--an. I North ?ole. I 109 says he‘ feels the divinity flI_sGulihl.0l|fl|0Nflwm.Tuas..;uly'24.I002.u ‘=RCAF transport sets up new record TRENTON, Ont. iCP)—’l'he desire of Sqdn. Ldr. Maurice Klady- and his man crew to see the North Pole earned Can- ada an endurance record Satur- day for turboprop aircraft. Twenty-three hours and 51 minutes after they took off from Ottawa on a routine training flight. thee’ brousht their CC-106 Yukon transport into North Bay. bettering by more than three hours the previous world record set last January by a us. Air Force C-13:) Hercules. Purpose of the flight had been to continue operational suitabil- ity trials on the four-engined Yukon—largest aircraft built in Canada—wh!ch has only been operational service_ with the RCA!‘ for seven months. and to test a different, type of fuel It was also planned as a navi- gational exercise in the Cana- dian north. At a point 600 miles from the said Sqdn. Ldr. Illady, he realized "the aircraft was going to stay up for a while The 20-year veteran of the RCAF and his crew had.never’ seen the Pole and being so close to it decided to carry on. The aircraft, which had left Ottawa at 1:10 p.m. Friday, arrived Great Lakes strife will be investigated ' By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA (CPI-Mr. Justice '1'. G. Norris is expected to fly back to Canada this weekend to prepare. for his one-man inquiry into shipping disruptions and la ' bor strife on the Great Lakes. The Jurist from the British Columbia Supreme Court was cutting short his oliday in h Britain to undertake the inves-. tigation. Labor Minister Starr an- nounced the appointment Wed- nesday but did the inquiry will The investigation. established under federal labor laws, will deal only ‘with labor unrest and shipping disruptions on the Great Lakes. But within this field. it will have wide scope. The terms of reference cover shipping disruptions, interfer- ence with the St. Lawrence Sea- way operation. delays and her sssments of ships in Canadian and American lake ports. the relationship between ship oper- ators and marine unions. and the “activities and internal op- erations" of trade unions rep- resenting lake workers engaged in shipping and work affecting shipping operations in the Great Lakes system." SIU MENTIONED The _governmenl specifically mentioned the Seafarers’ Inter- American women. used terrible drug WASHINGTON (AP -- Com- missioner George P. Larrick of the Food and Drug Administra- tion said today some American women took a drug now be- lieved to have thousands of birth malformations in Europe. “We now know that the drug was used by quite a number of doctors. but we do not know in what amounts," Larrick told a reporter. “From what I have been told. the chances seem to be small a early pregnancy." The drug. thalidomide, was kept off the US. psescription market when Dr. Frances Old- ham Kelsey, a native of Van- is' m ade HALIFAX (CP) — ESP and 6: cu vs join- rces 'at the University of Kings College ere. lngs. endowed by the Angli- K can church. is conducting an ; Investigation into human men- rcsonrces in an attempt to I determine whether there is any basis in the claims for telepa- thy. autoklnensls. clairvoyance and other forms of parapsychol- ogy or P—extrasensory per- ception. The study is on a three - ye Kings has accepted a joint in- itation from Duke University In North Carolina and the Pa- rspsychologlcal Foundation of New York to accommodate a research unit. The invitation was accompanied by an offer out being carried out or trial basis. Canon E.‘ L. Puxlcy. president in due wsnderiu ht "necromancy and " ' I'll . "There is s possibility of ca- tablishing a connection between llarspsychological laws and the laws of God for the health of man's body and soul." ' .For this reason. Canon Pus- present of st Kind! sschoolof makes it fitting the e univer- daonldhothoflrstlncan- in I-llady, who has been flying the not say when: begin. ,6ver the Pole shortly after mid- nllhf. completing the whole flight in daylight. _Returning to its base here after‘ refuelling- in North Bay, the aircraft of No. 437 Husky Squadron was cheered by 30,000 people watching Trenton's Air Force Day show. The 7.000-mile night was made at an altitude of 30.000 feet and an average speed of about 300 miles per hour. The record is unofficial but the log of the flight will be sub- mitted to the authorities for -verificalon. it was not the first record- breaking flight for Sqdn. Ldr. Yukon since he entered service with the RCAF. Last year, fly- ing a similar aircraft. he set a Canadian non-stop record‘ of 5.892.nautical miles. on a 17- Itigur flight from Tokyo to Tren- u. The RCAF has ordered 12 Yukons. built in Montreal by Canadalr Limited. to be used as long-range cargo-troop carriers. The aircraft can carry hp to l_67 passengers or up to 30 tons of cargo. It will replace the North Star aircraft that hovel been in service with RCAF's Air ‘ Transport Command. inational Union iInd.\ of Canada . _in the terms of reference—the {duly union so designated. l I The investigation was de- ; manded by the Canadian Labor i Congress, backing a new Cana- dian mnritime union in a fight against the maverick Seafarers union. headed by American- born Hal C. Banks. The SIU was kicking out of ; the 1.070.000 - member CLC two I ;years ago for raiding a marine 3 engineers union. ‘ CLC President Claude Jodoln ' I called for a judicial inquiry into the SIU affairs almost two months ago. warning that the struggle between the SIU and the CMU had turned into a “reign of terror" across the lake front. He cited 17 separate incidents of violence or intimidation against CMU supporters or ‘ members. After Wednesday announce- ment. Mr. Jodoin said the in- vestigation is necessary but re- grettable. He cautioned against any “witch hunt" among unions not involved in the shipping in- O. ustry. The government promised to make the inquiry after CLC-af- filiated shiphandlers on the St. Lawrence Seaway staged-as-bar ~ cott of ships manned by SIU icrews. The boycott lasted .1|_ hours. couver Island who is a phar- macologist. insisted that proof of its safety was inadequate. In seeking such approval. the manufacturer, Will m S. Mer- of Cincinnati. distributed the drug to physi- cians for trials. Such tests are required by the FDA before new drugs can qualify for the general prescription market. WITIIDRAWS APPLICATION . The firm wi its ap- plication when reports from Europe linked the drug to s sudden preponderance of pho- comelia. babies born legless or armless or with deformed limbs. There were many such births in Canada where the drug also was distributed. "One reassuring fact," Lar- ‘rick said. “is that the experi- mental work on which we have seen reports was done in late pregnancy. There have also been‘ some reports that it was used for morning sickness in this country but from what we have learned it was not‘ tried‘ for that in the United States." Researchers have estimated that thalidomide. which was used as a sedative, caused 3.500 deformed births in and that the total number In. that country may reach 0.000. In a speech Wedn to the Senate. Senator Estes lief-. auver (Dem. Tenn.) urzed President Kennedy to award I gold medal to Dr. Kelsey for blocking sale of the drug in the United States. Kefauver said her efforts merited the ‘presi- dent's award for distinguished federal civilian service. p . . . with long sleeves. "Lovely floral designs Hovercraft is in service Rl-IYL. Wales (AP) The world's first Hovercraft ferry service was inaugurated today when passengers were car» ried 17 miles across the River Dee Estuary to Wsllssey. The Hovercraft supports itself just above land or wales on down-thrusting jets. and is driven forward at up to 40 miles an hour by rearward-facing pro- peliers. Operators of the service plan six trips a day during an eight- week experimental period. said more than 0,000 persons ready had booked possess. RURAL APPRECIATION FOUR DAYS OF SPECIAI. VALUES-OUR “ta-..‘ " “ WAY special sale feature , KITCHENS CHI N U PANTS 4.99 special sale feature Western style . . . the pants are tailored from ‘ cotton, full cut. These specially priced pants are tailor- ed by “Kitchen’s" from wash and wear cotton, and require little or no ironing. pants are regularly priced at 3.98 and 4.98. SPECIALLY PRICED AT ONLY Colors available are olive and tan . . . sizes are 30 to 40. Regularly 5.98. SPECIALLY PRICED AT ONLY .. . . 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