om bum mt SECOND SECTION Charlottetown, Wed. Oct. 14, 1964. PAGE 9,‘ uses. It. m M thousands of lives. and “we can expect far better forecasting with the aid of weather satel- lites. such as Numbus. which have already photographed hur- ricanes from high altitude." IGY showed that weather Is Norman Jackson. president yesterday. They are from Donald, Sunnnerside. deputy of the Roundtahles Club of Johannesburg. Wives of club governor of district no.7. Mr. South Africa and his wife were members also attended the Jackson making a tour of entertained by the Charlotte- luncheon. Seen here, left to eastern Canada in ' capacity town Kinsmen Club at luncheon right are: H.C. (Bud) MacDon- as a ‘ tor of the World aid. president of Charlottetown Council of Service Clubs of which Kinsmen and Round- tables are members. IN STOCK . Old Sidney . Albion Stove & Furnace Size . Blue Hard Cool . American Furnace & Smithing Man Finds By ALTON BLAKESLEE an planet. the earth. Yard Service A PICKARD and CO. Lowl'er Queen Street tomorrow. the universe on which ts_ INTERRUPTION NOTICE There will be an Interruption of electric power on our line along Trans-Canada Highways between Bonshaw and North River on Thursday, October 15th, weather permitting, between the gents of 9:00 am. and 4:00 pm. Daylight; Saving me. This interruption is necessary to permit our crews to move les as require by r con- struction work on the Trans-Canada-Highway. The areas affected will be from CFCY Radio Transmitter to Bonshaw and will include Kingston to Emyvale and Canoe Core to Rocky Point areas. MARITIME ELECTRIC ll Kinsmen. Mr. and Mrs. Jack- ; son and w. Chester S. Mac- FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (APl—For some people. home is a familiar place enclosed by 0 ric r wood, stone or steel, . Coke Cfld and for others it is mud or straw. Sinker Pea But for everyone, home also Prompt Delivery is a spinning, ever-changing a . 3,000,000,000 live on it. and more billions will live here It is the only planet out of possibly millions or billions in man i certain that intelligent life ex is New Tools To Make Earth Study Earth, probably formed 5.000,- 000,000 years ago, is a home just beginning to be undertood by man, says Dr. Lloyd V. Berkner. one of the prominent scientists who has spent a life- time rummaging among the se- crets of the earth. "With our' heavily populated earth, we simply cannot afford not to know what is really going on." he says. "We need tains are formed, how and why oceans appear, or glacial ages 5 come and o, ow ocks are produced, how minerals become concentrated. “We need to know—and there is promise now that we can learn—how to predict earth- it is needed. to farm the oceans for food and mine them for minerals, to locate vast depos- its of oil and metals hidden somewhere in the ." A cosmic view of the earth comes naturally to Dr. Berkner. He is renowned for research in geophysics. space science and in electronics. and as a pioneer aviation explorer of Antarctica. He played a leading role in organizing the international Geophysical Year of 195850, which enlisted scientists from 58 countries in co-operative studies of the earth and its environ- ment. and which heralded the beginning of the space age. ng as scientific advisor to the U.S. government, Dr. Berk- ner now is president of the to know how moun- quakes. to make rain {all where between the two; hemispheres. In the future liel world-wide weather forecasting centres for precise short- and long-range predictions. In the long run, chances are ; promising for some man-made cloud seeding or other means. Space science: It is appreciated now that the sun’s outer atmosphere extends beyond the earth. and that a “solar wind" of atomic part:-. cles blows at us constantly The ! earth moving through this sea of particles creates a wake or tail of particles behind it. The earth's own ultra - thin atmosphere and geomagnetic field extend out to perhaps 40.- 000 miles. There it tangles wuh radiations and plasmas and: fields of magnetism. mostly streaming from the sun. “The sun's fields bounce against the earth's fields. cre- ating great .waves through the whole dept-h of our almtlu- . phere," Dr. Berkner says. ‘ Space satellites and manned1 trips to the moon and planets; Dr. Berkne: continues. will telll much more about this outer and distant environment of the earth. probably providing clues to the origin of the earth and possibly its ultimate fate. | I control over weather through‘ both still clutches his rifle after fainting cold as the pro- verbial mackerel. uands- man was carried out just be- ln the "never surrender" tradition of the Royal 22nd Regiment, a member of the honor guard for Queen Eliza- snu CLUTCHING HIS RIFLE l iYankee Stadium where she be- came one (it the ten of her sex to enter the press lunch room. review regiment 3. Quebec Perhaps New York had )1 the word that 518 is an attrac- tive blue-eyed blonde. 33 years fore the Queen arrived to Saturday. Graduate Research Centre the Southwest in Dallas. Tex., 3. ist,” now finds almost all areas of the earth accessible for'ex- .ploration, and he as many new or refined techniques and tools “to comprehend and some measure control his des- tiny on earth." 1'. erkner, in an interview, mentioned four prime areas of vigorous research which be- sides satisfying man’s innate curiosity, promise very practi- cal dividends: The depths of the earth: All life exists on the thin crust of the earth. The crust is only 20 miles thick on the continents and 31/: miles thick under the oceans. Beneath it lies the ‘mantle" of unknown composition, 1,600 miles thick. Under the mantle is a molten core 2,400 miles in radius. with a solid metallic core 500 miles across. Great forces in the mantle tains, and some crackmg earthquakes. deeper than any 011 well yet dug, to penetrate into the man- tle and learn what is there. In just six years—under im- petus of need to detect possible surreptitious undergrou nu-- clear tests — scismoiogy has scored tremendous advances, Dr. Berkner says. "Now we have beginnings to- ward predicting earthquakes. . . . It may soon become possi- ble to give city people 15 min- utes warning, time enough to save many lives." The mans: The . may become "farms" yielding more protein food through fish than can be harvested from an acre of land. Such prospects depend upon learning more about ocean cur- rents, and how sea water he- comes “fertilized” by the up- welling of rich nutrient materi- als from the bottom, then dupli- eating such processes in con- trolled areas of the seas r: Remarkable progress ha s been made in forecasting hurri- American and Soviet scien-i tists are planning to drill far up; FOUND 1T ' “So I rooted around the an? Impossible Jobs This Man's Mea’rl By PATRICK J. MASSEY ' LONDON(AP)—You want an. elephant? A stage coach? Fruiti out of season? There's a young‘ man in London who makes it his business to meet impossible requests. David Whitehead bills his firm as lmpossibles Limited. Aged 35, Whitehead started his enterprise nearly five months ago. "I put an advertisement in the agony column 1 personals) f The “and the flooded me. “Nobody has actually asked me for an elephant but i could find one easily if they did. Either for sale or hire. "1 did get asked for a nine stage coach by the owner of a restaurant who wanted to ‘rne ,’ recalled. inquiries absolutely cause the “whim of moun- station it outside his premises. lam“? P909193. ' and I suggested it would be cheaper mum/"W3 . shuddering of the crust through to let us get someone in build for chenls seeklng one but. he wanted old‘ model. an tiques dealers up with a genuine old stage coach for £250. So far. Whitehead has not come up against the one that really was impossible. "I thought I was beaten othe week," id. woman wanted ,an antique pot of willow pattern design to match one-she had mashed. I looked just about everywhere but nobody seemed to have one. “Then a newspaper wrote a piece about me and mentioned I was stuck for the chamber pot. Next day a woman wrote me saying she had the kind of thing I was looking for and of- fering it for sale." Whitehead char es his clients what it costs him to get the article plus 10 per cent. He also runs a club where. for a mem- bership fee of one guinea ($3) a year the customer can order an article and not be charged the cost of looking for it. “So far." Whitehead says, "I have about 1.000 members." "A lazy/'05: onrn’s --—- ii Mill/[RIMM Savings For You WM _ » w . "Billllllltl 6/ (M, Flues Web-no Sheets and Pillow Cues, noted fa rush of elegance at s Ind-st pdes.................... iIgIs Bed Shots _ 72Xl00"ol sols oslils Bed Sheets 8i 3‘ l00”on Sole _ Happy Home Happy Home illow Cases 42 X 33" on Sale item ‘ W/t/e y 005 90ft 7n 5/014 gem l b1 m k KANSAS CITY (APl—Betty iCaywood, major league base- lball broadcaster, didn’t accept the job because she wanted to break down the barriers of a male in. She says Charles 0. Finley, owner of Kansas City Athletics, offered her the job because he Whitehead operates with onel fellow director and a staff of five. His office in fashionable, Pall Mall is decked out like a; theatre ticket agency, which it is as well. “The ticket side of . the business accounts for about wants to set women Interested .10 per cent of our activities;an baseball so they will become he says. {paying customers. Some of the ticket hunting! “I’m in the industry because comes into the impossmle cat-lIt P335 8 [01 more money than! egory' too. More orthodox teaching and it‘s a real chaL agents. asked for tickets for lengev 531d 38mi- such wildly popular sports fix- “The fact that it puts me into tures as Wimbl on tennis oria field formerly exclusive for the Soccer Cup final, just shrug; heir shoulders. Impossibies: A newspaper recently figured leu gas the “CREW .out a poser reckoned to defeat There are some things wnich,iWhitehead’s resources. Its so- while not regarded as impossi-icial columnist challenged him fWoman Boll Broadcaster ls Seeking New Customers ; old. 5-foot-7. 120 pounds. with .a shapely figure. Betty understands the game but ‘ts she “doesn't know tall the technical rules." Betty's own background sug- gests she has what it takes. The weather girl job she held in I Chicago for 21/: years also was She said Finley evidently had new 10 he?- been thinking about hiring a Before that am did home woman broadcaster for somegbuilder’s Shows {01‘ a Kansas time, but the idea was a sur- City firm {0" two years — 13 prise to her 6 d been a‘shous. 30 minutes each. every weather girl for a Chicago sta- week. It was a rugged schedule. men is just frosting on the ke" ' I‘. h) on. “The first day he simply. REJECTS BANFF REQUEST wanted to know whether l‘d OTTAWA [cpl - Resources take the Job." she said. ‘ “ e Minister Laing has rejected the second day we went'mto-it and request of the gang Advisory I began to gel EXCllQQ- > Council that he rescind his or- “lts a terribly cxcmng Icieaider approving redevelopment of and a fantasuc Challenge Yo“lthe Bow View Lodge site in have to start learning baseballinann National Park. In an Oct. history and background and “W9 letter to the council, made anxwus to start. public Tuesday, Mr. aing de APPEARS IN PRESS BOX scribed as “absolutely untrue The next step for Betty Cay- and beneath contempt" state- wood was her appearance at the ments attributed to certain recs box in Boston's Fenwaymouncil members that the min- Park. Veteran sports mnters‘ister’s decision involved patron- e by Whitehead. he will: to produce half a ton of raisin- nevertheless refuse to tackle. “I do not fix introductions to e said in an "and I don‘t cater; :nobody [heard of. ' A couple of days later. the huge sums of money. 9 columnist. to , lterribly solicitous -— anything Iv at the castle of Wartburg to borrow pudding arrived at the desk oflwanted. you know." 1521 in ' it swallowed their cigars She,age. istudded custard pudding. 3 dishlwasn-t permitted in the lunch. 3 the trade had everlroom. Her lunch was brought BIBLE COMPLETED booth “but they were: Martin Luther began his Bible Germany: dramatist l 1. Next. stop was New. York's Goethe lived there m 1777. l Available right now "IiiT-Tfii‘ ages of 20 and 25. 4 f I Same exclusive super filter, the most. effective filter yet developed, for truly milder smoking pleasure. ' F11” King Size and Regular Size now available in pack- More than ever. the wand today is to du MAURIER the cigarette Of £001 £0810 o ‘ l -.........