** , to the A ears with ber, ing. SS WiHOuT METH Newsman Discusses Tricks Used By Viet Cong In War How is the Viet Cong able Viet Cong metheds in South (yell an alarm. Viet Nam, serve By MALC AV "BROWNE SAIGON pretty well reconstruct underground in an improvised | echo chamber, Naked except shorts, a long rice pouch over one shoulder and. a belt ‘slung. Viet-Cong positions were. f{jrst been hours. Itis nearly dark in the cham-|Cong guerrilla spends much of around the top. Through these | it. slots, the first sounds come, re- flecting from the éurved sides|might be under a heavy rock, ___ Methyl is the most in < es we - et the ‘ “8 as iM from a with American troops FE & 5 . x E Discussed At AA’s Meeting |. TORONTO (CP)—Threats to! One of the. reformed drunks, > - ona employee don't | identified only as Tom V. of the! t toward reform, | Cleveland area in keeping .with | two experts told an international |AA’s policy of anonymity, was [SECOND SECTION conference of Alcoholics Anony-|on the panel discussing alcoho!l- | mous Friday. ics in industry. ae ae © Kensit| coreg BEST APPROACH f im certain cases. “discharge | Drawing gexperience as” ah may well be the only successful ae if apd later ae spur which will lead an alco- whee tation ig thy i a holie to his prob. {tie —. face upto his *» ‘ling worker is to “sit down .with him and find out why he is an | But Mr. Kensit, superintend- | a \.oholic ” ent of industrial relations for |” ,, : . Algoma Steel. Corp., said his| “It certainly doesn’t pay to| company’s rehabilitation pro- | dangle a job, a spouse or a jail | gram has retained the services | sentence in front of an alcoholic of many hard-to-replace em-/to make him stay sober. : “Never tell him he’s going ployees The comments on how to han- . ” dle alcoholic employees were be fired if he doesn’t join AA. made in a panel.-discussion at). the. AA’s international meeting, held every five years ‘and .this year ‘marking the group’s 30th The meeting has drawn some 10,000. AA members and their’ it,” wives or husbands from nearly a score of countries. ey gs é E | Alcoholic Employee oa F 8 3958 F) Ey : ae g 2 : of the chamber and jit might be under the, hearth at the man’s ears. Then dis- |of a peasant’s hut, it might be tant thudding of helicopter ro- | under water in the bank of a nt blades. mountain stream. Only by sheer e do it? How can a guer- the on- ge The man, wriggling through a luck would a government sol- | short tunnel to the surface, can | dier find one, and if he did, he Instantly, sha-*| probably would kill only a few |dowy men lounged or cooking | Viet Cong. The rest would be at the bases of the tall trees |elsehwere. fare on their feet and moving.| In an air raid, some of the fast. | tunnels and bunkers would be lscarmen -quicany [crud A. Jolie furnace of | The men mové rapidly, scat- Latin often abe bet fou can tering in many directions in| afte Senkers a s. + yg ve way twos and threes. This is their | iach to a P ‘base area, and they know |iits by heavy ae 2 every feature of the dense jun- galleries of mes a iain gle in the area — the hidden would survive. At nightfall, it trails, the camouflaged bunkers would be sale te move eli and tunnels, the gun emplace- again. the mines and booby |KNOW WHAT TO EXPECT Nearly always the Viet Cong will know what to expect, long in advance. The warning may come from the echo chamber. It may come in--a~-radio” message from a comrade miles--away:--It--may-|fence come from peasants in the area, who either fear the Viet Cong or are more or less on the Viet 5 i ‘say e788 h C i iin Fl zs Viet Cong methods. ! E : i F By MICHAEL BLAIR MONTREAL (CP) — The Ca- nadian cotton textile industry is steadily regaining e of the markets it lost im cottons in recent years. “In 1949 we had 75\per cent of the Canadian business,” an official of the Canadian textile industry said in an interview, “but by 1960 this had dropped to 50 per cent.” Since then conditions have improved and within a few years the Canadian “industry could=be-back~at=its~75-per-cent goal. i He said that with the 1l-year- \drop in sales the industry lost iis Be FF (AP) — Viet Cong operates: small brown man squats, Hi straining his! for the slightest sound. | for black ieee hand . grenades, he ele by 3 -, ane uattin; atientl or|with each moni * 8 ‘have been improved. The Viet except for daylight stream- his day digging, even when through the _ sound slots ; there_is_no. immediate..need.for- Feruteh. ~~ “You can't just tel him: "You're fired if you don’t stop drinking.’”’ conventioneers The entrance to a tunnet iF . : : s IRVING brings you the first new 3 : Antiknock Compound since Ethyl i. a __The first new antiknock compound since Ethyl! = New Methyl steps up octane performance so effectively that it stops power-wasting knock better than any other antiknock compound. Millions of miles of road service, plus many other field tests, have proved Methyl’s advantages for owners of cars both old and new... )s a ~ nee nV a> bg v WITH METRY Lo cscs oe ern. antitnoc protection because Methyl stands up under extreme engine engine knock occurs “because ,confidence in itself, “but even- tually optimism took over and with a liberal sprinkling of con- fidence we were up to 62 per }cent by 1964.” | In 1960 the producers, centred in Quebec and built mainly around the Canadian’ “big three’’—Dominion Textiles, Wa- basso Cotton and Hamilton Mills—had_an output of 140,000,- 000 pounds of cotton. This jumped to 166,000,000 by 1963 jand an estimated 180,000,000 pounds last year. About 10,000,000 pounds is ex- ported ‘yearly, mainly to Brit- ain and the Commonwealth, while the remainder is used count for a further 12,000,000 pounds of.cotton sales a year, including 55,000,000 pounds from the U.S. CONSUMPTION UP The total cotton consumption in Canada last year was about 290,000,000 pounds, up 62,000,000 pounds over the 1949 figure. “One of our problems is low- cost textile competition from Asia,”’:-said the spokesman. He said the institute ign’t so worried about Japan, which in- creased cotton exports to Ca- nada to 14,000,000 pounds in 1964 from 11,900,000 pounds in 1963, but the over-all increase from Asian countries, including Communist China, India, Paki- stan and Hong. Kong. In 1963 their total was 29,000,- 000 pounds. In 1964 it rose to 40,000,000. “In this sense the Ja increase” was not terrific, but Heiress Gamb ,» N.Y... (AP)—Heir- ess Gamble. Benedict -and Thomas- FGaliagher, —a—$11,- 500-a-year--New “York State po- lice investigator, were married here im St. Mary’s Roman. €athglic Church in this college. community near Utica. In Syracuse, Gallagher’s ex- wife and mother of his 13-year- old” daughter; Christine Ann, told a reporter she and Gal- lagher had been divorced, but declined to elaborate. The Roman Catholie Church does not normally permit re- marriage of divorced persons in the church but there have been exceptions. - The 24-year-old bride’s _ run- away marriage in 1960 to ex- chauffeur Andre Porumbeanu ended in an annulment after she had defied her millionaire -weeks “ago that he and” Miss Benedict were planning mar- riage. two were married by U.S. Monetary NEW YORK (AP) The United States monetary “gold supply has suffered its sharp- est weekly decline in six years, — reserve system said The drop totalled. $359,000,000 through Wednesday, although most of the loss was accounted for by gold switched to the In- ternational Monetary Fund (IMF). —+—Some—$100,000,000—of—the—toss, Tesulted from transfers to a gold stabilization fund to meet foreign ~- government conver- ‘sions of dollars to gold. The $100,000,000 loss, there- fore, ended a five-week period of growing optimism that, the || United States-might-finaly have ended the persistent gold frains so far this year. Most of the gold has gone to France and West Germany. “The~ over-all decline’ dropped the total U.S. monetary supply domestically. On top of the Ca- | nadian production, imports ac- ' grandmother to marry him , and “| had- borne him two sons. =——S{ who _~ Gallagher, .- 32, denied--a-few~ PAGE 9 Canadian Cotton Industry Is Regaining Lost Markets we're worried about their over- concentration on narrow ranges of cotton goods.” On man-made fibres, Cana- dian industry has about 70 per cent\. of domestic sales com- pared with 55 per.cent 15 years -ago, /and from 1949°to the pres- ent consumption of fibres in Canada has v to some 000 a year. ; CAUGHT UP IN 1961 In cotton production, the turn- ing point for Canadian manu- facturers occurred in 1961 when they “caught up technically and the Canadian dollar was deval!- ued, allowing them to close the gap between the price of dom- estic and imported cotton prod- ucts. These moves hit the U.S. imports, where Canada is qan- tinuing to make the biggest in- roads. : ; “The demand for cotton has increased only marginally but the inroads on U.S. imports ts where our increased production a. come from," the spokesman said. To meet the increased de- mand the mills have spent $33,000,000 in the last four years on automation, and as a result the number employed in the in- dustry dropped to 18,740 In March this year, -100 less than in the corresponding month of 1963, despite, the increase in production. . In_the whole textile industry. there were 85,000 employed in March, an increase of 3,000 in 1963. : le Benedict _ Rev. James Nicholson, pastor of the church: : Ireland-for a three-week honey~ moon. - The newlyweds said they planned to live in the Utica area. : * “Tom-has-a demanding job; and I'l! attempt to make him a good wife,”” the bride told re* porters. ce dict of New York City, Gamble and her brdéther an mated $50,000,000 from a writer fortune built by grandfather, Henry H. dict, who once headed the ington Typewriter Co. in near here. elder Gallagher is a scout for Cleveland Indians of the Ameri- can League. Gold Supply Suffers Sharp DropIn Week _ The U.S. gold stock has been dwindling steadily for nearly “a decade because of the U.S. bal- ance-of-payments deficit. As for=" eign governments have accumu- lated supplies of dollars, they have converted them into gold. Since February, the United States has been working hard under a voluntary program in- volving banks and industry to: curb overseas dollar invest- ;ment,—-which the government blames as the major factor in the U.S. balance -‘of - payments | deficit. | ' RAIN STARTS LANDSLIDS | TOKYO (AP) — Heavy rains which lashed Northern Kyushu, Japan’s southernmost triggered landslides Wednesday | which killed eight persons and ‘injured two, police reported Thursday. Weathermen said up ;to-I3- “inches “of “fain” fell” in’ | Northern Kyushu in 24 hours. 600,000,000 potinds from 372,000, ' jover the corresponding month - The—coupleplanned—to—fly_to— ball--with~Pittsburgh~and Cleves" “~*~ land in” the early 1920s. The © island, Che Guardian — - = | Weds Police Investigator- =e ra ordinary antiknock compound breaks down too soon at the ex- to. $13;900,000,000, the lowest | ‘ treme temperatures of modern high-compression engines, temperatures, keeps its antiknock properties under all driving : + The ‘oon nen of gold so far | ie = ' x é - €onditions. Methyl stops power-wasting knock, lets every cylinder. . Me ecise ce te oe Y “. ees ? equeeze extra power from modern gasoline. ° set i he “Uaed ioe @ ee) Ble ‘ : , 7 i ’ . j 4 : 3 : through the - ‘= . count | Sn 6 esels a % , % ° 26 ‘ : e 3 . a as backing i een reases _And Methyl] delivers its octane bonus just when it is needed most mar" 6 7 ran e =: o ' oi e : ™~ . . gathered from a large number | ' ...for passing, hill-climbing, acceleration, stop and go driving! frosnck ls Q J. W. Skinner 5 3 = Sein aie a8 Dial 24044 i. 3 | _ =. ~ gl ealeeeta es & Parkdale, | week was the largest since Ieea, | Sherwood and Exner when the United States last | made a major gold contribution | to the IMF. | t’sin both Irving and Irving Plus gasolines...atno increase in price! a = |: | INVMEMORIAM : IN LOVING. MEMORY 2 _ CECH. J. STEWART. I Who departed this life July 5, 2 Ever remembered and sadly missed and Family. «