secretary of State George C. By JOHN DAUPIIINEE Canadian Press Staff Writer \' 2'1 “(CI-‘l -Lin\- of labor. forced by none ‘Pfihliy aggiiist 1h; ed d1: .. c of the Labor govern- ment and mule unions, is Britain's me=iiod o.’ litiiltiiiig up the work- ing force in \i L The uiiii is iii channel thousands h’ extra ttmkrrs into ngrleulltire, l" plaillii. il'0li founding, cotton iliiiiiitnz stud weaving. and into and pottery plants . - fall liy our per. e :11 iiuninin: tip these key “ said Sir Stafford‘ ,:ii:ii:s;t-i- for economic up YONDON, mi llid tit "t" niozifbs lifter Prime Minister 011' ii 311» irflvertinieni in - ‘ l0... idillllCl ministers in- itled dill“ t of labor. discon- tinued soon a ‘r the tvnr ended, . iiii m: lw Viillilllllbfd. Circum- liances muz- lltvm change their minds. ' 0i er-Livipluynieiit B"‘i‘n his . imen experiencing " And luxury and ' trades have ' higher pay and u trlitions titan the oi iilliil.‘ industries lite cozititrys economy itionllis. despite governc li_\ tiampnigns, man. ctiviilcs to which nun _ _ River 1.1 the a men and ttxmzczi tiow will be di. i ‘ed tins been 5111i. Sir Siifford mid lléllrls t.» lose most oi’ i irisolters-of-tvai‘ hi1 needs at least, 39mg liliSvt'0l1llll‘_\' by the middle o; iiiqincoa,’ Pl-‘lllilfltver has been de- ptik K,S.li2.l.._\‘ from the post-war °‘ 710-000 "i July 3i and now is fewer than 715,000. vhblflali-vifiiteiii ‘in iron founding. ‘lc 4‘ id steel sheet has been “m°“~ll'i‘ Hilrf‘ December i940 zznfllflqlévlii liifaiipoivei" in cot- - ~ »- >1: an. l'l\_v0ll totals u- m“ ‘"000 “tlliiiirired wit-h 410.000 standing almost agriculture is German SUYYITHE!‘ recruits Mflrihflll- 1H Enslsnd for the For- gifn Ministers’ conferences, walks with Pubilc orator I-llgham an" fulfilling an honorary degree of Doctor of Civil Law at. Oxford Uni. i-mity. l-le told a crowd of cheering educators that the last. war proved m. democracies could meet the big tests when they c.~me_ British Gov’ Labor ‘Day Persuasion t Directs cure I substantial redistribution of labor by persuasion," said Labor Minister George lsaurs in a par- ,i.imciitiirt' report. "It does not an- ticipate that iiiucii lillTviiflll ulli be necessary." Only persons who become unem- film‘) ed and subject to direction iii\ fist the new “Control of ED31130- tnent Order," and then only when they are men between 1S and :30 years old or women between 18 and 40. Women wiiit small child- rcii are exempt and n few types of employment are excluded from this or-iei"s provisions. "The hrder will not apply lo per- stns already in work even though in an oceupatioti which makes no u-titribtition io tho national effort," said Isaacs. Ho. said employment offices will offer job npplicatits aria choice oi four positions before direction is applied. “We shall not adopt general di- rection of labor," Sir Stafford Crlpps told a press conference vshen asked whether the existing order will be extended. Glasgow University Buys llew Property GLASGOW — (CPi ¢ Univer- sity of Glasgow is buying Gar- scube House. home of Sir. George Campbell, and 126 acres of ud- joinlng land to ilvcrcome a space shortage created by a sharp in- crease in student. enrolemcrtt. “There is plenty of room there to meet the needs of the univer- sity for perhaps the next 100 years, "said principal sir Hector Hetherington Garseube is about five miles from the heart of Glasgow. It will be used for residences. new iicientlfic and medical stations and porhaps playing fields. The present city site is completely built up. OHECKLEY. Slnffordshire. Eng- land - (CPl -- The nave roof all the lllh-cenltiry church here has; liutlie cud of w“ Th!‘ gmcriiiiiciit hopes to 59-] beetle. been damaged by liic death watch .,~ 41 Read by Evrybody Covers Prince Edward island Like the Dew SECOND SECTION NOVEMB_ER f. 1947 Stamp Sniuggllng llew Wrinkle In Currency Racket By LESLIE BBODIE Canadian Pres: C... eqsoiulcnl BYDEY, Austnlig Nov. 21 — (GP) -- Smuggling of valuable stamps from Australia la proving a lucrative business for rscketeors out 0o best the commonwealth cur- rcnc-y control regulations. Expert smugglers who know their stumps have no difficulty in gel’.- Lllil as much as $6,000 for s parcel of from 20 to I00. The size of the stamp mlhl ll my to conflu behind a luggage label or in the lining of a m|n' tic and such places. Sydney stamp dealers declare that the government is being rob- bed of thousands of dollars year ly by a profitable trade in cur- rent lssusa and easily procunble issues of recent. years. Best. stamp for the smuggler ls the five shilling (B0 cent) Kanga- rco of 1914-15. They are purchas- ed without much difficulty and are stopped to Britain where they have n value of £4. ($18.) each. In the hard-w-get catogory the listed price for the i850 Australian one-penny stamp is $448. For the grcylsh blue two-penny stamp of that date the price is $880. These stamps are more for the mrnoy mafiera who are prepared to hunt. for them and then make a good clean-up, But for the curiieiiuy dodger who wants to take more than the $800. the present wgulaiions allows him when visit- ing non-sterling areas the best stumps are the unused flvc~shllllng, i0 shilling and £10 ($3.20) varieties in euirent use. These stamps are readily sold at their face value. and as there is nothing to prevent a man from buying as many as he wants he has an easy means at his d-sposal of defeating the rcxuia- tltus and taking as much as he can conceal from the Customs of- ‘Jcials. Non-Fog Areas Grow Tall Men VANCOUVER, Nov. 2T. --~ (C. P.) --The big-boned men of the Prair- 125 are talien than eastern Canad- fans,‘ gpsOgrilpllef Jasper H. Stem- brlrlge cold the Vancouver Institute at. University of British Columbia. The geographical editor of OX- ford University Press said lie was greatly impresscd by the DhY-‘dque of Prairie farmers. He believed b11911‘ Phyiml d9‘ trons. which allow an extreme mmount of ultra-violet rays to pene- trate to the earth. The Prairie-bred strong men were proof of the triuimpl-i of en- vironment. over heredity. “Man ls a creature of his environment." the said. "The mechanical ingenuity 0f Eskimos is proof of this. Sheer. stark necessity crmpelled them to depend on the skill of their hands and the quickness of their +2."!- . "we are ‘made by geography- It is the sci-once that deals wiiih the earth as the home of man. Geog- rnplty was a tabulation oi facts t0 our fathers, but they’ made no at- tempt to relate the physical w iii“ human. "Canada. by and ime- l8 I iinlen did example of how civilized man adapts hlmscf i0 his environment." 0 av ifii ~—~~ W?‘ Sins 36 to 44, ici fAST-SAVE not ._.._.___. ‘ill! illIlllTlTY l8 LIMITED .0viRc0iisi .30 Burly Fleece Coats Special $29.00 For $29.00 vfolfu Hi0 grlumt Coot value in Town. Thus on burly, husky Fleece Cont: that will bullion you against the worst that Canadian winter can do-this or any other season. Here's your chance l0 meat the cooling winter in coinloil. Browns, Greys, Iluu—_ Wonk LABS Price I Eail E. veiopment. was due to lack of 1'08, or dust-bound atmospheric condi- Smith Ilohlen Keiuun Secretary of State George C. Marshall's three top-ranking ex- plrll on Soviet affairs will assist him at the London meeting of the Big Four foreign ministers. The parley will be another attempt at drafting German and Austrian peace treaties. They are ambassa- dor to Russia Walter Bedell Smith; Charles E. Bohleii, Russian-langu- age expert, now State Department counselor; and George F. Ken- nan, chief of Marshall's foreign policy planning staff. 'l‘0n0N'I‘('> - An increase of fll0t‘0 than $85,000,000 in loans, (-11-.- largcst of any year in the bank's history, features the 116th annual statement of the Bank of Nova scotia. reirased today. Deposits and total assets are also shown at new high levels in the statement. which covers the fiscal year ended Octo- ber 31. 1947. Net profits for the year Dominion and Provimr-ai Govern- ment taxes 0f $2,005,000 and de- preciation of $300,433 were 51.092- 277. T-liis compares with $1,588.45?! in 1940. All r dividends of $1,440,- 000 and prov sion for extra tr'-bution of $240,000 with dividends of $l,.'lRii.il0ll last year. 5’l12,2T7 was carried forward to profit and loss account. The statement shows total assets at an ail-time high of $714,401,000, us cz-npnretl wl-tih 56.096.175.000 a year ago. Liquid position continues strong. Cash. clearings and bal- ances due from other banks of $125.565.f1fl0 represent 18.58 per cent of total liabilities to the uubliv- Quick assets rmouni. to $434,679,607 am;- represent 64.32 per cent. of liabilities to the public. 5257.86.28.42 as against. $172,234,605 in 1946. The greater part of the l-n- crcase was in current loans which. at 522666-1394 were up mc-re than 570000000, while call loanmndvanc- ed i0 $19,325,010 from $13.CG6.25G a year ago. Loans to provincial 20v- ernmeiits amounted to $8,048,649 B5 compared with $1.5G9,Il87, and loans to municipalities and school districts $2,865,559 as compared w‘<ti‘.i lKIJBCLOOZ. Reflscting lessened need for‘ short team financing by the Domin- ion Government. and also as a re- sult of employment of a larger am-iount of the bank's funds in loans, investment holdings were re- duced b.v $70,750,000 to $2ll0.789,29'f; during the year. DtlniiiiOh Govern-y meat securities are $221,156,225 as. compared with szsaaaam in 1046.! Securities of provincial 800F711" inenls. however, a-rc slittmlv 111811- .er than a year ago at. 534.497.613- Municipal securities an: shown at 57,772,165; public securities other than Canadian at 513.776.3353; lull‘ other bonds, debentures and stocks at $22,586,058. All securities are carried at amounts not ex- ceeding market. value. Wet Country llry Throat: GRIIYMOUTH. N. 8.. Nov. fl- (OP) - Driest place I Nov IO- imd recently bu hem Wcltlmd Province. in the South Island, whore iiho rainfall is about. 200 lnohop s your. sully the heaviest in the country. fladltlonslly burly drlnkm. the West Ooums have bean grimly ob- serving a beer boycott. as a preheat against u: increase in price of two conic a slum. The boycott. wu dc- clued by the ‘h-adu Council, eon- troliln; trrade union body in the district and bu bun oinnrved by most unionists. though tamper- havc become frayed u a. result and thm have been uvcrsl cluhu. Om sawmill bu! to clan 0mm for u tlimb. A bushmoa falling tau ' for the mill refused to observe. the boycott and continued in buy his boar nim- work. Enviouu umber: of his no; stood it. for a while and then refused to work with him. It wll aural days bilonn they could b0 persuaded to return to wort h enable the mill to rmnm. , ncalorculiii-o. England - (OI) - A notion in wu smut-ind to a chichn aim one of m inlurud inn and tmu amfliltltld. fiolllhfl» Iilluml -(OP) - Th! MIIIOI c! civilian victims of the wlr are tn be included on Ohllmslordfi cenotaph. after‘ dis- ‘ fls cf-nparrdi Big Increase Noted In BankOfNovaScotiaLoans Experts Baffled By lluck Disease PRETORIA, South Africa. 2'! —- (CP) Rcscarch at Oirderstepoort hxpc-rimenial laboratories near here urn still puzzling over the mystery (HSCHSO which made its appearance anioiit: Muscovy ducks in Natal about six months ago. The dlsctisB seems to he uti- known in any other part of flit- worid, and this has made ii dif- ficult to isolate and treat it with imy stircess. The germs are pre- sumed to he carried by a certain species of mosquito, but this ltus still b0 be proved. ‘ So far the experts have found that the malady affects the Mus- covy due-ifs entire bod)‘. The iinrii- liation period lasts two days, dur- ing which the body temperature rises rapidly to 110 degrees. Two hours later the first visible symptoms are followed by a fatal discharge of blood-flocked foam from the ducks l'l0Sil'n—\'(‘liiS_ Nov. PXDCFli Total loans at. the yea-r end were; FILM PRODUCER. ASKS INDUSTRY BE PROBED LONDON. Nov 27 - (GP) — An inquiry into the British movie iii- dustry was urged by Paul Rotha film producer, addressing a teach- ers‘ conference. "I believe one would have been set up already if the film indus- try had not loomed so largely in Anglo-American trade relations." he said. Rotha said there had bevzi “frightening examples of phys- ical violence in British films." Re- PAGE THIRTEEN llrge More Freedom For English Bobby ____. IDNDON - (OP) —Lifting o! restrictions on a policemanlit free- dom to marry and abolition o! pay parades is urged by a com- niitlee which investigated local conditions of police service in Eng- land and Wales. The committee said there was no serious dissatisfaction. but the chic! complaint “was the element of restriction on the freedom of I member of a police force to marry when and whom he wished." PB)’ parades were sometimes made an excuse for drill practice the committee said. ' Maori Tot Walks i3 Miles Dally 'I‘E WI-ZAITI. N. 2., Nov. 2'7 — iCP>-- In one of the wildest and least settled parts of New Zea- land a flve-year-old i;lrl walks l3 miles on the round trip to and from school every day. She is Libya Daugherty. a Maori girl who makes the trip to the Te Whalll school in the heart of the forest- ciad Urevvera country ln the North Island with her three sisters and brothers, all under 10. The road is rough and winds over a GOO-foot hill and in the winter the children have in leave home befQre dawn and do not get. i“i.i\' iiiii.ii afici- dark. There is .:ii.e traffic on the road so ihc cliidrcn seldom get u lift. The; newr ask for one. Efforts have bten made to get a school bus a- lurz: this road for the Daugherty ciildren and others who live at a lesser distance but the road is in s (‘ll bad condition that. none of t‘ the local transport operators wiii undertake the contract. Most children in New Zealand in ‘ similar circumstances are sent [lessons for home study by the ;,- vernmcrit correspondence school, but they must have help from their parents in these lessons. This is] impossible in the case of the Dcogherty children, as their mother" knows very little English. Jack 0f illi Trades Starts ills 80th. Job FORT ERIE, Ont., Nov. 2'i'-iCP) -Gcorgc Bond, called "Pop" by tncsl. people in the Peace River bridge area. thinks there's nothing like steady work, but as he pre- pared to take his 80th Job he indic- ated he likes a bit of variety mo. His last lob-ticket taker at the u'ci.ncn's bathing beach at Crystal Beac-l'i—tvas the best, he thinks, but now he has gone to work at the chemical plant. here. George has kept a record of every job he ihas done and they range from printer's devil, steel worker and railway man to street-car con- ductor. lie was conical. to leave the cent gangsters films shown in London were copies o: American psychological crime thrillers, said, Rotha. who quoted one producerl as saying, "sadism is safe box-o flce for two years. i list at 79 and spent the winter at ease. but; vnhen his friends told him he could not run the count to an even 80. he said he begged to dif- fer. Now he's a pill mixer. l neishlp in 1039. orders came. They were for Curious spectators watch two pups on a street in Rome. They u (Photo by NBA-Acme staff By John Masher -Cl_nsdian Press Staff Writer SAINT JOHN, N. 13.. Nov. Z7 —f (CPi - Most businesses that grew up as sidelines of Saint Joiitrsl wooden shipbuilding industry fad» ed from the scene long ago hut the ‘ 70-year-old sail loft of George Holder is still going strong. Seven decaities of history and three cciicraiioiis of ilie Holder fiimlly have iviacie the loft an in- siituiion in this seaboard (‘li_\,'. Aii odd blend of the old and new ~oi wiridjammci- memories and modern mr-t-iiiiieiji‘ - the establishment is known to seafaring men around,’ tire world. i Its atmosphere tiiicorks reminis- cences, and captains like to visit the place. Marine pictures, snowy canvas and coils of rope and cord provide a background for stirring stories oi achenturous vulgngcs. Instead of sewini: “suiis" for proud warships. Ute satlniakers now 8H’. more likely to be stitching gaily-coiored awnings for stores. theatres, hotels and homes. or cov- crs for trtuks and tarpatilins for irciqliters. But they cling to the tradition of their craft and their speech is salted with natiticai terms, ‘Saint John was digging out of the ruins lcit by the great fire of 18""? when George E. Holder" found- ed the firm. First situated at Reed‘: Point and then Oil McLeods wharf, the loft was moved 40 _v€nl'S ago ti; its present quarters on Water . B-reet. When George E. Holder started f Uni, Saint John had 18 shipyards. five sail lofts, five rigging lofts and a rope walk. Of all these enter prises, his is the only survivor. Mr. Holder died in 1030. His partner son, William H. Holder", took his own son Harold R, into part part- Modernized Sewing At first all the sewing was done ly hand. About 53 rears ago the firm put in machinery with one needle, and much later the third generation introduced larger ma- chinery with i-tvo needles. During the war a flood of rush gun Italian boys trying to peddle their skeci 8000 lire ($16) for the animals. Correspondent Albert. Blasetti.) om Sail Loft Going Strong In 71st. Yea covers. awnings and windbreaks for naval craft tsrpaullns for land- llfs’ barges and scores of other 51111181’ items. One order alone call- ed for rapid delivery of 900 heavy Mr‘ oversized tarpaullns for land- nt; yirges, With canvas contribut- lnz to victory, the staff had to be reased but all persorinei have wen retained. An instance of their wide variety ill work was eiiiiiiitiiiig tho C, N <,_ l.i'.l_v Rodney with new l-anttm font stem to stern while making a Nota Svotia flag for presentation to alifax by the ORR, diam H. Holder can took bacic j to the days when he and his lather had just. i4 months to turn otii; -1tl1\ for nine full-rigged ships. 1-1 sv-liooners and l6 Si. Joint Rivci‘ woodboats. Some men, racing n- miiist time could sew 22 yards an, lwur with 3 1-2 stitches to tho inch. Stresses and strains, angles and curves, the stretch of the can- vas »- all had to be fluurezi wiLli complicated mathematical equa- Lions. The firm sewed a suit of 0,000 square yards for a four-master ‘rarqtie built in Scotland. They made the sails for the iaincd High- lands, a barqiie viliich wcni from New York to Liverpool 1:1 0 i-Ll days, one of the fastest ioyaces on record. Ilundrczis upon hun- dreds upon hundreds of suits went from the loft to sweep graceful windshlps over the seven seas. ;S.ecial sails were made for differ- cnt parts of the ivorid where winds varied. Aside from use by y'acliis, about; the only other sails made here noiv are for plodding auxiiiai-y- schoon- us. REMEMBER WHEN By The Canadian Press Dick Irvin, veteran hockey play- er and former coach of Chicago Black Haivks. signed l6 years ago today to coach Toronto Mapll Leafs of he National Hockey League. Irvin r:nia.-ncd with Tor- onto untll 1940 uihen he went Montreal Canadians ufiiere he now is coaching. No t 1 c c We have ggf raised our price Coca-Cola still sells for Pre-war Price . . . . . ¢ plus Wartime Taxes 8: Legislation . . . You Pay ‘i; | l fiwhfi l|l'i\ CHARLO Q 2 As always, the superior quality of Coca-Cola remains unchanged Aflbutlzoil bottler of Coca-Coin IIIIIIQ contract with Cool-Colt Ml J. 8i T. MBIIIIIS. LIMITED TTITOWN mimouuwucmmmmmwwwcaiul I ¢ ‘HON! l"