Hub 0f iimnsran BESIGNS llilllilbl. ' confidence. 187 to 5. against him 'l‘inee Julso quit their posts. Sophisticated Walk Now A Necessity (By Marilyn Larnborn, Canadian Press sum Writer) TORONTO, Nov. 13 - (GP)- ,, . - d 1 1d d] d, merely "tlCklBS" — Hi0 baymen ‘eilyl-tisrdrbtlle mo: coicyxm call them ticfclish places to sail a will rurrent dictates of fashion. 5MP- lnit when it comes p developing a new walk to arcomp y the "new some say “enough is on- professioiial models, whose flliltl depends on. the "know . ..iy the whole effect of l .' low liemline gown is lost if ivcurei- walks the same way (lid u-hcit her skirts dangled at licr knees. A lll-{ili no-way stretch dress 11 in. 11f: iruni tiic floor necessarily tramps the style of a long-strid- in; inmate. on the other hand a Wfifliali encased in swirls of ma- tc-rzni is tempted to walk with a swing But whether she must or should change her gait to suit her ' _ ii sophisticated walk is l . . consequence of giamor gown. Say the models. ildliil}. smooth steps no longer than tiic foot. no bounce and less arm movement are recommended for tsie woman who wishes to ac- c‘ r 2hr elegance of the newest : :~ 'l‘lic loot "must move slow- ly prli grace and precision." lliocirls also say it is necessary to ‘no a typo of actress if the full ...USlUl‘. is desired. An air oi’ self- rolillllfnic transfers ithc gown‘s glaniu." to the wearer. i As iicil as tiic walk. ‘dances lllicfliiil to be changed by the nor-wt fashions. But all these ideas of new walks lhfl \\i‘.1glES to match the latest ."_Iy.PS were strictly professional- uni. girls say they'll 'keep on 1i H and fox-trotting along var no lines and in wartime dresses: others who have succumb- etl to the idea of no longer giving znrrc- a peek at their knees. say tlnll walk and pivot just as though their hcmllnes had never failcii. Our ha:- Toronto housewife, who walked thc same, way for 45 . mid flatly. "you can show trc lifll to wear. but nobody is Rotor to make me practice the nrnv walk." ' Islander Wins In Combination llarness And Saddle Glass __-.p. wl-fllfill’ Barrymore. owned by E. f» Biker. won the class for com- riiuium harness and saddle horses hut. thrrcwvas stiff competition lirtorc a decision was reached in ill" rvrnt. Major Jimmy Wood. ’-* llldse. went over the ioniz M is of horses time and again w 0rd makini; his placements. G. "- OBIents of Saint John was “Fond. while N. B. lnngworth n“ third. and fourth went to Mira. It’ McLean of Halifax. f “mills: ad ifxdastraiab are two Detroit 3. "It'll oldest Colony I Now’ Foreign Minister Gheorghe Ta- mmi; resigned after the Com- dontinated Romanian Parrament passed a vote of noi- other ministers of Tata- party. National Liberal at Detroit after they had accepted an invitation mutants"! l-lthilgiiu; club u; slnl at a The new were dc- ; I I .011 according reports. were refund if” '°' i" "hilmn ma n and eight. immigration officials in the Toronto lroup of being "Commun’:ts" and stamped VQIIIINI llllll" hAir Traffic l! 801m rue! (Canadian Press Staff Writer) ~ I1‘. JOHN'S. Nfld, Nov. 14 _ (GP) — Federal union between, Ganada and Newfoundland - if the islanders vote for it next year —wiii add to the Dominion 42,000 square miles of terfltory traversed by a 700-mile nan-ow-guage rail- way and studded with one city, 10 towns and innumerable fishing settlements whose names are as colorful as any that marked the old West. From St. John's, the capital and a city of 56.000. in the east, to Port Aux Basques. terminus o! the ferry from Canada. in tha west_ it is only 300 airline miles. but the rail line weaves for M’! miles and the "lflfelsn express" takes If hours to cover the distance. Between these two points lie in- land industrial communities like Grand Falls. Windsor and Buch- Bnl. the big paper-making centre of Corner Brook. larger fishing settlements like Harbor Grace and Carbonear. and thousands of ham- lets that fl.l1 out the Gazetteer from Admiral cove to York Har- . bor. With no trans-island highway the quickest way of travelling across Newfoundland is by plane. But because the island has only about a half dozen airports, tvwo of which belong to leased United States bases at Argentia and Ste. phanviile. seaplane: have to be used. Two small charter lines us- ing light craft are operating. Most Newioundlanders depend on the fishery for a living and set up cottages and fishing "rooms" wherever a small boat may be an- chored safely. Many harbors are But ocean liners can enter‘ 8t. John's. and Botwood in Notre Dame Bay is the shipping port for newsprint from Grand Falls and ore concentrates from the mines at Buchans. . Corner Brook, centre of Bowe- ters Newfoundland plup and pa- per mills, has a harbor which can take large freighters and is the nucleus of a. booming industrial area. St. John's’ administrative cen- tre for Newfoundland and the 120,000 square miles of the Lab- rador dependency. is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cit- ies in the Western Hemisphere. since Sir Humphrey Gilbert took possession of the colony in Eng- land's name in 1583 the city has been fought for by the Dutch and French. Baa Own Brogue Now its Water Street —equival- ent to Toronto's Bay and Mont- real's St. James streets -- coh- trols a vast forest and fisheries empire whose merchant princes have world-wide trade connec- tions. Its link with Britain is close and in this hilly city where the brogue of the Newfoundland bays, a mix- ture of Irish, Scottish and Devon- ian is spoken, you can hear the proper accents of young men of England's public schools. Nearest large community to St. John's is Bell Island whose 7.000 people earn a livelihood from the 5.500.000.000-ton iron ore deposits in Conception Bay. Across the bay from Bell Island lie Harbor Grace and Carbonear, two fishing communities with l. combined population of more than 6.500. Harbor Grace figured in pioneer trans - Atlantic flights when a makeshift air strip was built there. _ Beyond them stretch hundreds of square miles of bare granite and lakeland with fishing villages like (Continued On Page 23) ll. S. Senator Opposed To Marshall Plan ‘i. W N. Nov. il-(APJ -—Se.'nator Robert Taft (Rep. O.) said today he is "absolutely op- posed” to spending $2,657,000.000 on foreign economic aid through June 30. 1948, as proposed by Bec- retary of State blarshall. Taft. who heads the Senate He- publican Policy Committee. made the statement at a press confer- enfl lhortly after Marshall out- lined needs for lmergency aid, in- cluding a proposed 000.000.1700 pro- gram of aid for China. gowns of the ll cauadlan aingeri refused just a few of the technical terms. and gulleleaa-iooking an bode no good. like gold or platinum are placed directl dots. dice are loaded with lead. cutters’ paradise aver invented for the benefit of tho Iwindier, can Walsh. es aper Read ryhody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew SECOND SECTION SATURDAY, NOVEMBIER 15, 1947 WHO WILL slow us,“ Britain aqua 8 states bor- dering Germany or active in var against liar folio part in drafting treaty. Russia holds out for inclusion of 19th, Albania. Fmicli unwilling fa include _Gdrmany in final pooce conference. Ollms op- provo Gannon participation . Ruhr. Separate Gar tales would close door for Big Four in mono f Ruhr. Many slieva his a cause for Soviet o-operolion in London. REPARATIONS- current German production. U. S. and Britain object be- cause cf increasing opera- tion costs in their zone. Such a plan would mean Sovid control ofGermon dusfries. Map highlights some of the controversial angles of the proposed German peace treaty which face the B3 Four when they meet in London Nov. 25. The conference will be the second and perhaps final attempt by the Council of Foreign Ministers to chart a united future for defeated Germany. Utwlmlsfkmtm sin egress to economic union n} four zones, U. S. and Britain have plans for sop- uraln western state. Russia Plfllll '0 fiqllt such uti n. France, originally opposed to vmlern merger, is expeclad to join if conference foils. i //¢ AGRHMENT. OK FAILURE ussio may co-opemta in Lon- don to get reparations from western zones and keep gate open for greater Soviet influ- ence in the west. Russia may balk conference still hoping for failure of Marshall Plan and U S economic depression Not To By Irving Deefor R-IDG-IZIFIEILD PARK. N. J.. Nov. i4 —-(AP)— The elaborate gambling 59ml? WhlCll New York police said they recently uncovered was '3 liigiiclass example. says sandy. haired Audley Walsh, of the multi. farlous schemes, swindies. rackets and devices which he estimnlgs muict $500,000 annually from a gullible public. Walsh is a seFgeant on the Ridgefield Park police force who has been consulted by the Peder! Bureau 0,! Investigation and has gained national recognition because of his study of gaming rackets. To combat the rising tide of Easy-money operators, Walsh has lectured before I". B. I. classes, police departments and civic organizations. While recuperating from a motor. cycle accident 15 years ago he took up the study of magic. became proficient and Joined the Society of American Magicians. He special. ized with slighnof-hand with coins, cards and dice. Other members of the police force soon turned to him as an authority where crooked gantblirig activities were involved. In short order. magic for entertainment was re- placed by police work and prosecution. Walsh acquired an extensive array of gambling equipment and took the gimmicks apart to see what made tbem pay off. In almost every case he found. the sucker who bets could be cleaned out as quickly or as completely as the operator wished. There isn't: a carnival or roulette wheel that can't be “gaffed" by pedals, catches or magnets and controlled down to a gnat‘: hair by such a simple thing as leaning on the table. In the carnival bag of sucker- iricks are many variations of the twtmway number gag, used in all sorts of dart and throwing games. The operator cln vary a number by training. awitc g or changing,‘ here's a simple cxaznpic: Suppose No. 1'! is a prise winner and by good throwing you've ' ' -' on it. The operator picks the number of‘! the hook and brings it. closer for you to see as he boilers. "No. 1'1"...try again, Bub?" Your eyesight really was bad, wasn't it? No indeed. you were being taken, for he had merely turned the number upside down and put his thumb on the honointal bar o1’ the seven and there it was, No. 11. I: anybody won the prilc with 11, it was generally a confederate. Bolus Dice And now how about dice? You could b0 taken Just as easily. Since phony dice were first discovered in the ruins oi’ Pompeii. (they were shaped and mis- nurnbered), cubes have been loaded. hollowed. edled, capped, bricked. topped and bevelled, to mention .5. liven dice that are tranlparent Dita of expansive mull under the painted "point" r the cheaper trade, the Oarda probably are the greateat Gambling Pays Off ‘To Slick Operator. Well Known Citizen 0f Jamaica‘ Dies KINGSTON. Jamaica. Nov. 13 —-(C‘P)—Sir Arthur Farquhamson, solicitor. planter. and legislator as well as founder of the Jamaica imperial Association and co-l founder of the Jamaica Banana Association, died here today after a long illness. He was 87. Gullibles ink read by certain colored glasses, pin pricks. and design variations. There are “hold-cuts" which are attached to the body and which project a card into_ihe hand _ The son of a clergyman. Sir mgfilzby ‘lf::“1¥_°°"“"' “mscles: Arthur ivas Crown Solicitor‘ of F“ m mime‘ "S" °‘ Jamaica from i894 to ioii and lighters, ash trays are used to reflect cards hold by one player to confederatcs. High cards can be cut by the way they are bevelled in certain spots. also was vice-president of the Bri- tish Empire Producers‘ Association for a time. He was a strong ad- vocate of producers’ co-operatiori and inaugurated a Jamaica-owned s-‘Gnmshlp line to England. Sir Arthur served as chairman of the Imperial and the Banana Associations in their early years of operation. SPRING-LIKE FALL OWEN SOUND. On_t. -_(cp)_ While warm springJike weather continues to prevail in this district. NOT CHOOSY several farmers have reported picking strawberries during re. Pheumonia and influenza can cent days. Another resident re. affect anyone regardless of age, PAGE SEVENTEEN Turkish “lliscipllno" Recommended For Frivolous Students l By Marilyn Laborn TORONTO. Nov. i3 _- (C?) — On leave-of-absence from the American Girls’ College at Istan- bul. ‘Purkey. Miss Cornelia Rob- erts is “shocked and disappoint- ed at the undisciplined, uncontrol- led and frivolous" nature of North American students who lack "any real intellectual curiosity." A bit of dren by Miss Roberts. here vis- where shetaught for five years be- fore becoming Dean of Discipline at the Istanbul College. years she had been away from Am- l erican schools. students had lostl a serious-minded approach to their lives. The lack of “intel- lectual curiosity" was particular- ly evident. Part of this situation was due to the unsettling effect of the war while the rest was attributable to lack of parental control. American children might benefit by Turkish discipline while Turk- ish children could safely be gratit- ed more freedom, she said. Even though Turkish women had tossed off veils and harems were things of the past. girls. were rigidly controlled by parents and school authorities. The Turkish Education Depart- ment forbade smoking and use of lipstick and nail-polish even for college girls. Parents were strict about the chaperone question, sei- dom allowing their daughters to "go out" with a man unaccompan- ied uniess they were engaged. Her biggest lob in Turkey was dispellingthe Hollywood version of American life while in the North American continent she wished to erase the "terrible Tur " illusion in American minds. llew Natural Gas Well At Moncton MONCIUN. N. B., Nov. 13- tCPl-Monctoirs consumers of natural gas learned with interest today that a new well had been brought in last night at the Stoney Creek field and that already the new production was coursing thibugh the mains. increasing slightly the Moncton ‘pressure. C. T. R. Wilson. manager of New Brunswick Oil Fields Limited. warned against Monctonians ex- pecting too much from the new well. stating that it would take half a dozen to meet demands made by consumers. How great production could be ports that a snowball tree now is bearing two large flowers. sex or racy ail are as susceptible, say health authorities. "Turkish discipline"l n-as advocated for Annerican chii-i Eind Magdalen Islands _ Are Thickly Populated By Alan 11881181 Cwldmn Press Sta-ff Writer the Magdalen Islands. 13-(0 P)-llere. where $01108 Magdalen islanders wane to learn farm-ling and fishing in Govern- ment-sponsorcd schools. they say the Magdaiens are the most heavily area near Brussels in Belgium. them, each house with its several none too productive. lylcre nearly eyerybgdy own-is his own house and land, an average of 12 acres munities. Lapeyrere, with perhaps 30 houses and a store fairly close together and near the fanning and 115111118 of a cit-y. Girindstone. where thcrc is a wharf. and liouse Harbor, on Alright, Island “there iihere are fish l processing plants. are other “UIllCs' of about the same size. The Magdalens spread miles over the sea and some GU broad iting friends at Mouitcn College beaches loin the five main islands which boast some ‘J00 automobiles but leave most transportation to picturesque two-wheeled llOftC She said that during the eight, carts devoid of springs and Will Bl" ter the fashion of French, farin carts. "Of the 10,000 people on our Is- lands about 1.000 speak English." said Hoimidas Langiais, the ls- lands‘ representative in the Que- bec Legislature, The English-speaking people live on southerly Amherst Island. descendants oi’ settlers placed on the Islands by Isaac Coffin. a Brit- ish admiral who ivas given tho 1:.- iands in 1798. Others live at north- erly Coffin island. Basque fishermen are supposed to have been the first visitors to tihe Islands. evcn before Jacqurs Cartier came in 1534. Tlic Basques collie to sauglitcr u-alruses which then suniicd themselves on the iridc island beaches and even _iodav there are such Basque names as Iturbi and Ilarlgay aimong the ls-i landers. The French are descendants of colonists settled in the Magdalens under Quebec's French regime and also of fugitives from t-iicxAcadinn expulsion of 1755. Here you fiend English names SilCll as Dingwcll and such French names as Arsen- ault. LeBianc, Lapierre and Gif- fard. Some islands rise sheer from the sea to a height of 590 feet; others slope gently to the water with 1on5! sandy beaches where aircraft land regularly but must take off before high tide covers the sand. The war years were kind to the Magdalens. Fish and lobsters brought a good price and today U“? island's are more prosperous than ever before. “My people of course have debt-i but most own their own homes now -if there is a tenant it is an ex- ceptlon." said Mr. Langiais. Communication in the Islands is by word of mouth and the Legis- lature members said there isn't much need for any faster systrm. “I have been here only two hours but I'm sure everybody in the Is-v lands knows I am here." he suidJ "I would say news travels about G0 miles, from one end of the Islands lo the other, i-n about a day." EARLY PAINTING LAPEYRERE, Urindstone Island. Que. Nov populated section of urban 18nd l" the world with the exception of one A look at the Islands frcm the air bears out this clalim. Houses dot’- acres of land uihicli is arable bill- per family. people don't cluster in coni- achool, is the Magdalena’ equivalent SEAS MYSTERY f victim of what Scotland Ylifil ‘believes is a high seas murder inlySlPfy is English actress Eileen iGgyl Gibson rabovei. who disap- peared from the liner Durban Castle off West. Africa. When ihl ship docked. British police held Q t scvraiwi as they probed the theory ltho actress had been strangled l and her body pushed through a. portliolc. HIGH To Issue Special Postage Stamp O'l"i‘.AWA, Nov. 13 -Postimascer General Bertrand announced w- day that a special d-ocnts postage stamp will he issued on Thursday, 15th January". 1948, to commemor- atc tiic marriage of Her Royal Highness ‘The Princess Elizabeth to Lieutenant Philip Mountbattan, RN ‘Flic ll\t"l"all dilnensi-otis of the stzriip will be approximately 2f! n: x It; nun. ant‘: it. will be vertical .in aligenient. Tilt- stamp will bcai a portrait of Princess Eliza- beth. fro-m a photograph by Doro- thy Wilding of London, England. This portrait has been chosen by‘ ,Her Royal Highness and approved lbv His Majesty the King, The col- lour has not yet been decided upon . but ‘Will probably be reddish-brown. l, Tile stamps will be issued in sheets l of 100. I Plans are being laid to have the stamp placed on sale at all the lprincipal Canadian Post Offices on the 15th January. 19-18. First Day covers for philatclists will be handled only by the Postmaster at Ottawa. The stamp will also be on sale. by mail order, through tho Philatelic Division of the Post Of- -i'i<3e Department in Ottawa. on and after the 15th of January. MASTER ON THE BBIDGI HLLIFAX-(CIW-Capt. Thoma! M. Ormiston, 68_year-old master mariner, doesn't go to sea anymore but he directs the operations o! eight harbor tugs here from 4| wharf-born bridge. The veteran skippers task is to dispatch powcr~ ful little craft in response to tclcphoiie calls from steamship agcnis. LATIN DERIVATION Painting on canvas was known expected would not be determined for several days. in Rome as early as 66 AI). The English word barber is .- _ tiic Latin “barba? meaning beard. l, WA TCHES Su our outstanding lines of Ladies’ and Gents’ Wotclm. All Ilia batter makes. Fully guar- anmd. It’s Not a Bit Too Early Make your selection wiiila our stock is complete. won't find a batter range to choose from in the City. ' » llse Our Lay-Away Plan . Solve Your Sift Problems (IROCKETTS JEWELLERY Yo" to HER. display. What could be more pleasing A reolly wonderful Priced to sell. Adorn HER with] string of superb Pearls. Single‘, Double ‘and Tllpll strands. There are "edge readers". one. In; bash. invisible and infrsurad I05 KENT ST. om ran r. 3...... Your Iicket For Allaluable Free can m” l CRUCKETYS JEWELLE mom 2126-1 i ~E ‘d ll SIL VER SE Tb You can't go wrong by choosing one of than. Any number to choose from. ./