A 4n - xmnvas l.» l flu/H: Iflfl/l/PU/fll/A’ ‘OVOUI Vllfll YOUR APPROVAL ncwaoave. 0e may. Cancun i’ OF All. ADULTS HAVE BAD BREATH — —ll|o bar to romance, popularity, success Donkyoh be a victim of BAD BREATT-l: You don't need to offend. Just brush your teeth night and morning and before every date with Colgate Tooth Powder. Remember. scientific tests prove that, in 7 use: out of 10, Colgate quickly stops oral bad breath. Milli?‘ IIIT COLGATE TOOTH POWDER final-ram arm-onto LESS natgr-ltamsmsdertutu euiu.'lbnuthcua.l abut at $016,000.00!) ls the t: o timber- of yuan. IAIOIIIIIIUKPOQE‘ Docrons Pnovrr I out o! ilwomen can have - 56v Wow! E36 doelon Ieslcd lite Palmolive Plan 4101285 Women. In addition, 141i Cana- ldian women n/n/l agr: am! rbin tJ/zu tried (he Palmolive Plan in their own homes. Two our of three nfsll those women rrpurrcd amazing skin improvements m lwf l4 44y!- proof that the Palmolive Plan ran bring a new complexion luveli- ncss to you mo! l.‘ Ill. YOU IOU Wash your face rhrce times a day with Palmolive Soap and, mar/i time. with a face-cloth massage Palmolives beautify- ing lather into your skin-Jar m: extra 60mnnd1. If ylllll‘ skin is extra-sensitive, use just your linger- tips to massage in Palmolivfs lovely soft lather. Then rinse well-first with warm water, fol- lowed by cool-and pat dry. That's all! PALMOLIVE Ides you these complexion benefits o‘ uss onmess <> 0 llll DIYNISI -O HIIRTIXTUII'°O FIKIIIIMIHII O e90 Indonesia Plans l-‘or Freedom By STAN SWINTON BATAVIIA, Java. Oct 21 —(AP) —What. would Dutch recognition of the Roplublie of Indonesia. mean to the estimiamud two and otnemolf Mo three ‘billion dollars of fumlgn caipdbml invested in tthn Blast Indies? That quoation has fresh interest for communist circles hietre since HBSMImtioru were chewed between the Dutch and Indonesian Repub- licanu asnid istdicatians of Dutch em to grant considerable political concessions in Java and Surname, where moat foreign hold- ings are mncerttratcd. Tlhnccquar- hers of this foreign capital is Dutch. tho reunsinder virtually all British said Amorican. Datrmaxwan Mamcenkoeaooimw, Rnptbllosm Mirtistcr of Economic Allah's. says: “Wb plain to nationalize mining, petroleum and tin production. since’. salt and tobacco production and such. public utilities as electric- ity, railways and txmuriunioations. “Study commissions will be ap- Dfllnwd b0 determine what linrtn- ciail settlements should be made where those are forman- private owners. "We time willing in malattain eco- nomic co-oparation witih all nfhen we are lines. wz-eign capital, if needed will be asked ho come in but on conditions favorable to the population. By that I imam that side by aids with capitalist Dfqfits there must be un increased share for the workers through minimum wage scales and hlghm’ salaries." Constitution Quoted Basically socituistic. the Indon- esian economic policy was laid down in [he RBlT-lblittati Constitution, sponsibllity for _ industrial ‘icncy. British Trade Unionists 0m Annual ongrm BRIGHTON. BLIAIQX. II» Oct. 2l—(R.euter|)-—Brlta1n’| trade un- ionists opened their maul con- gress here today and President Charles Dukes called on the tnde union movement to tale active responsibility for industrial effic- iency. Mr. Dukes. general rec-rotary of the rmwerful General and Mun!- cipal Workers’ Union, called on lhc B00 delegates of 1M unions to make use 0f the present oppor- tunity to develop workers’ partici- pation in the conduct of indus- to adopt the Congress’ wages policy in negotiating methods for new conditions and to reoflnalder restrictive trade union practices. ndopiCd when fear oi unemlllflll- merit was still paramount. Later. m. cerium: hwd from William MacGrugher of Edmon- ton. president of the Civil Service Association of Alberta and u dele- Ztaie from the Medea and Labor Congress of Caxmda. Mr. MacGruher. first foreign fraternal delegate to address the Com-rose, said that the T.L.C. be- lieves that the best safeguard for the maintenance 0i iull employ- ment 15 an increase in the pur- chasing power of the muses. Mr. Dukes‘ presidential address marked the first time a T. U. C. president had called 0n Bfllllll trade unionists to take activeflre- e c- His views were received enthusi- nstically and observers felt that his speech set the tone in HWY of an active trado un-lon shire 111 the responsibilities o! social plan- nlng. . On the “closed op" issue. the president also too a. definite line, defending the right of every un- 10.n- to initiate a 100 Per cent organization in every anon "h?" it is strong enough, but deprecat- mt; the idea of forcing rival 1m- ions out of business by what he called a “head-on collision." PriceTroublesllamper Canadian Controls (By Jack ‘llllllitamn. Cnnldllu Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA, Oct. 21—(CP)-—Pi'ice troubles in the United States con- tinue lo he a major worry to Can- with adian officials concerned keeping prices udown. The fact that top American of- ficials see an early end l» priCQ and w-agc control in that country adds complications to the Cana- dian situation. Policies of the two countries differ basically in that Cnnndg has followed a blanket price coiling plan while the United Sinics has uscd sclective ceilings. Under flu‘ Canadian Cit-control plan, a lame numhcr of goods re- gartird by the Prices Board as nc-n- c..scittial or hearing only a minor role in the cost of living have ‘oi-en fret-d of price ceilings. but the great majority of goods still are untlcr control. So far titers has been no in- dication of early action to lift ceilings on Canadian foods. with the uxccpllnn of some luxury goods. Main complication from the Can- adian angle arises when Amer‘.- can prices no up on goods which Canada normally imports from the United Status. That creates a sit- uaiionkvhlcb means higher prices in Canada or holding down of prices by Government subsidies- and present raoliry is to try to re- duce subsidies rather than create Article 33, which says: "Scot-loin 1: Elconomy shall be or- ganized co-operablvely. "Section 2: Biauchcs of produc. dion which are important to the stale and whlcu affect. tihe life of most people shall be condrollcd by the abate. “Section 3: Land and water and (the nurtured riches therein shall bc controlled by the state and shall be exploited for the gzeatcst wcl- iaire c1 me people." Latetr, a Republican “Political Manifesto” darted Nov. i. i945, de- clared: "All properties of foreign- urs. except those wanted by the state for government uxploiitmlon. will bc returned to the leglztimttic owners and for those appropriated by the starte, me due price will be paid in the most Just pussiblc way." Indonesian ifcpubllcatts feel their tintionalizaltion irrogrann is not ex- Dre-me since government. sntarpfln always has plaiycd an inuactrhnt role in the Indies. Before the wnr salt was a government monopoly while railways and communications urere government-operated. Mining was unden- government licence. Important mines were gov. er-nment-ovperaauxl. Commercial circles hen: also have arhltaoiacd considerable importance to the anti-communist trend shmvn by the Irtdoneaimn Rcpublloans in recent months. pcciulions are casing nif through a new ones, Canadian wage crmlrol regula- linns are likely to be lifted early in the new year but general ex- ihnt it will ‘we at least well toward the end of i947 héfnrc there is rr-moval of price control, though there may he some continuance rlecontrnl policy cl the gradual before then. The whole anti-inflation pra- gram. including prlce control. ll likely to be a lively topic in Par- liament when the new session i: rolled early in the new your. ClRRllQSlS PROBE!) t T“ NEW DELHI — (OP) — In- vestigations carried on at the Haffkirx-n Institute. Bombay, show that. contrary lo the general be- lief. cirrhosis of the liver. a d18- ease common in certain parts of India. is caused by deficiencies in met rather than by excessive use of alcohol. With the aid of a grant from the Indian Research Fund Association. experlrnen al work on animals fed on diets - flcient in Vitamin B2 complex has been con-ducted and useful evi- dance has been collected regard- ing lhc effect of deficient diets on liver cirrhosis in animals. Sports Styles Selling at . . . . . . n. Gr. George St. rm: rdsmon snore: AUTUMN SALE! f All lost season's Winter Coats. Fur-Trimmed and 2o Per Con! Discount Phone 5d Arms Cal Draw With "srqtelnrd" l; nuns: W0!) IIIW YORK. 0st. I —(AP) -- Would-be De Vinclt. wlw can't draw a straight lid; with a ruler. new can stop repressing their draw- ing ambitions. A new Kl I l"- ventcd by Latvian-born art ll. 1A0 Michelson will Ullilllg. them to do |. portrait of Aunt Unis without having it turn out like n aurrml- let's nightmare. I tried out this new eldest. vl- ing the artist-inventor himself gs a subject - and endtd “D I 19W minute: later with a sketch of grey-haired Michelson that really looked like him. and tho convic- tion that dormant drawing talent suddenly had been released. The reason I had been ablc to reproduce his likeness. Michelson explains. wu that hi: "sketchald” permitted me to see the willed throulh the artist's eye -—XIVB l! two-dimensional visualisation of a three-dimensional subject. All I did waa peer through a one-eyed viewer at 9 pane o! Ill" l" 8 from; placed before the subject's face. and practically traced . his likeness directly on the glass with a special grease pencil. - Two Dianenslnnnl Vlmv The artist discovered that it was possible to give almost any- one the {winter's eye when he taught art in adult education classes in New York after hi‘: el- cape from Paris thé day before the Nazis invaded it in 1940. Visualiz- ing o. subject in two dimensions- axactly at if it already had been painted _ was the student's troub- le. he found. In desperation one day. he took a picture frame, held it up in front of a subject, and asked the class to imagine that it was al- ready drawn on canvas. To com- plete the illusion. he had the stu- dents squint at the object through one-eye over the tip of their pen- cils. The idea worked. and Michel- son decided to make n permanent “sketchaid" to help others. After the would-be artist has re- produced the outlines on the sketch- aid glass, he transfers it to paper by wetting the paper‘ and rubbing n spoon or other hard object over it. The same method, Michelson says, works with oils or water col- ON. and ls simple enough to keep children quiet on n rainy day. The artist. whose paintings hung in the Luxembourg, dies not like the word trace used in connec- tion with his invention. Proof that it's not tracing. he points out_ is the fact that several different puc- ple can do exactly the same sub- ject and end up with entirely dif- ferent conceptions. A similar device. he believes. was used by some of the great artists of the 15th century. and by Durer. who has been depicted sitting he- fcre an upright stick, viewing his subject thrc-ugh a glass boxed off into squares. Durer's method, ap- parently. was to use paper boxed off into proportionate squares, and reproduce lhg curves and llnEs in each box as he went along, Round Table Knights lleld Verbal Tilts By WILLIAM BOSS LONDON, oct. m _ (op) Their Camelot h a large room in the May Fair Hotel and they no lflnlpr chmtpion damscls in d-is- tress But the Knights of the Round Table still halve a round table. Out more than '75 years ago from a solid Spanish mahogany. their immense one-piece festive board is 27 feet in circumference. rm: __CH'A'R ditiohs and consumer nsedl was the course of simple centurion-sense. yet allowed for the exercise of individ- ual judgment. taste and flair.” dusLry manufacturers would have to pay them better. whllc their ideas best more would have to be given to latest ulna...» ‘rm llave lienhera ' 0| Prleesnfloarl Otrrnwn. 0273. _<or>> poinlmrzi: cf two additional mem- bers to the Agricultural Prices servers here consider it. likely they will be from either Ontario. Quebec or the Maritime Provin- CGI. The Federal Act under which the board was fer-med provides for three member: but up to now only um. Chairman J. G. Tutu-t. bu been appointed. Work the board has undertaken up to thll time. however. had been largely a mat- ter of compiling statistics on llrlll prices and markets. The board will begin operating as a price support instrument shortly when lt takes steps to bol- ster the market for potatoes in surplus-producing areas of the eastern provinces. When it thul goes into action. the need for ali- polntment of the two additional members will become more appar- ant. Mr. Taggart has said that as he ls from Western Canada it would be logical to appoint, as addition- al members men from Eastern Can- ldl. llew Designs Seen as Key to Markets By William mu Canadian Press Ski! Writer LONDON. Oct. 21 —(GP)—In- "tent on resflininz her position as "workshop of the world." Britain is emphasizing the knportanee of modern. industrial designers. A conference. sponsored in as- sociation with the “Britain Cam Make It" Ebrhibition w hhe Coun- cil of Industrial Dedlcn and the Federation of British Indultriu. has stressed the importance of training and giving scope to de- signers of industrial products and of machines which malts than. “Rule ct thumb nwthods" pro- vide aln easy but dangerous course 1n modern manufacture. Sir Thom- a5 Barlow told the delegates. stres- sing that “careful, exact and ob- jective inquiry into market coh- Ln order to keep deslgmers in in- to exploit attention technological improvement in mai- erials and processes-factors which affect design. Research Needed Manufacturers couldn’t expect designs to “burst intmfiower" tavith- out long cultivation, Sir Miles ‘llhorrnus. vice-chainnan of Morris Motors. Ltd. said. Potential de- signers had to be given first-hand ness and the intended market. both at horns and overseas. Instancing the importance of form in productive equipment. Mr, T.P.N. Burness. managing director of William Asquitih, Ltd. said "e. good-looking. well-finished mach- ine-tool. capable of doing its job well. ls a thin! of beauty and a real 10! to the mechanical mind. By plying attention to the artistic as Well as to. the practical side of de- sign. sales appeal is enhanced." John Glow. director of F. C. Pritchard. Wood andPsrtmers, Ltd. said the handful of "remarkable British industrial designers" vrbctlslr-z today ought to be 1... creased and. "if given the oppor. lllnll/l’. ilhey could rte-establish the industrial leadership which Brit- ain enjoyed in the lflthocnhtryvmqq It W“ the work-shat: a the v0.1a." and around it have sat more celebrated names than at any Other table in the course of his- tory. It is supposed to be the biggest table ln the world and when the knights are gathered round it. no woman may eat with them. The Knights of the Round Table do exist. Current Knight President Ls Viscount Bennett, who is to be succeeded Oct. 25 by "adopted" Cmadlin. the mm of Athlone. former Governor-Gen- eral. As the oldest lunchepn club in me world. founded in i720. the Itnignts proclaim as their purpose “the cultivation of the gentle arts of chivalry. oratory. dining and international goodwill." Ynrlr Plinth-u The contemporary knights no longer charge about on horseback seeking causes l0‘1lPh0ld. but do make one pilgrimage yearly (in a bus) to Wlrwheste. supposedly the Camelot of King Arthur. Pbr more than 100 years after the club was founded it met for lunch at Simpson's in the Strand. Later it moved to the Hotel Cecil. now Shell Mex House, but the May Fair Howl has been the‘ table's resting place for the bet- ter pert of this century. - Membership in the club l: lim- ited to 150. and members are ad- mitted only alter an elaborate ewearlng-in ceremony. t Their twice-yearly luncheon meetings are formidable toumeyl oi eating and speech-cruising. may. usually lut trpntde of three hours and provide for an avenge of sight touts and sight speeches ln reply. The prescrib- ed form of address for lllli-TIOOII speakers ll. Bit- Knl|ht Pr “’ Your ‘Icelleucin. llr Knights and Honored Guests." ‘m0 storied "Bull of the I'll- towlrlp ct the ‘Knights of King Arthur" st Tintllil. Cornwall. la their formal betas though no oi- rielal visit to it ls on record. 1K Wlllnlbfiflmllyofthllnilht- head's founder. Roderick Glos- aeti. and ultimately earns into "If kitish industry used the men who lanow how to denim machines and produ“ for m, 3M}. century. their disciplined and "billed lmtlalnatbrta could eniurea 1M‘ permanent place for mt goods in the markets oi’ the world." con. eluded Mr. Gloag. WOMAN LAWYEI CAN COOK T00 renown. Oct. 22 -<oP)- as. Elna La/wyer Dorothy Gtceristnirtdr rtccentLy celebrated thc 21st ain- nlversavry or nor atintlasi to u... Saskatchewan bar by baking a one and sending it overseas The fiftyish slug mums,- o; u‘ “timer-swarm department or Samatcihcvtran ‘s O OF. Kflvfifnlflfifl said it was the ntuncn dammit that made the law trrofenton fr; "Cases never become mliine to ma beollule o! nhe people involved. I “W08 I61 that Wwy conviction illlylali tragedy in a private fun. Part of M135 Gremanitfra work now is lmndlirf lsigiiiisfit l izgi support Board ll plndlll Mid OI- k d!!! a paradise. for wild lifeoinl rles last year's fruit with this year's flowers. also shoots forth seeds- frequently l0 feet away. Its branch- es are used as divining rods in the experience of all sides of the busi- . wmr-mww ocannlnrt . ' With Canada's Naturalists IQOPIYLOcLI-(G) Polnthnlnnilaiaamssalvs and dune. int-eu- vmlnl lwnlel and banal-k momma. From thi noililfi‘! v int this 1m! neck cl tc-rit- klndg abounds than. A inquest vinltc in Munroe Landon. oi’ Shncflt. farmer. stock- brsedn- and forester known across Carat. He bu also acquired “m! ll a naturalist and photographer of birds. bouts and flowers. Speaking 0f a Scptlnhar trip to Long Point, he sws that its purpose was the observation of more birds. Not many were rum-but the flowers were a thrill. Mr. Landon found many acres colcnd in masses of purple. mas, blue and yellow. and the whole area dotted withditeraliy millions of white, nodding lady's treases which scented the air. No alpine garden. he said. was ever more beautiful. Lcbellu made up the Dmendsr- ant blue in the pattern of wild flew- ers. Gerardlas contributed the rose- purple hues. Where the Ohio 801d- enrods flourished were great patch- as of gold. Blue gcntlsns closed and fringed. wild flowers. it was feared. that wereget-tlng all too scarce. ap- peared tn quantity. New England asters, loveliest of their kind. were present in purple opulence. And the grass of Parnassus-which is n01. a. grass but a plant with dainty wlhite flowers-added to the colorful tho maple. birch and oak raises of the cetmtry- side that create abs almost in- credible beauty which is the ant» utnn fantasy of color; but the countless hosts of wlhi flowers which paint the hillsides anti lanes. the swamps, fields and woodlands with gorgeous hues. make a rich contribution which gladdens the eyes and thrills the hearts of nat- ure lovers, Jewel weed. both: lmown as “tsucbmie-not" earned its familiar name from the feat that when its teed pods are mature in the aut- umn. the pods suddenly burst open at a touch. and the seeds shoot out as far u four feet. Witch-hazel. said tn be under the influence of witches by folk of other days because tho 3mm g3;- dlscovery of water. Bonn-set. with white clustered flowers. once had a reputation for 8119661118 the healing of broken bmea. Bouncing Bét, or goarpwort, a pink-flowered weed. hu a spicy odor. and its leaves, rubbed in wat- er. make a lather. Flesbane, of daisy-like nPPnrance. when ground to DOWder will warn off fleas-or even dogs. ¢~====i.f1ar::;r Y up nos ! y >__ Staff Writer) —-Predicated on otherwise-wt Mrs. Lean Dl-ck. against her father, the William Bohmuk. vlved next January. that the jury ln itself. So have ian pipe. Dutchman's NIA Staff Correspondent mansion. 111- amuse he's found contouring better than $100.. Wollmazifveliev. JemmW. Me. Gl-in. who once WM 1k. I.Q,. h racing for the Episcopal pugs- Hll "h i=5 i Vivid-fire question. and-answer nun. dispensing good diver. ‘Wide’ bars and silver diqL 1m. brotullit him radio fame and $N00 a. wet. He gave starting salary of or w) 5nd v dmuwd h clerical oct- wllten he was ordained l, in nearby Wiknetlb. Next June he will b‘, ready 10¢ mom. i?‘ g? 8i ii s list Inuit of the dub. . r Case Traversed To January Assizes (By Alan Randal. Canadian Press HAMILTON. Ont. Oct. 21-(0?) silence-or Evelyn Mne- the murder charges Donald Mac- lrattn, and her one-time boy friend wwent temporary discard today to m: re- That, in effect, was the ruling of Mr. Justice George A. Urquhart when he granted g crown motion this second of passes. has a naime which explains e pitcher Play-toe!» hverl ting flowers. Livi- cat-tall, bottle gentians. cramesblll. called for trial at the nsslzes. lng 28-year-old widow, thing about husband so far at th have been admitted n burly Buhczuk. worker, did the killing. into a drove the car. questioned as has been a blunt "No." 1 convicted cf plant. breeches. Hamilton's celebmtcd torso trlnlt he dismissed and the accused rs- January The reason: A young. good look- convicted or the killing of her husband lau March 0. who refuses to any any- the slaying of her ‘ trial goer. Already. at her own trial. then cvidcncu statements in which the sari tht n furnish also] the; ht shot her husband during a motni car rids on March 6. when she But her repeated answer when to whether slit wishes to testify during this trial. In her jail cell. when the all: the killing under sentence to be hanged Jan. 7. sht insists she will say nothing and since. in the words of His Lord- ship, her evidence ll not only mt- ierial but "vital" to the case. Iih because it was t-ilher that. or the Rmnan Catholic irricstl-cod. Being uhc father (“if dblldrcn Jimmy hltrtdalrt made an married and dwiotrs dine-ice Bcsldcs he oon- cycle bccamoe my frienkisthmig sidsrs the Eui- opal Church as it was not dignified. I wish I the historic Omtnt-iic church for it. mw. I tuft see anything un the United Starter He wus raised a Christian Scientist No holientbain-t-hou slmwl/ 1“dl"$ SUPP". lflllely Orchid moccasin flower-rind scores of Lordship decided to traverse the ° l others. . cane to the next aeslces. llE Fnllllll SUMETlllNG W‘ "P m’ " M’ ‘Y r llev. James McClain-f B! OIIAELB8 W. PAYNI He chose lite Episcopal clergy McClain Ann"! motorcycle panics d two dignified about it.‘ m “llun-lllng" ... Jimmy titb would lost sic in Louisville LQ - into the dhruroh. New the Rev. Aaleadtoposeoncsti py . curb. he laugh-ed it off with "r bettor not. I had to acli my motor his rad days is wthat he: miamdenst ‘thinks his lmmivest dalys in radl were 11ml. at his typewriter fore the stmeal of Dr. 1Q At Stmheun hfethodilt Univar my In Texas. where Jimmy Ola-in studied for two Wars on mtuiosl ndnlausnlp. they ‘bell 8_ 8368i bilii when itowcntin-tdndio. lien studied mmlc eight yearmin all hi; (other was lib file ilmo pre dent of the umber-vainly oi Mu- He left Southern Methodist ~ 1938. nun-led a Tens girl. -~ not his first radio lob rendi cotnlnae-rclalsutt $10 n. welt. ' Mien he Wéll‘. or! the "air --‘ no had in mt - rural trunnion wnrlr in the west 0m section of hla native " W. Thad‘: stlll what he an" _ . . . y, .._-. D ‘fiwuozxmnetl (asadc m the lento! St. Prussia should lihe to emuhto him nmob u possible" he says dinni- ln clerical gum, Jamal W. ~' ones famed no radio's DI l-Q aauntera bcalrlc the "one Ill cl the catapll of Sabin-m Theological Sentinel’! (U). l‘ - Mr Medial"- la shown below with Illa wife. 9° ill H