s :9f9:L.'Aoclaim Canadian Tenor ...!-:N3oJNon(g7cl;:hw::h"'a"lll 0:. K: I asked him to join the London com- p mg in the Chou. 5, an Bantu Bwml mumh chm, gm", ",9 an PI!!! Ind 0"9Ij5 Poured 111 10 Sin! member commi;tee of U S. and clrfrch at Prince Albert suit. is of six. His father. George Vick- ." 5'-”i""l ”"”ed SW95. """”- Candi" m"0""9 '9""'-'''5 ll” ' ' as. W” prmcipll of we mwn including Ann Arbor. MlCh.. and been formed 43' 3?; I1 KEN surrisnal. ,n;.'., caaia Press tall Isltes. o . 4... ' ' In . I :1 '- being widely claimed in Europ - Observer and Ernest Newman of 5”” , , ",3 Sunday Times describ, lhevwlas much more interested ill. Canadian as ”outstanding" and aafb”9'”" 3"” lmcke-Vt .....-,; can operatic circles. in World Operatic Circles bert-now famous as the home- town of Canada's new prime min-l lhigh school and church nrganist- Leading British music critics 'N"'"E3'"'3” W 5'0”? such as Peter l-leyworth of The I "singer with a future." Jacques Bourgeois. "I didn't have any ambition to a professional singer. I Anyway. what 1 really wanted to be was a l 4 u . . - verslties at the end of the Second: 0e::l:: nxrgrntyrngg 3:2,: Staci; World War put paid to that." that after the famous Italian Instead. he went to l"lin Flon.l of! as a career? Then came ftva action-packed weeks that Vichers and his attrac-l tive wife. Henrietta. will never; forget. "Everything happened liket. a bomb." David L. Webster. gen-' eral administrator of the Royal Opera House. Covent Garden. mu an more um mm! Page 10 The Guardian Wed. July 17, 1957 San Francisco. His Covent Garden debut as the king in Verdiis A Masked Ball. brought near-rave notices from British music critics and he fol- I.-,am.e-. doctor. The student lbulge' at uni- imced The Tr”-l3'-W TO SING IN SPAIN This fall Vickers is scheduled tot go to Seville in Spain for a per-I Leno, Mum Del Monacm vick"sjh1an.. and later Port Arthur. 0nt.. lforlnance of Carmen. then will re- --is the only true heroic tenor wholes a chain store lW00lVt't)rth'si cit. p turn to Britain for another season .,m,,nbe,s has been produced on the inter- ecutive. At both cities. he joinedp national scene in recent years." -ll" ”h""h ch”'-';'lhe M” ”'3l"' GOOD ACTOR T00 11 is not only Vlt:l(9l'S' voiccthat groups. Finally. in 1919. he gave nine-inch frame is causing Vick- 'marks him out for greatness. Equ- serious consideration to a singinglers considerable worry. ally. if not more important. he can Ict. Jon-he was talks rapidly and almost llamboyaiit mixture of col- orful adjectives that give an in- sight into a keenly - developedl sense of the dramatic. He is modest about his sudden cident and then almost gave it up when success was Just five weeks- away. Born 30 years ago at Prince Al- W v -3 -,5, 71- :- 539-..lix FEET? CFCY-TV CHANNEL is WEllllESllAY I115 p.m.-Test Pattern 6:00 p.m.-Suing Your Partner 6:30 p.m.-Rin Tin Tin 7.00 p.m.-CFCY TV News 7:10 p.m.-Wcathcr 7:15 p.m.-CBC TV News 7:25 p,m.-Viewer"; Guide 7:30 p m.-Disneyland 8:30 p.lT1.--Motlflllillll Bay 9:00 p.m.-Kraft Theatre 10:00 p.ni.-llerc anti There 10230 p ni.-Pacific 13 tl'00 p.m. CFCY Tclcvisinn News A: Weather 11 '05 p.m -Wrestling ECKCW - Moneton Channel 2 Television Programme Schedule WEDNESDAY 4 30 p.mf--I-TM. Concert Hall 4.55 p.m.-News. Sports. Wcathcr 5'00 p.in.eSwini;i Your Partner 5:30 p.m.-Rln Tin Tin 6.00 p.m.-Western Theatre (:30 p.m.--Early Evening TV News 0:45 p.m.-Weather 6:50 ").m.-Sports 7:00 p.m.-Bunkhouse Boys 7:30 p.m.-Disneyland 8:30 p.m.-Moonlight Bay 9:00 p.m.-Kraft Theatre 10:00 p.m.-Here and There 10:30 p.m.ePaclfic 1l'00 p.m.-CBC TV NPws 11:10 p.m.-FKCW TV News and Weather ll 15 pm Hlllboard ll 20 pm.--”Lady with a Lamp" ii.r.o3oaricl. TIIICK-TIIIC christened Juna-l than-Vickers is a friendly. seri- nation-wide radio competition held singers will have to start watch- ou; mm; mm g ready smile. He to encourage Canadian artists. butting their figures much the same fluently. hlsi international speech liberally spl'llll(lt?d Vtllh anihlm. By 1955. he was "married. diet already." SORE was active in amateur operattcl career and went to Toronto tol study under George Lambert. l Within two years he had won at recognition evaded i with the Covent Garden company.l After that. he hopes to spend two ling a young singer can get"--and lyears in Germany. The 224 pounds on his fivc-foot. "At one time nobody cared what an opera singer looked like. but times are changing. I believe as movie stars. In fact. I'm on a STE. GENEVIEVE. Que ICP-. Municipal elections in this Mont-i real suburb were postponed indef- initely Monday after all ballots were stolen at gunpoint from the itown's secretary-treasurer. Mr. Gratton was reported to be .under a doctor's care suffering from nervous shock. l Mayor Armand Lacombe said llhieves broke into Sir. Gratluirs home, assaulted him and then3 made off with all the ballots. i Mayor Lacombe said Sunday; night he received three phone calls. The voice at the end of the line was so incoherent on the first two calls that he thought some one was playing a joke and he 'iiing up. On the third call he was able to make out the name "Grat- ton" and he decided to go to the secretary-treasurer": house to in- vestigate. Accompanied by provincial po- lice-Ste. GCHEVIBHE has no pnlicei force of its own-Mr. Lacombe said he found Mr. Gratton in an- extreme state of shock and shout- ing: "They held me up; they stole all the ballots." When electors appcarcd Monday morning to cast their ballots Mr. Lacombe told them what had hair pened and said the Quebec mun- icipal commission will have to flu a new date for an election. Mayor L a c o m b e ' 1 action brought a storm of protests from candidates who opposed the mayor and his supporters in the town C: .NHy ya-HE .home of Rolland Gratton, the: By J. M. ROBERTS 1 Inflation is becoming an increas- ing problem throughout the West- ern community of 113110115. . The debate in Great Britain fol-l lows lines close to those in the United States. will light money. and a ioliin-. lary lessening of labor union pres- sure for higher wages, be suffici- ent to halt the trend? Those are the two points about which most British comments re volve. The chronic inflation in niost Latin American countries has now broken into a gallop. 1 Refresh Yourself ? While You Work i l g l Suburban Montreal Election :3".t:..C.;::':2;..::':r.;..::t Postponed-Ballots Stolen council. One a p p n s l t i o n candidate. George Pigeon. who is police in- speclnr in nearby town of Mount Royal. said the robbery story was a "prefabricated llL" "As far as I'm cnncerncd. .llai'or Lactinibe is a dictator who is afriad of an honest t-let-liuii" he said. "The ballots ccrlainly weren't stolen by us. We wanlcd the clerlliiii " Mr (lrattoil was qiicstiniied by two doclnins--llis own physician and one called in by the opposi- tion group--in the plil3.s'f'.'llttP of two lawyers and two "neutral" pcrsiins. "He told thc doctors that a lllfln came into his house at 10 pm. the lll,'.!lll l)Cltll'P Sunday. said 'l'm Rcd.' filled a glass uith liquid and forced him to drink it at tzunptillil." said .'ilr. Pigeon. ”Thc- next thing he knew the bal- lots were tznilc." ltion. said at a press conference. g . lowed with brilliant pgrforfnancesllhe committee's ciychalrmen wtllpimbalance in trade betvgec-ii Ila ca,-mm ma me 5e1dom.pm. be R. Douglas Stuart. former am-pond Canada. with C8113 8 UYUIB p are tremendously CONTRACT BRIDGE John Gilniotir. allolllcr opposi- tion candidalc. said the postpone-i ment of the election was not fhe' first "obstacle we've encountered in this clcctivn." ”We here tort-ed to go to thc polls with old votcr.s' lists." he said. ”The mayor told us now rolls were bcing made. bill would not bc available until later. They weren't ready by election day” The clection was to haic dc- cided Sic. (icnt-vicvc's choice for iilayor and three ctiullcillors. Unr- cntiilt-llliir. Paul Lahrosse, was re- elected by acclamation. Inflation Becoming More Serious Problem For West France is under tciisiiins uliich have not yet come in ii hctiti. but iihicli constantly thrcatcn hcr with ldt-valuation. She has continued a good many wartime controls. lliight now she is faced with two lprohlcms. She is increasing hcr rcllallcc on import quotas in an effort lll sliip thc oiitfliiw of forcitzn ext-htiiigc on one hand. while trying to increase exports with the other. This con- ccrn with exports in turn has its effect on domestic lnfliition. l-'rancc has price controls with which she seeks to prevent the automatic wage increases which accompany rising living costs there. She is even making what is for France a ratltcr revolutionary effort to collect taxes. HEAVY EKPENSES But since thc Second World War she has had hcavy military ox- penscs in lndnchina and Africa. and the pace is telling. Italy has tried to stiffen her moncy and hold price lines One rcsilli has bccn tn incrcase iincm- ployment. already a serious poli- tical and economic problem. with- out reducing pressure for in- creased wages. All those countries are running into trouble during a period of re iatlve prosperity. International C To Probe Planning Problems WASHINGTON (AP) - An N- to study mutual; tpioblems of the two nations. the-of views by independent citizens National Planning A ' tion an-' nounced today. The NPA. a private orgauin- bassndor to Canada and now chairman of the board of the. Quaker Oats Company. and Rob-1' ext )1. Fowler. president. (lana- tlian Pulp and Paper Association. The committee. with equal from both countries. will represent aitriculturc. busi- ness. labor and the professions. Stuart said the two countries important to ommiftee each other "defensively and can nornically" and the time has come . to seek solution of common prob- lems "ontlle basis of exchange of both countries. thus supple- menting governniental ae- tivities. . Fowler noted there is a serious more than Sl.fl00.000.(lhl more goods from the US. than it sells. Another problem "causing ser- ious difficulties." Fowler said. in the present hardness of the Cana- dian dollar in relation to the U.S. dollar. The comniitteh plans to meet twice yearly. starting this fall. once in Canada and once in the United States. By 3. JAV East dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH Nortl 1 NT Pass 2 4 2 NT Pass 4 Q opening lcad-queen of dia- lnonds. The role of declarer bears analogy to that of the detective in a niystcry story. There are cliics in eiery bridge hand, w-hcther thcy appear during the bidding or the play. The derlarer is supposed to gather all the cities, lntcrpret them, draw the appropriate in- fert-nccs, and then execute his plays on the basis of what he has learned about the defenders” cards. An example of good detective work 1! given in today's hand. The bidding by South was a lit- BECKER in dummy and the jack of spadel led. East arid south played low and West won with the queen. Declares tnirnped the diamond re- turn. The king of spades was led. East took it and returned a dis- mond. Declarer ruffed, drew East's trump. and led the king of clubs. East won and returned his last diamond which South ruffed with his last trump. Declarer had already lost two spades and a club and had to make the rest to make the hand. With five tricks to go. South had only four sure winners. He led the ace and king of hearts and then cashed the lack of clubs. The four of clubs was next played from dummy, East produced the six. and Satith. whosc last two cards were Q-8 or clubs. had to decide which to play. with the fate of the hand rest- ing on this one decision, the prob- lcm was to dctermine whether East's last card was a club or a hesrh East had dropped the jack of hearts on the second heart lcad. and assuming it was on the levcl. East's r lnIll'lll'lK card could be either the tcn of clubs or queen of hearts. South decidcd it could not be the queen of hearts. East had al- ready shown up with two seen. a king and a jack. He would pre- sumably havc opcnt-d the bidding tie on the aggressive side. but the final contract was a good one. The diamond lead was taken if he had also been dealt the queen of hearts. So declarer fl- ne.-acd the cieht. of clubs. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS Not fresh Harp string l1.Shore bird 12. Type of pneumonia 13. Dwell Dashing 14. Similar showy 15 Digit )6. One 16. Gov. 19. Wharf Harriman 20. Engages 17. Exist 21. Consumed 18. Famous 25. Oriental magician nurse 1 Beast of 26. Assist burden 28. Frail 22. Cnmpaab (colloq., point tiibbr.) 23. Ahead 24. GIf'l.l nickname M. Perform 27 Lixivium 28 A spine . Writer (01! . Sloth 33. Youth 34. Bacon stripe ". At home 38 Not many 39. Land measure 40. Heavy staffs 42. Wrath ll. Clever 45 Edible seaweed 46. Gnpea 47. Leui stand (print.) Farewell Guided Before Collarbonea Cavity Fetish 2- 9:- .. .909'.4.9.”'P9' um .- DOWN 1. Bit ndage '1. Bans , A X Y D '4 II L 0 N 0 I One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L's. X for the two 0's. etc. tropliea, the length and formation of the words are all hlnta Inch day the code letters are different. A1)-yptsgr-anQaehIsa no CEKM KM cs!-true P0 2PM- IKXQY IPAQUM CIY PCIYAMY-O Yeohlbfa Oryptnquotet IDVIRI WHO LDVI TRULY D0 THEIR IIAPPINIII - 'ANA'I'9lal Norr warrl: Down rluutcr HHEJI1. f:lI'2EI . '- E-ilid ll'.VIl'il-J n KL-lilillifzl Ullinllla hat i 31. Appra. hend 32. French river (pout 35- Em” nu;-;ri;t H '"l- 1'-l".l'AZ-1 3:13;- tton (slang) leatardafa Answd 30. Bird 01. Cry of of a crow prey 42 Sale notice! 38. Flowerleu 43. Squirrel plant bod -Here's how to work its IAAXII sl.l.ow single letters. apoo . IIJC CIYT JAY PQCJKAY. Tug VENT THKT-A-WAY! -AND THAT6 EWHER A v LOOK! vsmtanitow -tar-soar i OUT OUR WAY I J. I. WILLIAMS TILLY THE TOILER MICKEY MOUSE GRANDMA THE LONE RANGER JOE PALOOKA SECRET AGENT X-9 ETTA KETT MUGGS & SKEETER WOUT IT 3 GCIKTTDST AIAV F'K&CIVIi.l2Kl'lON oo- UP INGAMP JDIE5 CAN'T M, OR TAKE DfCTA1'lON. wtiA1'5C;eAN st: Lfyiars A siiiiu J29! INEVEESNIIITFMLI! t ASSMNASWEGETSETTLED Aaourrirvtis we GOT ENGAGED, isN"r tr? ' rve 601' A FEW DIMES SAVED. How: About” PICICING OUTA RING? In .......G - HOW LONG HAVE we BEEN DATING I T srezsox I MEAN! II it I AM P oiaxv!-l eur iF WELL Wu lcNOW--- su " -my ii ivm