran bush pilot and owner of Lamb Airways at The Pas. Mnn., has a small hand- net in each plane. Should he be forced down the net would be used to take fish for food. Rev. Etienne Danielo, a menlbe of idle Roman Catholic Oblates oi Mary Immac- ulate who lived for 20 years at Pond inlet on the northwest tip of Baffin island. speaks of the de- .met at the home of Mrs. Edson '”d- 'Pl"""”d "d "”'d' mm". Th. Frau”, opened an Reports of committees were annourws. names,-ssnIIIvIIIl."5 nooetobcmoaunsosta.w.r."l0I0l'-luP'"'""””'"""' X!- wnhod.-n Jbymed ceived. It was moved hi MH- sovenjnssnbers answer call. Minutes of last meeting were read. approved and signed. Corres- tbsir reports. Towels and tissue had been bought, for school. It was moved and seconded that bills be psid.Itwsadecidedtohaveapan- 31'! sole and Mrs. William Mill was appointed to find out about place and aid Mill and Mrs. Ernest Mill. Nextl Geo Crosiel'.secondedb!Ml'i- - "t"””"nve;:itanmuytlutmbwm con-int-dol- ewsaread. Sick and school comm!” gave date. New sick committee: Mrs. Ger-l ed ial-reaching headlights. Avail- able ln the Desoto series this yet! is s tour-door hardtop. a two-door hardtop, a four-door sedan. a con- estate wagon. M of self. He lost 20 pounds during the ordeal. Bush pilot Gunner Laurell oi Churchill kept himself awake for seven days and nights while he was marooned in the barren lands. L He constantly rubbed his hands and ' feet to keep up circulation. In hisl emergency kit only ebocolateswl raisins, sugar and a parcel of vitamins were of any use. The rest was frozen solid. After his rescue Laurel! said he would always carry a snow knife so he could build an igloo it forced down. He said he would also carry smoke bombs and a large sheet of red cloth to help searchers spot his plane. BURLINGTON liciousness of frozen caribou meat, rens for 29 days in August, 1951. They had a month's supply of food ries, conserving their emergency, rations for a hike south if they were not found. SAVED BY TENT tent with saving their lives. doctor said. as a weapon against marauding animals. The match safe assures lrarlnth and light. He always car- ncs a medical kit and recommends a tmttle of liquor-for mediclnall pllrnoscs 'nnly. l llli wife, herself a veteran of rut.-arctic travel, says: illllry tllrnlllzil it. like tllcir time or they'll never lrlzlim ii." DIRASTIIOIIS CANOE TRIP This summer six young Ameri- can t ' attempted a 700- milc trip from Stony Rapids, Sask. in Baker lake in the Northwest Arthur Moffatt of Norwich, Vt. died of exposure after two of th three canoes were swamped rapids of the Duhwawnt river. Th 5 others reached safety 10 days later. 0 In June two American army offi- cers and a Canadian school teacher leit Fort Churchill for fishing up the Churchill river. They started J out in blustery weather in a canoe RESOURCEFUL PILOT Pllwerrd by a small outboard en- one. They never returned. limiter leadership. Eighteen-year-old George Grin- llfll of New York City. one of the bi Duhawnt canoeists, said most of hi tlwm lacked proper equipment for them ppm-e the only - - bu Oll lnrthcrn travel. Their leather boots The wpmgplg bgby Wu ban in hit? hrontlnuously wet and their the.frost-lined cabin of the plane h "me cold. swollen and and he took off his shirt to wrap it. '" However, on baby hlater dil;d.l d I, Rickey warmed is poor -ca it? our blood circulating. he said. other children against his body at nights. His hands became frost- The youths wore the wrong type bitten so. he could not roll clgarets. llilnve. Crlnnell himself made the Rickey gave up the solid food in Tlll W9r'lllIl.lZ two left-handed gloves the rations so his charges would moors. Head nets proved not starve, living on-liquids him- "Wc seldom took our boots off to llllll-Ill MISTAKES WHITLUCK 7'95, SERW l A :,-ll,f l .4 lmita mines. ills plane. only sllglltly . . , danlagcd hlll for off course, was "m”&:rI:,S 1:23 ?tldl;:LPf1TSlll'::(::'pl:jeventually follnd. Thepilnt left 8 wming in Mm think "my Nmfnnfe saylnrz he had decided to walk E Th”, have m,out of the hush. He was never forests hide the fate of many planes. In .l'allllzlry, 1950, the big- gest nir search in Canadian his- ilnr,v-- some 60 Canadian and Amer- ican piallcs--failed to find an Amer- B .. . ,iran (354 transport with 44 ersons Te”""”95t Lmd" 9' "'9 gmupl ohoard which disappeared oliier the - Yukon on a flight from Anchorage In 9 to Great Falls-, Mont. heroism and ingenuity when the boLastv.luly seven American school- chips are down, paul Rickey, cent. T ys tiled in an avalanche on Mount ral Northern Airways pilot from emple'ln.Banff National Park. A Winnipeg. 1. an example, ms plane "'"”l," 5 llll”Y delilded the 8l'0l-lP was forced down in northern Man- ras iii-equipped and lacklnl l-I ltoba while carrying five passen- thcm mad before they were found. Johnny B o u r a s s a. la Grande Prairie. Alta., hush pilot, disap- peared in fllny. l.'l5l. on a 200-mile illlzlli from llntllurst inlet to Sal- und. The countless lakes and miles of h Among the most publicized catches was that in 1951 for Tor- Bush pilots are synonymous with tterly cold weather, Rickey kept s passenger. alive by letting visiting at Burlington. guest of Mr nto hockey star BilliBarilko and 3'"! M” Ems P"'fm' l Tlmmlns dentist Henry Hudson who disappeared in Q light plane near of Brae, Lot 9 were recent visitors ames bay while on a fishing trip. to Long River. when they were guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Bernard and other relatives. her home in Margate on October. 19. after a motor trip to Boston and vicinity, Cape Ann and Ply- mouth. She was Mr. and Mrs. John Fyfe of Stan- . M id gers-a pregnant Indian woman (1,? Bridge and M" EDD” and four children. For six days, in Mr. and M". Leslie Clark Elma! son of Kensington left October 23. The Aristocrat of Undergarments Recent weekend guests of Mr. a staple food for Eskimos on the and Mrs. LEROY Campbell. Irlslr an, town, were Mrs. Campbell's broth- Two Wjgconsln fishermen, 1),, er, Mr. Robert Cotton, Mrs. Cotton. John Tasche and Miles Elchen- and their daughter. N0?! M82 of burger, were isolated on the bar- Galetown. N. B. l Mrs. Peter Morrison and M i s s -beam on iJ::”:..”J:li'5f.".i:l.Et2l12t2i'lill" week” they "Ved ml "sh lmd her" and Mrs. Preston Campbell, Irish- town, and also enjoyed a tour or the beautiful grounds at "Wood-I leigh". Burlington. 1 st. Stephen's Anglican C h u rch Dl'- T850110 Cfedlled B bu!-W003 boys and girls met on Friday at p the home of Mrs. Leigh Paynter. ”Wlthout it we never would have where a Junior Auxmary was or. survived in that wilderness," the ganized under the leadership of , Mrs. Paynter with Mrs. Borden Hordes nr black files ncarly drove Campbell and M”, Kehh Han-mg. ' ton as assistants. i The many friends of Mr. J. A Harding, Norboro, regret his ser ious illness. and hope for an earl. improvement in his condition. Her many friends will be pleaseti to learn that Mrs. Archie Mac Lean. Graham's Road. has recover- d from her recent illness. Mrs. W.J. Profitt returned to has ome in Long River on Sunday. after spending the past few days in the P.E. Island Hospital, where she underwent a minor operation. Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Payntcr. urlinrzton. motored to the Main- land for the October 15 weekend where they visited points of interest New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Mrs. H. R. Profitt, Crapaud, is Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. MacLeod Miss Mary F. Mayne returned to companied by Cape Breton. a motor trip to Boston. St 'M til” it Cotton IibPb'Viiids:-W.::ry Comb- liam and Mrs. Gerald Mill. Bolll call to bershlp fee. Lunch committee: Mrs Cecil Mill and Mrs. Ernest MillQ Program committee: Mrs. William "1956 DESOTO FEATIIRE8 - transmission. Four push-buttons .. es,x"Ceuter-Plans" brakes. llnPr0V- Mm ad Mn' yank Shield" l committee than had a guessing con- test which was won by Mrs. Ger- ald Mill and consolation going to H1 . - vemble coupe, Md . Fkedome Vegllgd Rlyller Jr Lunch was ser ilton W.I. was held in the Institute Room at the hall with an attendan L. at the home of Mrs. Wil-l he answered by paying mem- Co V,” 90 cents. pl-ogl-.n-I Bssk in the sun . . . snioy deck spotu...orsdip in one ofthe two swimming pools. The Empress of Scotland has every- thing for your swsy-t'toln- winner enjoyment. Boardtbe glamour-ous.Empress of Scotlan for a cruise you'll long fGflll:l'nI:el.k-Igh-1.! lyllolllltlolll crusse s lp c - - - invites you to leave your cares ashole. e committee in charge. eating and with the Queen. HAMILTON WI. The October meeting of the Ram- ten members and one visitor. committee reported sevc- senault a letter from C.A. cles needed for the school. an invitation from Indian tion it was decided ts mm Institute askinl Ill them on lleir regular night of meet- ing oct.i2t.b. We were happy to alettar to meet with Isa. ll-Jul do fronts, lsntsiqos MN. is - FEB. 9 - MAR. 2 3 twenty-day cruises from 5495 up from New York III III. luslts Ills CIISVOIAL (sell ZII Ii. IIIOIAS, "rm Host IIIGSIOI, lusts U WAIIA, Vssssvsls Hill-All-Plllti, IQ WIAQAO, I.V.l. IAVAIA, (obs in sddltlssi Isl. 9-fort sf Sod, lnsidad vener. Collection I5 money Sl2.5o. Meeting Lunch was served by the commit- cents. at r lsvsll I-Isvbssss, l.I.l. Exciting ports of call . . . strange and romsnt' nstivl customs ...exotlcrhythms...asyou cruise the Spanish Main. full information on itineraries from you lmvsl agent or any Canadian Pacific office 0 GEO. 'AlSua Canadian Pldfle Shnsnshlili Q Klslj Sicd, Ids! John. NJ. 1956, Scotsman Plclollllll. clllrllllllll 48 large Views of Scotland . in all its Scenic Splendor The Famous SCOTSMAN CALENDAR, famed the world over for 1956 is made available to the readers of this newspaper of 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: Edinburqh, Scotland to any ad- dress. Orders must be placed not later than Saturday, Novembel 5th to insure delivery before Christmas L the remains of the old Bridge of Earn, Perfhshire insert name and address of person to whom calendar is to In sent, also name of person ordering. if more than one is desired, writs particulars on separate sheet of paper and enclose with the coupon. (Enclose Cash with order) Mail or present your order direct to The Guardian I A glimpse of the Balmoral Castle from the River Dec. i THE GUARDIAN l : Address..... I I i -Ordersdbyuu Ljjjj bassoo- aseesssaosoaaesw Friday, Oct. 3. 1955 The Guardian PIIO 1.3 ' aceept this invitation. There was no new business. A po tion of the Protestant Orphanage collection was handed in to the Con- tee.