ff?’ Es _ you don’t' know how downright delicious cocoa at its superb best cgn be. There's new drinking pleasure in every cup — new success in cocoa recipes - because Baker's is all pure cocoa-nothing added. |reaHy Hke cocoa!” enjoy its Up to 90 See its rich, warm dark color- flavor — and you'll never he satisfied with less than Baker's quality. l-lb. package. r BAKER,‘ cuocours "40! av rue maker? ° Alter more than a century and a hall, the Baker's Chocolate Girl still stands for the consistently high quality and reliability that generation of good cooks lave learned to associate with the famous Baker name. A Product of General Foods >_-—— U I DAILY CROSSWORD ShipsMascoi ACROSS 2. Smell IBfRiver , e , oed 3. Swine Bel . HE A l d H ll. llzllzal d. African 20. lguoti) “l9 h. Magistrate antelope 22. Depository {anC.R0m.l gpAminm- for public _ PLYMOUTH, England, Now 1 bleeding coin of 23 gimlmcnt: , —(AP)_-—Simon the cat, mascot of new: h France -aflrllln i the frigate Amethyst, has an Qp- li-ggui ' gun“ o; 26 Taaléld Iplggitment with the Admiral’! electrical ' Y- lbllmitnt resmun“ 28' x3559‘! _Simon was acclaimed a_hero for implement 15'5"“! swords Yesterday's r ' h“ conduct when the "up t“ ' mm logically 291m," Ham‘ i_ gauntlet of Communist forces con- 1 (archaic) 3-0! MM or (pass-l as. Stern from mums ‘he Yawn”- mve" H’ gibmepintn. his 3LAlllStr0US grain “m? ‘we've m“ DIQKM Mfliil- middle doctrines satin fabric 'l9.River(Gsr.) Whml‘ ‘ prlva“ law's“ "WP J10“ myeams sac” ‘gun. “Lconsume l. ‘ awards to brave animals. 34y ghurch l2. Compass 34. Appearing 43. Ailirmstive .11“ Pedal “"11 be 913°“ "mind oflcers point as if eaten vote Simona neck by Lady Burnett l [Former wife of Admiral Sir Robert Lind- Russmn say Burnett, naval mmandgrpt m" ("m of Plymouth. some time this week. The Amethyst is schedlled to arrive tomorrow and a hero's wel- come has been arranged for ite crew, including the cat. The people's dispensary for sick animals, which confers the Dickln Medals. released a letter from the . Shower p A king of Jadea (Bib-l .Cubic meter IHint A Dutch cheese Amethyst‘: captain. LL-Cmdr. lieatsafresh John Kerans. extolling the deeds Greek letter of Simon The cat. he wrote. was wounded on the back and left side by a shell fragment and his face was burned. "For many days Simon felt very sorry for himself." Kerana said. “But when his wounds had heal- ed he was again to be seen prowl- ing around the ship. His whiskers even now show signs of the ex- Jilkwonn Fate lubricate Sheltered My h. Sultan's decrees .On the ocean . Tier Obnoxious POND!) 1on0“ "P"°“"' p "anti which began to breed re DOWN . ' ifrolapss pidly in the damaged portions or vbackjslnn, the ship were a real enace to "In", the health of the ship's company. Simon rose to the occasion and. after two months. the rats were much diminished. In fact, when we managed to obtain some traps. not a single rat was caught in any of the 4B traps set through- out the ship. Simon, however. still managed to catch a rat now and again.” LIMBIGD (lane Back When your back is stiff and very painful and it's an effort for you to atoop or bend, take the remedy that has brought swift. safe relief to thousanda-Tenipletotfe ‘LR-C's. Don't suffer from the nagging misery of Lunibago a day longer than you have to. Get T-R-C'a today 60c. 61.25 I-lll DAILY ORYPZPOQUOTE-iierefis how to work itz.’ A X Y D L B A A X R le L 0 N Ci F I} L L 0 W I his letter simply stands for another. In this example A la used [for the three L's, X for the two 0's. etc. Single letters, apos- trophlcs, the length and formation of the words are rll hints. day the code letters are different. Acryptegrain Quotation PATN n: Qiioonionu"sv vnN emu-a ERUURIK, icrv n: riivosav are en-sv-orsrnrnrs JIILFJ. ruterdayh Oryptoquote: HE WHO ALLEGES ‘THINGS Magi} ARE conrasmcroav IS nor 1'0 BE HEARD-Law. ‘""'°' ‘Distributed o, run; nsuina memo " "" at drug counters. L r Tl-IE FINEST. TOBACCO YOU EVER ROLLED THI GRIITIST NAMI IN CIGARITTIS OFFERS iYOU CANADA'S FINISI CIGAIITTI TOIACGO. 7) CIGARETTE TQBACCC until you've tried Baker's, full-bodied, real Chocolate servings in the economical Boom Times liil Ancient Capital of liashemililordan By FRED J. ZUSY AlidMAN, I-Iashemite Jordan, Nov. 3 -- (AP) — Boom times ‘nave hit the ancient city of Amman. capital city of the Hashemite Arab ruler. King Abdullah. Amman ls bursting at the seams after tripling its population tu more than 100,000 persons in two years. p The atone outter's hammer taps incemantly all day long smoothing the native limestone used for building. More than 300 buildings, including apartments and offices, are under construction. Everywhere along the hilly. dusty city streets are great piles of building stone. Pavements are torn up, sidewalks being laid, ditches dug and wires strung. It all looks confusing, as though there were no master plan for de- velopment. Aa a matter of fact, there isn't. It's s catch-as-cstcb- can job in the best tradition of booiri towns. It's maide a lit-file more difficult because Amman - a pre-Christian-era city-is spread out on the slopes of a number of high hills. The reason for all the building goes back to the Palestine war when a. large number of Arabs ‘—- phiefly from the large coastal cit- tes of Haifa and Jisffa - fled to Amman. Despite the constant building housing demands still are greet. ‘ In most poor and middle-class homes there are usually four or five people living in a single room. ‘There may be more. Besides the influx of refugees, the was‘ made Amman a more ini- portant trading centre. Imports that used to come in by sea through Jaffa or Haifa now come through Beirut in Arab Lebanon. thence overland to Amman for distribution. British lied Dress To Distribute Danadlan Parcels TUR%TO. November l — Conl- die-n Red Cmsa relief shipments to Britain and the comment will be distributed tlirouilh the Brltml Red Cross Society from now on. it was’ uplsined today, by Di‘- W. Stuart Stanbury, national Com- missioner of the Canadian Red Cross. Dd’. Stenbury made the statement in contradiction of a rumor that the Society would withdraw from the field of international relief with the closing of the overseas office in London, September 80. "Assistance to war-deviated ootmtrlea and victims of use scale dildo! in other lands is a first obligation of the Red Cross and We will continue to contribute cloth- ing. food, drugs and other help l8 long ae there ia need." he Mid- The Iondon office of the Cana- dian Red Cross Society was estab- llshed ten yea-rs ago to handle the vest wet-time undertakings of the Society ovcsess. During the will’ years. the Society distributed 16,4468! ardclea of clothing and hospital supplies to Britain. Before D-diw. five large warehouses out- side London were packed with Canadian npplies for the troops and for liberated peoples of Europe. At the close of hostilities. t-he over- sees office collected 0.1130 we!’ brides end fill!) children of Cane- dien service men retumine home from IINII. fitted Stem with clothing and arranged their pus!!! and eaeim to Canada. marshes war- of llapls led Otahs. blood for trsnmmeo. services for finsdiea trom- Iuniansnt nsniento of Canadian generosity in Greet kiteln ls Tap- law haqttal which the Society nee-ted dining the war ss s Canadian hoqsitei m servicemen. with accommodation for 000 beds. It has since been presented to the British government and is being us- ed alareaeerahcesitreforrhetnn- etle eardlso ailnenta in children. mllmcar. baa-ms manna. Oalweywlreland ... (UPI - Three le were‘ ktlle: WW by lllllflill‘ in different parts of timber es the same evaaiaa. l Tint GUARDIAN. CHARLOTFETUWN Psychiatrists Find Hunting _fir_ound By ARTHUR IDSON or (b) illiterate. Food Tastes Happy WASHINGTON. Nov. 2 — (A?) —Any man who doesn't like fried eggs may be either (a) neurotic Maybe you never thought that your tastes in food could be s happy hunting ground for a psy- chiatrist. Yet if you're unusually finicky, it mayibe a clue. For example, teats have shown that while practically every nor- mal man likes fried eggs, one out of five neurotic men don't like their eggs fried; and among iiliterates, one out of 10 say no to 18, of Owen Yvonne Cobels, fried eggs. And take the humble cabbage. Only three per cent of all nor- mal males checked said they didn't like cabbage. But almost a third of the neurotic: and illiterates tested hated‘ the stuff. Professor Richard Wallen o 2O foods, he found that 62 per cent of the neurotics said they dis- cent were so particular. faulty and strange." in: base, William D. Altus ates. made public today written for December chology. his tests. "Too precious," said Altus. beer. like mush. Altus didn't drawn any tic, too. Increased Dock Space Planned For Dublin By Michael 0’Mara Canadian Press Staff Writer dock for the port of Dublin. Authorities expect the years to complete. Construction has begun about 250.000 square handling equipment will and several 3.0001pound lifts. tyipe oil ship trading in the port. Dredgers are dee irw port's entry Dublin. Death 0f A Diplomat dead Sound. Ont, is separated from the man she wishes to marry by iron bars and immigration laws. Her fiance, Eric Willan, “overstayed" his shore leave from a British ship in Montreal, applied for permanent Seek Employment 0f More Section liands By Railway (YITAWA. NW- 1 —(@')— Non- observance of safety regulations by the railways was charged today by a union seeking the employment of more section hands. Counsel and witnesses for the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees (T.LIC.) told the Board of Transport Commission- ers aafety rules are continually being violated because the com- panies do not employ enough men on each section. The union is asking for a board order instructing the railways to increase the number of mainten- ance employees per section. The railways are opposing the appli- cation. Morria W. Wright, Ottawa law- yer representlng the Brotherhood told the board today the safety of the travelling public and of rail- Western Reserve University ran the food tests on neurotics. Using t residence in Canada, and was re- fused as he could not meet finan- ciai requirements. He and Yvonne were picked up at Niagara Falls, by immigration officials and now Eric, 21, is awaiting deportation to other work is under way. way employees was being “con- stantly and seriously jeopardized" because sections do not have en- ough men to carry out prescribed safety regulations while repair and Certain safety rules were honor- liked three or more of the items. Among the normal, only 1l per Wallen decided that the dislikes begin in early life. as the result of "emotional experiences at meals, . capricious training method; and fear of the new andl ‘ With Wallen's charts for a start- 0f Santa Barbara College tried some- what similar tests onarmy illiter- Results of those tests were in an article issue of the Journal of Consulting Psy- Altus said he had to discard 12 of the 20 foods Wallen used in For instance, he figur- ed that anyone who couldn't read wouldn't be likely to know much about mushrooms or Swiss Cheese. But even when ha substituted better known foods, he found the illiterates pretty choosey. too. Al- though anyone who has watched soldiers on Saturday night would never guess it. Seventeen per cent of the army illiterates didn't like Also, 23 per cent didn't like buttermilk and 20 per cent didn't con- clusions, but he suspects one rea- son for the iliiterates’ poor food showing: They tend to be neuro- DITBLIN, Nov. l --(CP) -{Work is in progress here to increase deep- water bertfhage and warehouse ac- commodation and build s. new dry- improve- ments to take from five to seven at one warehouse to have a storage area. of feet. Goods- include five continuous package elevators The new graving dads will be 080 feet long and 100 feet wide with a depth of 32 feet. ‘This will be blg enough to accommodate the largest the channel, to enable deeper-draught vessels to ply into Ireland's first diplomatic repre- sentative aibroaxi. Art OBriain. ta Britain. Yvonne says she will fol- low him to England. if ecessary. Stettinius’ Book Gives Background Df Yalta Conference By 1M. ROBERTS, Jr, (Associated Press News Analyst) One 0f Edward Stettinius’ last big projects was the preparation of a book, "Roosevelt And 'I'lie Russians," defending the much- crlttcized agreements at Yalta. The book was for publication Nov. 8. but. wpies were released immediately by Doubleday and Company on word of the former Secretary of State's death. Stéttinius presents the back- ground and the events of Yalts from the standpoint of s. leading Allied participant. The atmosphere he depicts is one of Russian rather than allied concessions for the sake of agreement. You get the impression that if Roosevelt. relied too heavily’ on the agreements it was because of Stalin's display of a. great desire to agree. With the atom bomb not yet proved and the Japanese was‘ then expected to last two more years, Russia's entry in that. sector meant the engagement. of vast. numbers of Japanese troops while the Ani- erican invasion oif Js/pan was be- in; prepared. This is cited as bai- anclrig the concessions made to Russia tn Msnchuria and the Kuriles. Stettlniua appraised practically every one of the agreements as a victory. He cites Russian accept- ance of the American conception of the United Nations Security Council as against the voting priv- ilege for each of the 16 Russian republics which Stalin originally sought. He cites the "free election" pledge for Poland and "democrat- ic" processes for the German sat- ellites, the military eo-ordtnatloii agreement for Europe, Soviet con- cession of an occupation zone in Germany for France, and points out that Soviet intentions were softened at several points where she was in a military position to take rather than to bargain. Stettinitis asks, in effect, who could know that the pledges would be violated or that Russian help against Japan would not be need- ed. ‘Phat there should have been better appraisal in the diplomatic fields seems more certain. Roosevelt was obsessed with the idea. that. through personal negot- iation he could obtain Russian cooperation in the post-war per- iod. Be called it his "great design." A consulting engineer in in 1918, OBriain gave up his pro- fession to act as representative of Irish repufblican interests in the United Kingdom. The Irish Riqaib- lican Government of 1919 confirmed him in this post, and he was Irish envoy to Britain until 1M3. Born in 1872. he was president of Yet which wirids its way around the wars and other obstacles of the years with the ilndeviating pur- pose of a stream seeking the sea. was already plain to be seen. Many students of Russian policy were much worried about Ameri- Russtars over-all program, the London Gaelic Iieag-ue for 2i France and-like many contempor- side English prisons for political offences. Diplomatic Appointments India's first diplomatic repre- sentstlve in Dublin. Venn-ill Krlshnan Krishna Menoin, has pre- sented his credentlals as ambassa- dor. Already mdian Ambassador in London Krishna Menon plam to fill the dual post for several ' months until his government appoints e full-time Dublin envoy. Msgr. Ettore Fellci. Titular Archbishop of Corinth. has been appointed Apostolic Nuncio to the Republic of Ireland by Pope Pius. The ofifics had been vacant nearly s year since the death of Moat Rev Paschal Robinson. Born in gegnl. Italy. I He" llil. Msgr. I-‘elici previously served as Papal Nunclo in Santiago and Bel- C. CANBERRA - (OP) - An Aus- tralisn postage stamp was issued 4*" Wu" ""3"" u“ "'3'" ‘recently to commemorate the birth i of Henry Lawson, Australian poet. (li- i i\rii.'l.i LOUR years. He also served as envoy to ary Irish patriots-spent months in- various [0530 can acceptance of Russia at face value during the war. although most of them did not consider it T ‘lent to raise their voices against an ally who was fighting admirably. The situation even dur- lng the "love fee-at," however. was such that in 1944 I pointed out in one of those columns "how rap- idly the Russian sphere is being consolidated." And shortly there- after I egpressed fear that "by yielding to Russia on certain points . . . . . we have been stor- ing up a. whirlwind." But the political lgreements reached at Yalta contained little or no guarantee of implementa- tion. Iven the words tn which they were written were not defined, and are differently interpreted in east and west. Idke that little word "democracy." To be harsh. eae might eey that the western negotiators at Yelle had not studied their Russian les- sons well. To be charitable, it is necessary to remember that. west.- ern diplunsts now have had five more years d intensive negotia- tions on wlIeh to base their sas- picions of the Kremlin. ed only in the breach, Mr. Wright said, and were being violated by maintenance employees "every minute of every day and with the knowledge and consent of the com- panics." He said "flagging" rules-under whi flagmen are sent out io warn approaching trains of track repairs and the like-are “vir- tually a dead letter.” “Employees were working under conditions that jeopardize their health and, in many cases, their lives," Mr. Wright said. Sport Snapshots By TREVOR. ICITON (Canadian Press Staff Writer) TORONTO, Nov. 1 — (OP) —- Andy Lytle, who leaves his Job as sports editor of the Toronto Star this week-end to ref/urn to the Vancouver Sun after Id years. lets his readers in on some o1 toe stories behind the story tn one of his last columns here. Andy skips back to his early assignments here -- covering the Nations: Ilioekey Isasgue games at Maple Peaf Gardens. "Not liking the remoteness of the press box. I used to stand in the aisles to be nearer the scenes of action on the ice and around the benches," he relates. “Finding me a nuisance tliere, Smiths (Conn Smytiae, Leafs boas) tucked me away in a box orctip- led. among others, by ILW. Bickle and W.H. MacBrien, who were on the Board of Directors of the Gardens." Didn't lhylbhg "I was not long there,” writes Andy. "In those times, it. was cus- tomary to hurl directorial irivect- lva and voiced disapproval at the referees. Overnight I was remov- ed from that vicinity and shifted down the red box line to seats from which it was fair run along the carpets to bench brawls. ‘flioilch I wasn't too slow in ec- tion, I was always half a dozen breathless jumps behind Smythe." Satisfying lob Andy lists his assignment to cover the second Ioula-Schmeling fight as his most satisfying and tells why. “In the fight camp, Sehn-iellng was surrounded by beefy, grrgg. ant Germans and 1f aver in life a. Jew showed patience and forebearance under calculated, cruel persecution, Joe Jaoobs, Schmelingb fight manager ., . did." writes Andy. "I didn't. see Jacobs after Schmeling was so swiftly dispatch- ed s few nights later, but I'm convinced the little man could only have been gratified by the extremely brutal fashion in which Iouta disposed of an adversary who had. some time earlier, trum- iliated him before thousands." RED C3058 HOSPITALS HALIFAX, N. S. — (GP) — Three Red Cross outpost hospitals are scheduled to be opened in Nova Sco- tia before the end of the year. They are at Guysboro. Bsddeck and Musquodoboit Harbor. There are already 10 Red Cross hospitals in the province. BEARBS’ NEW HIT SWEEPS BDUNTRY! sifiss Tleeseldekalllnltklfeihen seasosgkdreptastsssssaiioal dayniorepeopledlscever lnllii..llld Wild Ceet only e dlwiel Yo. sic-elm wince-mom are delidoue- and they work! Gctapackcoda I “v10: i SERIES Buy Men et banks, Investment dealers‘: er through your Company's Peyroll Savings Plea» CSLI A DAT! WOI-l OAMNLE. Sash. -—l@)-- It was all over in e day when the Saskatchewan tuberculosis X-rav unit visited Carlyle. In that time 1.140 persons-almost. the attire communist-were X '