.5 , rma ovanouuv. jgcnlgnnorrarowu R Caihifiméurvey Photo irovazuaanris. 194s Canadian Army Plans . .. . 13.3.25 gggraan Manufacturing lllgarol Loses Churchill Wanted Drive In Canada Set l For Better Catering Through Army School Mennonites Meat Extrema Hardships In Paraguay ._.__. ‘moan, Man, Nov. l6 -(OP) __g;mgme hardships and bicker- “; among- emigrant Mennonites m their new home in Paraguay soon may drive more of them bark to former homes in Manitoba. This word came today from two Mennonite families recently re- turned to this district from Para- gun)‘, P. Eons. his wife and two daughters and Jacob Enns and H, family who are the latest of the returning emlgrants- part of m, pend of 1.689 who left for south America last summer. Their reports of conditions in interior Paraguay are confirmed by B. B. Dublenski, legal adviser i5 the emigrants. He said Men- nonite leaders now in Paraguay imi- urged that no more large gvgupg be sent to the new land until initial difficulties are sur- mounted end it is known ‘how first settlers make out. The returned emigrants said a peat deal of discomfort suffered by many in the group bed bred disputes among them. Others were overcome with sickness. Many emigrant families combed at vlilar-rics in tents for several months until a road was built through bush and swamp. They then moved on wit-h the aid of trucks and oxen. The Enns said the mountainous terrain made it difficult for the Mennonites to make a new start in life The returned families plan to start up farming again in the Al- toms district. They say they now wish to remain in Manitoba. Dutch Make i. Wealth From Oyster P Farina EDMONTON. 13.7 2'! - to») J Pearls, don't, come from stern. at all. $0 A aa s Dr Peter‘ erringa of the Nethe lands government fisheries laboratories. The "Pearl oyster" isn't an oyster but a mem- ber o! another family, . .. . Dr. Korringa, a graduate of the ‘ University. of Amsterdam. is in Canada to talk over the pearl in- dustry with Canadian businessmen He took time out during a visit to Edmonton to explode another pop- ular belief. The "Pearl" oyster- low-rs sometimes find when eating is iust apiece of xvorthless calcite. But believers in the saying that oysters should only be eaten mouths with an "r" in the name are right, Dr. Korringa lays. Oys- ters breed during the summer months and are then inedible. Oys- icrs reach the peak of their POP- uinrity during thaChrlsirnas sea- son in Holland, one of the world's ‘ceding oyster exporters. Oysters For Christin“ ‘they are part of most Christmas dinners in the Netherlands and a good cater can consume two dozen at a meal. ' Dr. Korringa says oyster culture n Holland is o. profitable business Many oyster farmers are quite wealthy. . Canada and the United States are “far behind" Holland in oyster‘ culture. except for parts of Nova Smtia and Prince Edward Island. Dr. Korringa says. in Holland, oysters are planted m huge beds, and in the 7B years the industry has been producing. many‘ special strains have been developed in edible variety. IQI will“? officers found themselves up steaming meals lo long lines of hungry troops. Neither the of- ficers nor the nurses escaped kil- chen fallguea such as pct-washing and scrubbing floors. Way, Winnipeg; cam aoaomv. Ont. lVov. 11 —- (CP) -- When commissioned of- ficers serve Christmas dinner to the men under their next month, it will merely be an old tradition. But when a grou of officers takes over the meni chores of a cookhouse. lt'| news. command That's exactly what happened during one phase of the Royal Can- adian Army Service Corps‘ celer- ing officers’ course which has just concluded hers. Designed to give practical ex- perience to catering officers in each of the five army commends. the eight-week course saw 13 of- ficers. including four nursing lis- ter dietitians from military hos- pitals. and one staff sergeant. peel- ing potatoes and scrubbing floors. The course had a minimum of lectures and a maximum of prac- tical work under conditions fam- illar to any army cook] The re- sult, the army feels, will be better eating for the average Canadian lalrller. Highlight of the course came dur- ing one week when the student cf- flcers prepared, cooks-d and served all the meals for 200 other ranks from the Royal Canadian Electrical and Mechanical Engineers and the 23rd Brigade Company, R. C. A. S. C.. who are stationed at Camp Borden. school Officers Serve Meal Clad in cookhnuae whites, the dishing Instructors for the course were the chief‘ Instructor from the H. C. A. S. C. Sdhool of Cookery. Capt. C. D. Jack Sinden and one officer and three enlisted men from the United States army whb instructed in the latest methods and procedures of U. S. Army cooking. (Tex) Hazard; staff Capt. Maj. K. l-ialke. w the U. S. instruct house method "Your ideas and films on nutri- tion are the best l have ever run across." he commented, "and might well be used by the U. S. Army. Your meat-cutting. too, far excels that of ours . there is little waste in the methods used by Cen- adlan Army butcherl." Attending the course were: Lleut. C. L. Thurber. Halifax; Lleut. L. F‘. Jones, Halifax; Lleut. W. M. Thcrrlen. Montreal; Lieut. A. l3. Tilley. Ottawa; Lieut. J. R. W. Hider. London, Ont; CapLJS. C. Licut. J. A. Pear- son. Si. Thomas, Ont; Capt. R. W. Lockwood, Calgary; Capt. E. B. Robertson. Edmonton and Staff Sgt. F. Dania. Vancouver.’ " ' ~'»“’¥‘“ The four dietitians and their army posts were Lieutenants (Nur- sing Sisters): Janet E. Keay, Si. Andrewlr-by-the-Sea, N. B. Mont- real Military Hospital; E. E. S. Wright, Port Hope. Ont. Toronto Military Hospital: Marjorie Will- QJX. Calgary. Shilo Military Hui- plfal. and Constance E. Pirie. Si. Anne 6e Bellcvne, Que. Calgary Military Hospital. ._ _.___¢ ___..4 Eisenhower's First Choice Was Alexander NEW’ voax. v0.11}? -a (CPI ~ Fleld Marshal Montgomery got the Job but Field Marshal Alexander. now Governor-General of Canada. was Gen. Eisenhower's first choice as commander of British forces in the campaign in western Europe. The story is told in Elsenhcnvci-‘s book on the war, "Crusade in Eur- ope", being published next Mon- day. l-le says he understood originally that either Alexander or Moni- jgomcry “ms available. They then had rank of general. "Al that time I expressed a search of the mostlpreferenco for Alexander. prunnr- lly because I had been so closely Exchange‘ llalue 0n German llurh n} oaonoz mua BIILIN, Nov. 1'! -(AP) -mir- rency reform in wanna Germany has changed the fortunes of many a black market and brought the world a thflvlhl new one. The clgaret, once good as sold on bargain counters of the de- feared, plunged diaily in western Germany with the birth of the Deutscha mark. It held nearly its own only in blockaded Berlin. buoyed up in the uncertain swirl of orisis. American clgarets used to bring about 10o marks a package. After currency reform they dropped f0 about five mas-ks. Taking lnw consideration the fact that @119 mark was slashed on a l0 for one basis. the new price for cigars“ still reflects the heavy bu?" dell“ to this black market- In Berlin, however. a package of clgaxcts still gets around l0 sweat-marks. . candy bars. coffee and will yvliich opened many doors l0 My money in the first days B! °°°“‘ potion. also have lost much of their barter power. Men say they would rather work for the marks- The new mark itself, resting On tho European Recovery Pwslflm- made two nations out. of GB!‘- many overnight. one rooted in the C0,; pit; and forges of the Ruhr. the other chained to the dismal economy of the Soviet occupflllflh A black market sprung up l“ 5min as soon as Russian authori- ties followed the western currency reform with a money 01151139 f‘! their own and banned the Deutsone or “may” mark‘ gram east Germany. The ‘Clay _ mark hit a four for one ratffl “l? the Soviet or "Sokoiovsky mar . and with slight fluctuations has held that ratio. Exchange Roles Military payment certificates (scrip) used by Americans and Britons get about ll marks i011‘ $1 in western Germany. B" greenbacks buy 13 to l4 marks. New York set the exchanse "it rim-e a; six to l0 marks for $1. At present there is no interna- tional rate except for lmpflflirex‘ port transactions where it pegged at one mark for 30 cents. The cigaret and candy markets in wéstern Germany dwindled greatly efln before currency re- form was adopted. “he boom was in the first days after the war when a week's army P05‘ EX‘ chgngg rgflqn would keep B "W" living comfortably for a mqmh on, malls: from the ration sale. iggmall fortunes were built, y by changing marks into dollars a» 10 cents each. (‘furrency reform stop- ped that. 4 The cigaret market thrived for e couple of years. hOWBVP-I- “"- splpments from overseas ulllll these ulere banned in 1947. Barter in post exchange itcllls was still good for laundrr- “WK around the house and auto re- pairs. but it no 10ml" bull! 1m‘- tunes. ‘ The new mark dealt a dos-h blow to all this in ivestern Ger- many. outside Berlin. The clgawt no longer is the factor it once wvos in German life, and ils value is less than in French or Italian black markets. r-————————-—-—-———*— associated with him and had de- veloped for him an admiration and friendship irhlch have firm"! “Wm the years. I regarded Alexander as Britain's outstanding soldier in (he field of strategy. He was, more- over. a friendly and agreeable type; Americans instinctively liked him." ORPINGTON, Kent, England — (c?) - Concert pianist Dame Myra Hess, giving a recital here. stopped and declared: "This piano. is doing its best. but if i5 like entering a donkey for the Grallfl Nimoml, 1 hope everyone will (‘lube together and buuy R "W" one." liarson,'llllntors In llaw Si. Laurent ablnat‘ ‘an an”, formally Tanned a-em w: Ian. use»- ‘mm’ m‘ '“" n’ n’ ‘ “if”. takes even. lee at Often where Mull M» If" t) the increase were: tact can be made in. the field. even in far northern areas: improved supply a choice of areas graphed. so a unit. can work on one area While another is closed in by bad weather; the "tri-cam- areas may be degree of accuracy; range Lancaster aircraft tri-camera ivork; Squadrons Map Canada Irllphed are so badly hemmed in by clouds that only a few days s. year are suitable for atr photo- grophy, which must have ab- solutely no cloud and a mini- mum of snow and ice. (B! fl- Dene Bullpen, Canadian PNII sun Writer) oyraiwa, Nov. 17 — (GP)- The It. C. A, . has gone all out to map Canada-for peacetime as well as was purposes. year. tackling in dead earnest a survey job for which there is no parallel in the world planes ol the service's two Air Photo squadrons snapped 911,936 square miles of territory, much of which was previously un- charted. some ides of the immensity of the task can be obtained from the knowledge that the estimat- ed land area of Canada is rough- ly 3,500,000 square miles. The 91mm square miles photo- graphed this year was more than double the i047, ‘which KlMOO oovend ln itself was a record War. Dt was nearly half as much again as all the air photography g done from the ‘began in i921 o the end of i947. time the work \I"aclnrs mainly responsible for good weather this summer; establishment of a signals sysletn by which con- wtth aircraft lines to setting up of to he photo- units in the field; era" system, by which larger shot with a good use oi long- in the and full use of all available "photo" weather Actual areas to he photograph- ed in any summer are establish- ed ‘by an irl er-depantmehtel committee on survey work, which co-ordinates military and government, and also takes into the requirements of civilian branches of account non-government needs. some of the areas to be photo- area with aircraft lleiv on its photo rims, obtaining 270.- ~880 square miles by this method. My All Day When good weather comes, air crews stay out all day. Ground crews sleep by day and service the aircraft at night. One crew this year had a week of clear weather, and its crews flew an average of l0 1-2 hours a day for seven days running. “In our business," said Sqdn. Ldr. R. F‘. Milne of Windsor, Ont. commander of N0 M6 squadron, “the cardinal sin is to have an aircraft on the ground in photo weather. When a rup is everybody has to pitch in." Sqdn. Ldr. Millie's unit, com- prising l9 Dakotas, handles ver- tical photography which l5 more acoucuoa than this tail-ioamem variety. A shot taken vertically from 12.0000 to 18,000 feet up covers only a four-square mile sufficient accuracy for this type of work. This year his 113.000 linear miles In the enstcrn Arctic, Baffin Is- land region, the Uugava region of northern No. 4-13 squadron Ldr. C. L. Olsson of Fort William and Ottawa. square miles by the method, which can lo the accuracy of the inch. To do this, his squad- ron had to cover only 40,000 lin- ear miles. and Labrador, under Sqrln. Que bcc 64-1030 (vi-camera produve maps four miles to covered ‘Fri-ca mars prantngrn phy con- sists of‘ one vertical camera and two oblique cameras rnotluled in such a way as frcm one horizon to» another with to Rive a strip each simuilmeous flurry-camera shot. Spends Thirty Years Checking I Mystry Artist's Life (By Robert Hewett) LONDON. ‘Nov. l'7—-ICP)~—Did, Joseph Mallord William Turner. England's lame-d but eccentric master painter, really live a Jekyll-and-l-iyde existence after his supposed funeral in 185i? A Bristol schoolmaster thought he did, although public records Show the great painter died and was buried that year in st. Paul's Cathedral. For 30 ‘years Frederick Pickles. head of Si. George's School in Bristol, spent all his spare time in tracking down and trying to solve what he called the "myster- ious and baffling" story 9T Tum‘ er‘s life. He ended ‘up Turner lived years after ills "so-called death" iin 1601 and left many unknown masterpieces. Pickles kept his hobby to hun- seif during his lifetime. The strange story was disclosed re- cenlly in the will left by the schoflmnscr, who died last April at over so years of age. It was .grected scclptically by art "rill!!!- In his will Pickles wrote he 'had “for the last so rears been engaged in continuous research cvork on one subject ‘Only-the whereabouts and occupation of the mysterious and baffling world Hummer! artist Joseph \ Mallord William Tumor." Always Eccentric Declaring that painter “played the part of Jekyll and Hyde from hi5 youth upwards," Pickles said that "hLs final the year 185-1. the ing with his previous practices. "Turner lived to be a very old man," Pickles added, "and his final refuge xvas in the neighbor- hood of Bristol. where he had re- tutlons and boyhood recollections. "At his death he left many fine -- shown hen with two daughters. Marjorie and Eleanor; {years In i851, the in hiding for manygil-‘eitlggfllgfic m at disappearance inl date of his! so-called death, was Just in keep-l paintings and iunumri-able small sketches" Pickles said in his W111 that b9 had purchased several such pic- tures. l-le said that he could iden- tify them as Turner'= sum-k even though they oven- unsigned. The schoulmustsus son, Ciroup Ugplom Kenneth F. Pia-kits, RAF said his lather never gave the family any details cf his investi- gations. A spokesman of the Na- tional Gallery sold the state- ments were “rather suspctrt." The Encyclopedia Britannica says that Turner's millfl “had evidently given any" in his later Encyclopedia says, the painter disappeared and convinced “mg ‘later was discovered ill in a Chel- hotisc. He. dicd the ti‘. age 0f 76 the Encyclopedia so and was buried in Sf. Pllll s Cathcdral. llrltlsh Party Leaders ilongraiulaia Princess » -<CP\- Bri- infin)‘ inid LONDON, Nov. l6 (kid's party lcolicrs aside political qunrrcls m Parlia- ment to congrhluiulc Princess Elizabeth on the birth of a son who may some day be king. The resolution was udoptcil ullihout dissent. Even Willie Gnllacher. Commun- ist member responding in the Gov- ernment's formal resolution in the House of Commons, dcclnrcd. "l will make no adverse pnmmont." But in Northern Ireland. Nation alist members of the Lllstcr Housc of Commons walked out raflici thnn vole on u similar rcsolulion offered by Prlmo MlhlSiPl‘ Sn Basil Brooke. ll was ncloplcd in their absence with one dissonilm: vote. cast. by Socialist. Ropuhlirtm Harold Diamond. Prluccss Eliznhclh and Prince nor» reported by inns lo ho making satisfactory pm- » gross n! Buclclnolizim Palncc \‘.ill‘ll‘ the baby was horn Subrlny’ nlghl. non. it. n. winters. newly eo- poinled Minister of Transport. Record In 1947, OTTAWA, Nov. ll _. turned out L 000 worth of products m 1947' the Anglo-American armies Bureau of statistics reported to- This was a 24.2 per cent increase over 1946 1mg was directed to W5!‘ product- on substantially to the gain. cell's index of the physical volume of production on the base when final are compiled. the be only about 158. The physical [hug jmpeaggq by 49 peryin Europe should he fought. cent between i939 and i947 com-l pared with a 187 per cent in- crease in the gross value of pro- lllllrl"! W?" 59! "P "Mil Employees engaged in ruanufact- IWPFE "HYYIETOUS uring. which in 1947 lotallcd 1,120.- were still below number of 1,222,882 employed in “~‘ Between 1939 and m employment proximately T0 per cent. paid out m an all-time blah flguurc of Mini).- showing an 19.9 per cent over 194B. and rise of I80 per vent over i939. wood and group with $l.953.379_fl00 portance 1n 1947. products come second with $1.768»- 9l9.00(l. aillmal 858.000, textiles. 31.056.869.000. iifm- , presents 111m a; a ma" wha viewed metallic mineral products totem-cw”... “in not only a; a chemicals ferrous metal products $1lI,950,000. l __.______._...___. MAY BE OIL FIELDS IN AFRICAN DESERT UPINGTON, CAPE PROVINCE. South Africa,‘ The Kalahan valuable oil deposits. A. P. Audas, mining expert. from n trip into the desert. North-cast of the Nossop River he found a large area of coal cle- and he said there are 1h- ......___..__-.. .__.s__.__.____ A On Berlin Eisenhower Reveals In. War Book By John Deuphlaee (Canadian Press Sill! Writer) NEW YORK, Nov. 17 -- (C?) - dld not drive to take Berlin ln the final stage of the war because Gen. Eisenhower opposed Winston Chur- chill and was supported in doing so by the combined chiefs of staff. This is the supreme commanders ownexplanallon, given in his book of the war, "Crusade in Europe.” to be published Monday, Nov. 22 (by Doubleday and Co. Inc. and Doubleday Canada, Ltd.) He says he believed e "lake-Ber- lin-before ~ the - Russians" {would have been strateg that allied forces are the only, ~ way to fight a successful modern war. Be points to supreme heads ' quarters so a standing example din , proving the old military maxim that coalitions cannot fight sues cessfully. ‘ "Crusade in Europe" depicfl Gen. de Gaulle, then leader of tho = fighting French forces. as a source of trouble for Eisenhower. 0n the eve of D-Day. Eisenhower relates. de Gaulle demanded that he be recognized as the ruler of d that he alone could to the people of France on co-operation with the Allied forces. Since President Roosevelt was unallerably opposed to givinl de Gaulle such recognition, Eisam hows-r says, he had, to pacify th temperamental Fr e n c h Genet without committing himaelh (OP) --‘ industries record of $9.97d,4M.- manufactu. in; and an advance of 10 previous high 1944 when manufactur- nrlces. however, con- The decision he made-it has since became the subject of much figures for the index debate-ls only one of numerous oc- 1947 index will l caslons on which. Eisenhower says, in» argued with the than British pm. l Prime Minister on haw the battles volume of "Crusade in Europe" indicates that. from the day combined head- they were disbanded after victory, there occasions when British and American political and me Term...‘ ntililary loaders did not sec eye to ‘P. Release Names 0f Missing ll. S. Fliers m" we‘ Most 0f the disagreements were was apflovcr where the main assault on The a_,fortress Europe should be madc. jEisenhouwr, strongly backed by iGen. George Marshall, the United Ismail-e clllPl of Staff. put first . ‘emphasis on a cross-channel l|\~ "HTMSP ofwasion. Churchill and some of his a.arl\'lsers—af first. anyway -— felt ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. Nov. ll — (CPI -— United states Al: Force officials at nearby Fort Peppers-ell today officially released the name! of persons who were aboard a U. S. 3-25 twin-engined bomber, missing since Nov. 5 on a flight lo Slephenvllle, Nfld. The names are: Capt. R. W. MYPTB- CHM. M- M. Liles. Limit. i’. l-‘i. Larorce. Technical ser- geant P. G. Manzey, Lit-Col. E. s. Hlvkcr. U. s. air department and Mal. H. L. Forsylhe, U. 8. ord- uance. salaries and i947 was. however, at lgrent advantages might be gained paper “mducu l by exploiting the Italian campaign. an "lmmi/ "awed a" Eisenhower pictures Churchill as "mkm fir“ l“ "min man with tremendous interest Tm" and l" and rlrivc to lake port in anything. ‘constantly participating in strategy products But he $1357” l and even military tactics. , military $446,G15.000. non- . problem but also as a means of oh- $l.04l.fl4l.-‘ialning post-war political advant- induslries ‘age in Europe.‘ United Slates policy. as he shows ’it, was to front the war as strict- ly a military problem. to be ended expeditiously by any means at hand. British and American viewpoints clashed in Churchill's desire invade lhe Balkans; in his apposi- llon to the invssloif of southern France; in his opposition to in- Parachute pas-ties were dropped tenslvc bombing cf communications to investigate the wartime casual- in France before the cross-channel flag, both of which we" found m invasion; in his oft-repealed views isolated-cud densehbwoodm “elm ‘on tho imporianca of the Mcdiler- 30m U_ ,5_ army and navy plane: mncnn theatre; and in his demands have taken m“ m m, hunt l ll- f d.’ f "r H“ n o“ me O “mum An almost-continuous search is Berlin. Bur. for all the differences he. gggzfiismaimained by nmmd 995mm mentions, Eisenhower's theme is l shlngton. It was last heard from near the naval base at Ar- gentia. in Southern Newfoundland, and is believed to have plunged into Pleccntia Bay. Bad weather has hampered the searchers since the operation be- miscellaneous , . NO‘, H,_(CP,_ two aircraft lost Desert may have said on return that nil silsn exists in It’s Never Too Early To Arrange For The Greatest of All Gifts What is the greatest of all gills in the physical sense. ls if no? good Health? Most everyone will agree if ll, and moat people The moin cause of incurable 'Cdncer is DELAY. But let us emphasise EARLY CANCER iS CURABLE in the majority of cores. You will know if any of the following‘ symptoms suggest that you should know that the second greatest menace lo health is Cancer. visit your doctor immediately. NEGLEBT: Any mass. lump, swelling or hardness on the face. neck. lip. tongue, in the mouth in the breast or elsewhere in the body. I Mllws-Cancer of the lip is mos! prevalent among irnen and gen- erally bcgzns in the lower lip. ’ WOJIEX“ All lumps in fhc breast should be presumed la he cam. cor until prmcrl not tn be. Many caacs can lu- curetl if a diagnosis ls maria curly. An ulcer sort or cracked lip which IQ lot heel within a month demands attention. Any mmnlurnl bleeding is n sign. Attend lo a wan or mole that starts to IDCYFZSP rapidly. Hnarscircsa which persists past the durnllnn ol‘ a common (Tfllfl may he serious. , Dlffirullv ll’l wallowing your food or uidlzcslirvn “hush flFVfflfiili alter the age oi 40 requires investigation and probably X-ray cxrrmn- Ptlon. Do not wait for pain. Fain la a late symptom Remember to see your Doctor now. Early Cancer is curable lu tho majority of cases. - It’s Never Too Early To Arrange For The Greatest of All Gifts