i l Eh: filturdimt ' i no on erum Edward mud len Tb- Dew l w.l. iii-um. vubluhu limo . Ell-cull" Edltm rublllh-d .my week d.. mamng mm... s.» . Icy: ind mth helidlynt .t lbs em. sum. Chlrlottlmwrt. P.E.l.. b. than.” mm 'llnth oHiul .t Sommerliu'e. var .nd Scull: lent-"Ned mom-i, b. ltteutwn Nana-zero Advertilmp 5mm lavonto dam. Mm... runi wiiku s nu. - Georgi- sue-i Mmi... Carnelian Daily "tewwspet Minn." alumna» and 'mi Canadian e-nii in. (ms... i in... .. uxclustvelv emitted in lha bi. in. tam/h- liut-un at All hm mum to ti n. .. Ind Alli: to the that m... piriihm hm... All iiuhu o. repun‘ulion 04 went smirk“ hat-in . lilo rel-Ned Suharto" u... Not avei :5: be. neck b. an... a... n. mu .m n ..d m.- time I year all ll-lrlt .id as $2M) oe- yut in us. no “emu. ubtlirln sinih Cam. . Not an. 7: n2. tingle tun. Mempet Audi ems, o' Ctlullltion ocronnn V 1963. Explostve Situation The liele ill Calintld':I shipping at this ill’llkuhlle members of the C.S.-controlled Seni‘arel's' lntei‘n tionlll linion prepared for t h m r “march on Oriana" tl‘t'lfll'rvt‘nllltllllt have come at a worse time. As iiitltc- died in sallll'tl‘ ' tlispaiellr, llte re— sult could he the complete st incliniz of our n‘lnl'iilme intlllsll' including the arrangements for shipping grain ‘ cargoes to Russia under the recen'ly ‘ completed $3liit,0tt0,0tttt “limit sale t deal. Tlte Itltel'llatloni Union is protesl- . ing legls ntltln passed hr 3 sueepiilg majority lll Parliament, lmptt‘IIlZ federal t' 'tee hip [olltiu'illg an ex- haustive llitlil into the ttni it's tin- democratic acti ‘ in" I Justice of the Supreme Court, This measure can no“ lie ill\0l\€[l by the Federal Government. at any time. but it held back over the \ieekend in an en- deavor to relich an alternative. agree- ment, through negotiations involving both the (‘alladian and l'nited States governments. the (‘anadian Labor Congress and the AFLJ‘IO of the Us. What CAUTIle \ras chiefly concern- ed about in these negotiations was. in Prime Minister Pearson‘s words, to provide “absolute guarantees" that Canadians would have filial say in any private board of trustees to h. set up to let organized labor handle it own problems. Hopes fl)!‘ an agreement of ti s kind were dashed by the Inter 'ttitmal l'nitin'i determination to tie tip shipping and summon its sailor members to 0t- Lalra today. This livtiiiu has been construed as an atlenlltt to intimidate the inn- ndian Coiet'nment. in the light oi the Norris report there is yood reason to harbor such a suspicion. Labor Minister llztchltlchei'n has denounced it as “clearly illegal". and the Gov- ernment has ordered the [him to obey the lair and direct all its mem- bers “to return immediately to their ships and to rrsumo \voi--" It is not a pleasant course for the. Government to have to lay down the law in this manner. but the altern- ative~ttf dictatorship lll f‘ltttiltla ni- fairs by a foreign-controlled union. on a matter of prime importance to our national economy—would lie. clearly intolerable. Revealing Statement A London correspondent notes that among the neglected ministerial speeches at the recent Conservative Party Conference at Blackpool \vas a notably lurid short statement of Brit- ish foreign policy by Lord Home. It is receiving closer scrutiny today, now that. the then Foreign Min ter has become leader of the British Government. Lord Home spoke at Blackpool of the strong opposition in Britain over the years to the maintenance of an independent British nuclear deter— rent force. “I feel entitled to remind the British public.” he said. "that had our Conservative Government not Innisted . . , on the ultimate con- trol oi our own nuclear arms. the British Prime Minister wnitld have had no status to talte any of those initiatives which led up to the silt- lIIture of the teat-Inn treaty; nor would the British Foreign Secretary have been present In Moscow to sign it: nor in this last week would i have been l"th in New York with tho Ana-Ion Secretary of State and the w Furnim Mini-tar. working out I plea {or commence." hm ln hie smelt Lord Home “I'd that Britain all I nliclmr "I must lled two extremes of policy. The first was Jingoism- the second "a couldn’t-care-less attitude ‘ which would leave everything incliid— ‘ in: our own security to the other fellow and rasult inevitably in Brit- ain ending tip near to neutralism." l. is recalled no“ that a our days l before the Rlackpool conference. in. l British Government had agreed, after oli\‘lltlls reluctance. to participate ill r \'.\'l‘0disclissillnsnfthe multilateral. . mivedmiannrd nurlesr fleet that the. l l'ntted States Government is ctlrrent- ‘ ly promoting. Already Britain‘s so- i'flllt‘tl independent deterrent. both in the V-llombers and the Polaris sub- marines to come. is committed to NATO—except in case of a theoret- ical supreme national interest which nobody can envisage in practice. For Rritain the decision to go ‘ along with the multilateral force idea represented an internal policy victory for the Foreign Office, which i was concerned with the political inl— l pliratiuns. river the. Defense Depart- ment. which will have to find the money {or a Bri h contribution. . The reason the Foreign Office pre- vailed. in the opinion of political oh- servers. is that refusal to un along ‘ would have meant. first. the end of all special relationship between Britain and the United States anti. second. Britain's exclusion from the hitter councils of NATO. This may have been one of the. determining reasons. in Mr Mat-mil- lan‘s mind. for nanlilii.r Lot-d Home as hi. slll‘l‘esslll’ in the Government leadership. .-\t allv rate. it affords Il gtmtl clue to what Britain's unclear defense ptilit will be. under the new administration. New insect Killer The danger ill the mi lse of in- secticides is being emphasized more and more as a result of Rachel Car- son's famous book. “Silent Spring". The pmblem was recently dis. cussed hr nltr nwn agriculture min- ister, .Vlr. illacRne. and we note that. similar warnings have been sounded by the authorities in other parts of Canada and the United States. Emphasis now is being placed on the use of less deadly insect-killers. and some interesting new techniques are being tried out in this connection. One of the nlost prom up is report- ed to be in operation in Arizona. in the form of experiments to adapt "black". or llltl -violet. light to the trapping of insects that attack farm ‘ crops. Results aflcr half a year of tests give rise to the hope that light traps may g‘l'F‘rIth reduce the use of insect- icides, They may prove to he at, least a partial answer In the storm raised by Miss (‘nrson and others who are concerned about the effect of such chemicals on human and animal health. In cotton fields surrounded by so- called hlaek lights since early in the lflfifl growing season. It has not been nece ry to apply anv pesticides. Other (‘nttnn in the immediate vic— inity has been treated three times or more. The. number of applications re- quired to protect letiure has been re.- dttoetl more than 50 per cent, and vegetable growers think it may he 1 possible to dispense with chemicals altogether. If treatments needed near to harvest could be eliminated. the troublesome. residue problem would be licked. The technique itself. of course. is ' not new. lamps that lure mosquitoes I and other flying nuisances have been i on the market for years, A few more! have been made to utilize the same extremely short rays ln agriculture. but it is asserted that no attempts have heretofore been made on the Arizona scale. nor with the long- range lights specially produced for this program. EDITORIAL NOTES lt’lt not so bed to drop your wealth—that in. i! you drop it into government bondli. . The world Impact of man's do- ntructivo wave was Indicated at the recent International Congress of Zoology in Washington. D.(‘.. Wild- life authorities estimated that 65 species of mammals. 4R Ipeciell of birds and six ol reptiles now are threatened throughout the world. In North America alone. ion species of fresh water fish are facing ex- tinction. if the trend is not reversed by good management. warm an ex— change. “too- mey become modern Nauh’l Irlu into which the IMMI flock. two by two. to escape the n‘. in flood of civilization." MOMENT OF TRUTH ' choke on I small toy or I piece TV Medical Aid Programs By Dr. Theodore ll. v-u pollen Emergency hellth cIre II strelled by the departmenle at In e Ind lil heIltll. educa- tttm. Ind wellnre lrom time to time, The Ilrrl is to III cl‘l — tbi-uuzb - medic-l Iell-hnlp pro- lram— u mIny people I: pol- llble What, to do in the event Bl emergency or dinner, in Chicago, (or example. I In Week 1e ev on couru ll belnl conducted in conjunction with the l tn medical society. Till viewer will be shown how to emergency childbirth. shack. hIndIglnl wounds, lllll‘lll'll care at the lick Ind injured. Ind protection mlnst inlloult , But this II only pert Hi the pro- ject. Everyone ll Inked In In- roll in the course in order In olr tIIll - lounge elmm guide. whlch explIlnl n r e v i ewl every leunn ollerod. ExImlnI lion in liven the "ltudellll" It the and of the cuurle, The dlnllcr profit-In ll uol lull another courle In fll’lt lid. II Include] InIlIy emeraenny Illuatlans "ill malt, Amuchl-II never hlvc experienced. T h I next war will be iaulllt Chile to home and ll it includes nuclul weapons, special problems will be posed im- the civilian populI- Ilnll. In all probability. there will nut be - physician in the bomb Iheltcr and many cundillons will Irise lbui require emergency are One a! the children mlflhl oi meat Granny may lle Ind break her hip. trying to get into the Sllrllcr. The excitement may preetpilate . hyllericIl reIrlioI In the neighbor next door. And you might be pregnant and so into labor 20 mlnules after til: lncmy attacks, ‘ ' ll nl. BETAWA REPORT la Patrick Nicholso-i Tributes Paid To Former Senate Speaker Enemies and allies in the Pulli- lcal iielii turnut their feuds lasl week. to travel together to Que- be: my in pay their last res.) peel! at the fuller-l or non. Mark Drauln. The farmer SPeIker of the Senate we: lrlend to them all. in: at Mark Drouin‘ It can be said that. despite iii-en. ty u c t i Ve years in point”. he hurt no enemies on Parliament Hill Everyone who crossed his path hm. trnrn the hlchest ta‘ the humblest, counted him as lriend. sin-in» lnnv ago A pun cin-iilat- . inc on Parlianieni Hill paid iribi ule in the rliai-m oi the Speaker ol the Selllltr There were rumour. that the obsolesccnl Eltmarr m | exile was to be replni'ed by a more uprtodalc. rocket in our delence lystem. “Le Bnrnni-t- ma renipl-ce llIl' le rtteket " That led the want. in. sneer-st that. in line min the hut vnvinn ni public: by h n c k e y‘ stars. "19 hcnu lint-k" would he succeeded by Montreal‘s burkey are “llnckol” nich-rd Is. Speaker Tlim Is no exact Eng-l llslt Iran~lntinn at the French Id- let-live "beau" Applied to - man, but its sense Iccuralely descri- bed the gay. debonair, success» int and g o nd-luoking M a r k Drnllln. so "It beau Mark" be- cattle his nlt~knumn on Pal-lib ; menl Hill sTnnTs AT TOP RL’NG Mark Droutn its: a longtimu Conservative stalikari and leade! In the province nl Quebec, but he had ne\rr .ni in an) legisla- live assembly 9 had once. ill. 1949. rhullcnued the m l n h t y Luuu st Laurent, in lllt‘ historic Lcrnl iorlress oi Quebec East“ but ll(‘ was overwhelmed by that hltlllesl majority In tn-indn. pnI-‘ ling mun vote! In Tulsa tnr the Prime Minister only i 1% viitu went to the Social credit Party. which now hold: niai seal. on fll'luber 4. lint, Mr. Drolltn's ability and service tn the Cnnsrrvaiivo causn were n.- cocntzed hy his appointment in the Senate He arrived «it Parlia- mentliill with the Import mm pnnarhe of a Bomun‘ Hc w a - appointed Speaker, and leu day! later prostded over till" i-rl‘emany at which Qllei'li Ellzabrtll nlllclrl Illk' a Parliament . slim" Mark. looklnz m I! r e you h at y e u r I. l. ' role to perfection and . u . was a: ulird~perlect as a skilled Irlnr in [art he had been deeplyl lutrrestrd ln .innieui- thentrr l - in till Important new role. Our Yesterdo s tl'l‘rnm Ill! Gulrlllzn Flea) TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Orlobl I NOI’Vlll! Luck. general mn- llry oi the hell YMCA. lereI today for Slokvllle, N,B.. to u. loud I meeting of employed om‘ etll‘ ill the YMCA‘s In the Mavi- time valnbu Arrlnlemenu will he mule at the ltesslon lnv I Young Men'l collierencI It Moncton late in r'ovelnber. l-‘oriyelsht girl. will begin - Ill week: home-meld" can". here today The couree ll autho- rlled urulel the Domlnlon»val - ell v o uth Tuiut pron and will be under the luporvl-ion 61 ML“ Mary MchmlIld. Super- vlmr 0! Wmnen‘l lnItltMaI in Prince Edward Island. TEN YEARS AGO 09M" ll. I“! Kitchener. Ont tAPtfiAmmlg in m is! the Catholic Wnllltll'l Lulu: lemd the Camilath MIdIl In er1 Buck. St, John'l make. G" I Coug‘llln. Woodltock. ll Mu- [uellll Burul. mu Ind Mn. FrIlIk Murray 0! ChImtlelWll. R.L. Rupeu we elected wreck that at tile chem branch of tie Fri I We Sol-Hy It I medlnl Ill-M in Zion L‘hurfll IIIII lIlt even- [1' he did not sunri- trtini s I II tie irlchl. Ind lie rri-ctvrd congratulations If n m I Iudlence of mllllulls. n o i n it i y lrnm some 0.5 A colleges where tile ceremony was watched on classroom 1 ‘ WANTED “use CANADA" Senator ornuin was blpued‘ uini one Ion rare but highly dzs-l irsblr sitrihilte Hr tinnkr- hotll' French and Enziinh IluenIIY. llndl with no true ot Ilien menu: Thll. it» once told me. slemmedl from his norvntsze 01' a French-t Cnnndian father and 3 mother who spoke lllllP French Sr. in- unit his ht‘iittlr'l‘ nnd sisters spoke t EnellKh in their Quehcr hnmc;‘ Inn \khcn lllfl went nut to play or to school. they spoke French. Thus. as too few of us run a n d do. he appreciated the strength: and wonkncstrs n( both sides in mu tracir racial hl'fll'lrll, \thCfli be recruited as our caunlry'll greatest current problem ‘ av career he was It sllecessllll luwiar, handling mlirh cllrl‘lor- atlnn “ork. and also llefcntllllg 22 poi-snns accused of murder. us‘ well its tilt? ht thnse urctisod in the Gnu nko sh cnsl‘ l'lV choice lie was fl dedicale SuP~ tinrler of tile art. nt"l oi sport lie has presidcnl ill the old one llel' At'rt hockl‘l' club. and had been a player in his youth. Hi! wide interuls were lhown by his membership at flying. sall- ing. golf. llshing. hunllnz Ind wltltfll' sports clubs. He luvs llllstilil‘lllzly of his time to sup- port the am He was a launder and president n! "lie Tlteflll'e du Nnuvenu Mnndr": and nnly iii-i veer he and Madame Drnllln ee- carted the Montreal Symphony Orchestral to Russia. Austria Ind France _ the llrsl prolr~sinnal CIMIitln orchestra to perform in twin-i capitals Qltll‘kllV becoming an sdrnll Ind respected “President” a! i the Solute. when the day'l work was dnnr. n: alien. charmingly assisted by his wile. played hul- pitahle halt ln llll sue-ker- (‘hnmhern here to .n unulullly wide range at nueltl. when he last vlslled Parliament lull this sunnnrr. llis bilingual comment “.15: '11 say Ltlls lll French— nu revotr. but i may not lee you again " Still Making Harness Mnntrut star The ltrsl horleles! rarrtflues had quit. a number (it than. n! aiIlniLv pith llte horse ape l-‘nl‘ inslillll'e. Inc celebrated w h l p socket The last. or some Ill ltlrm. will time at least out The seal bolts ulth which it tl ‘ equinprrl may be direct descen- danls of bonus. perhlp! made i by n survivor nt the once-sile- i (Ible llalnr ~maliillg trIdr ‘ Ilrrr elenrn withl t lnlereil. a harness-making con- rern stlll moi:an harness and going into the production at seat (‘ltS to enlarge ili range nl side- lint-s. l-larncssinukiruz sounds a . hillllly. but there are still horse: l about, some pulling delivery wa- l Wins. some llll lmns. sum: krol l {or innw purunies. There are also telephone and pmirr complnles whose line! i ’ itimulIted but. prodded b are «trim: ltll “linden nnlel. Ind whoden 130ch mill [or human to climb them, and bells Arctic dog Item“! need liarnhl some do: learn drivers. It any rate titty tl "nulsidr" instead ol having ll mzlde locally. ll Dl'mldrts .v morer in nourish the sense ol continuity to lell'n of this mi of healthy, ir Imull. cnlry-m’er from utt- post How many old earring? mak- ersure tlirrr still turning out a ytlltnz with wheels on il‘.’ The sense or continuity is not only y th e thought. at the 75 years in the trade which one o! the com- pany‘s employee. can bout. a = =- A bit slow mlkinl up nu mind i Ielller cm what he wanted to do u I boy. i. but he llll made up (or MI e a r i y flllhtimal. t knoull‘llfle will help cunsiderab ly. even though it Is limited I. what not, to do. Those who pull ll-le course wlll not be allowed to practice medicine but they can help themselves and nlllerl dur- In: disasters and emerlenclel. OVLRWEIGHT AND OVERTIBED Mrs. W. vtl' be I have gained 1 pounds each year since u: ow. a weilh Pounds and em 5 leet 1 inch. try to diet but. let weak. l I150 get walk when 1 clean house or lllnp [or In hllur or two. Whll wnuld you suggelt? REP]. _Pa' A complete phylical examlnl» Lion. A sluggllh Itlyl'nid. (or ex‘ ample. could account (or £11 Hill in weight and m. (augu- Lllat lulluws exertion. DELAY VACCLNATION . , writer: in mutant vucinuiibn harmful during the (int. tlirea martin nl preg- luncyt REPLY No! II I full but relctinnl oc- cur once in I while Ind there ll no reason to take I chance un- less vacclnution iI ublolutlly necessary It LI time, Inch ill in an impending epidemic, THE SANDMAN .t E. \l‘l’l|cs: i am 75 year: old and tire eIItIy. Then my ayes feel as if they had sand in them. Would this indies” my blond In low? REPLY No. Why not have - checkup to determine the mm at your l-ilguel it you are liuliby otherwise, a tonic may relieve the condition. ARTnlilTls AND Till: noon M. .l. writes: Is the" I blood on for arthritis? REP Yul. The with and Hylend (“It slide '1 I In null [or ecreeniug rheumatoid Irthl‘ltllt The blood uric acid ten ll for unn— Dnn't attire nonedlhle Infill ill lhelvel contIlllills load. VEHICLE PRODUCTION Vehicle! totalled 503.130 unit; lll m2. In thereon at 117.!” over I‘ll. NOTES BY n. I ma bu mod-l which no bellil introduced at this tune M n to have :uu .boul everythin: . penal: could think 0! In the wly bl "ant-u." However. none at them hm come out with pow- er Iteel‘lnl lol- b-ck mt driv- m yet — Columbul Journll t Republican . THE WAY n u ubvloully dellrlhk iii-I we would li-ve I decimal ur. rIncy. Sir Christopher Wren I9 llmous arltuh architect. iugu l" ted It in NW. and it ill a pin .ll waen't. listened to it would have colt u lot in. to um matte in change then — DIlIy Mall Lulldn U.S. Election Shadow BY IIrl'ie Mlflllnd CInIdIIlI Prose ltlfl writel Prelidentlll election: in the United Sulel probably cut, ll lonur lhIdow tll electionl l loi- - Illlllllr pull Inywhere In the hmotntlc war it. The US, election In [till more dun l yui- .wa but nimdy aim Ire vlgomui liirrlnu lmm panible Republican Candi. dem end 2 preu. On. Ill the HINDI (0r thil urly IctiviLy n th: compil- ted and lenithy job or picklnl dldlte. I cut The Democratic Pll‘ly'l choice {or November. 1904, ll I l m o I t nuuredly Pnlldel'lt Klnuedy; the choicI ol the mwbllcllfl ll not In deltlllh Ind will not be null] the nami- nItin| convention next lummer. The Republicans. as are the Democrats when they don't the I man in the While House. Ire leIderleIl. Th! structure of political panic! mike: till! 30 Lacking White House leaderetlip, U,S. parties out of power Ire historically lormleu. kallllen Ind undisciplined. with their power nutter Imonx each of the 50 states. GOLDWATER LEAD! Only when ill. llales' dele- gates meet on the smoky can ventiull tin»: and focus their mullet-ed organization: — Ind their hotly enthuilasm—on the lab 01 plchinl I prelidealial candidate dn lhcy lescmble a national party in the Canadian nu. with thin Ilruclure n prospec- (iv; candidate must contend. And he must contend early. lt bu been ntd thII Presl- dent Kennedy spent (our yen-l betel-e lltl elel‘llnn building an It would nut-ca» i 5: !" S Ilully umle his decentralized pIrty lung enough to take lllm tn the white House The lending contender [or the Republic“ nnmlnllton It thl moment ll Senlwl‘ BII'T)’ Gold- wow 0! Arlznnn. Although he IIyI hl he: not yet dul whether In full (or the nomlultlon. be ll thundurln around the "Wu-pl”: politic dinner circuit Ipelkln It. r lien and Ill Iboui any other Irvin: um i. willing to Inter. ew ork'l Governor Rock leiier. “other "non-cudldnte Iao tin lteliped up l’lll llltlonll political activity. He [at I later um and. according to popular ovlnlnn will, on less chance bl [Ilnlnl the nomlultlnll than Gnldwalel But. he. loo, lids been climbing the Political 00d and dill weekend will invade New Hampshire. a test- ing ground with it! tirel-tn-ttllv llltlon presidential Dl’imIry—Ill election Io decide which eludi- dlie the state party will luppDn at the convention. NIXON MENTIONED Several p n I I l I) la "der horses" re also being men- tioned Amonil these ml gover- nors Scranton oi Pennsylvania Ind Romney of .‘llchlznn. bnin with decreasinc (requch -. and. with increasing frequency. tar. mer vice - Druldlnl Richard Nixon. the Republican‘s unsuc- cessiul pmsilienitnl i-indidutn .n . 1950 and unsuccessful candidaia illl IBM for the gnvrrnorshlp o! CallfornlI some 11 Iervere discount Nixon u I serioul challanger. although Goldwater und Rackev teller hulh lay they believe Nixon in a candidate lor the noun nun. Muscle Power Propulsion NIIImIIl Econ-phi: Suleiv Y come when a I in In It? cycle built {or Girl; with strong legs probably will set the most aerial dates. Though muscles will never re- place engines in planes, ant-r» lellc British enthusiasts still are punuinu the elusive goal at mall-powered flight n: u Sport. They ve had some succeSI. A slender-w i n g e d. leather- light plane has been liawn inure nun - hull-mile It in miles per hour. it: said "engine" was I hunky young mln whole luridul p c d at i n it spun a propeller. a two-manpower plane in in the workl. HOT coMPETlTloN A British industrialist has til» lured a $14.0“) prize to the hut nun to propel himsell over a mlll-lonl. lllure~elght courle. keeping at least in feel abnve Ill. Krnulld. About 25 teams, in- cluding lame ol‘ Brllaln's top Iorllllautlcul enllneerl. are com» plflul in this Inner space race. Thu Royal Aeronautic-l Society ll contributing l r I II t .l l n Idvice. lrnnicIlly. Illa lumlul’lllfl mIn- powered Ilrcult benolit from Jet-Ila ldvlllcu In IemdyllI‘ in man it Int db. velopmznt i- a lens. nun-ow Vlan that Rives maximum lllt with minimum energy. some of the muscle-powered pinio- hm - winman of W lent. which pom a plrking um. hlcln [or I hIl' Ind commuter who dreams of hum)an into I perlnrnl ylll'ltl Ind pedallnz all to work [Ir Ibave the muddlng cm , rluugb dellgnm have exper- lflllnted with lupel'lllllt phlllcl, may th0 returned to Jun it has super. plain wnnd net-in slit churncler- lor strenlhh Englneerl estimate that it lakes iron. .35 to .70 horsepower to lift a plane all the ground and keep it ain't An Olympic cv- elist can pump out about pnwer. Enthusiasts envision a unique nylng spnl‘l cnmhintnl sophisticated engineering. plint- ing skill. and ath‘telit‘ prone“. Aeronuulirnl engineers gener- ally agree that . mun-powered pllne .liuulti have fixed wing. mi be driven by a propeller. Several experimenters, however. have not given up on the aizel- uld ornllhupler. a manpowered plane with {lapping u-ingl. BIRDMEN EARTHIIOUND Some years by... one inventor raced down Creech Barlow mu in Snmeru‘t. madly thrllhing his III-loot wings. He tripped and iel‘. on his face: and of exnert- merit, Another Aspiring binumn hopelully launched himself lrnin . bridge. bui flopped into in. Thumel. such he been the viay at th- omitllupter toi- centuries The most famous victim was Icarus. ul Greek myuiningy. whole nut. Iicial wings were put together with wlx. He flew to» near [ill lun .nd plunged into the in. All 11th-century Saracen at;- tempted to my around the blunt»- cit-ante tit Cnnltantlnnple in 1 Ion: whit. Tuba Itiliened will. lllht mu. He met momentarily llku - bird. nun lel‘. like u rock. About. the lam nine, Elmer ol Mllmelhury, an English estro- lour, llltcd win]: to his handI - i a but IquOd. Slrncly Ittl’lbutlul llil lIlllIl'I In inch of I Mil. 90 Chenotmown lo' Halli-x hlmJolIn,N.l.e Mamet Canadion Natlonnl'c rIvolutlonIry Red, White a. Blue for. pIIn of year—round savings coon to coast October 27 C035 coast Compel- thou one-way ouch novel ill! on «my led lam/n Day at the you: 013,00 Vancouver t €4.00 Winnipeg $35.00 4.30 lemma “1. tn.- .. t.. iliili' t... itit..