LILLIAN COLLIER and her husband, Eric, went into the rough northern Cariboo area of British Columbia 28 years ago at lier's the urging of Mrs. Col- grandmother, a full- blooded Chilcoutin Indiah, Their object was to restore wildlife to a 150,000-acre tract of land ' framed by dark, shingled hair," t Eric Collier recalls in his book. . adventure and hardship, have in- on which they obtained trap- ping rights. Their project suc- ceeded and the story of their life and work in the area is told in Mr. Collier's first book, "Three Against the Wilder- ness". Mrs. Collier is shown here in Vancouver as the book was launched. FIGHTING NATURE 'UK. Prost 'Go Underground By STEWART MacLEOD Canadian Press Staff 'Writer LONDON (CP)--When Britain's |street offences bill went into force i was freelv predicted that flourish underground. But even the prophets must be surprised with their accuracy. London prostitutes now are ply- ing their trade on undergrodnd Tube trains. They started on this beat a few days after the new bill, which gives prostitutes up to three months in jail, scared them off the streets last month. Their new gimmick is to slink up beside fellow strap-hangers and whisper invitations in their ear. : Unless the solicited man elects | to lay a complaint--and few do-- police can do nothing. As long as the girls are travelling they can't be arrested for loitering with in- tent There is no estimate of the number of girls working on the Tubes but police say it's only a small percentage of the 12,000 banished from the streets. Others have established their own meth- ods of beating the law. The old business of advertising "models" and * fons" op The description still fits to a large degree, but the years, their creased the look of kindlv wis- dom in her dark hazel eyes and added a few lines of determina- |bulletin shops is flourishing. Hundreds of the cards are on display in Soho, near Piccadilly Circus, where] girls are said to pay up to £5 an prostitution would continue toad. The sale" ad on these bulletin boards is usuallv sixpence a week. ONLY THREE ARRESTS have asked whether the grocers who own the bulletin boards are technically living off immoral earnings. But no such "charges have ever reached court. developed is to form into groups of eight or 10 and produce a book- let, complete with pictures, meas- urements, phone numbers |prices. They ute this guide" to likely clients. ing. It is no offence for models and hostesses to advertise, even at problems for police, it has suc- } Lm ceeded in its purpose of cleaning up the streets. There have been only about three prostitutes ar- rested in London in the last month. Normally there would be hundreds. have turned to work in offices, {stores and restaurants. Employ- [ment agencies say their statistics for the last month support this theory, many female applicants listed their past profession as prostitu- tion. itutes CHCH-2'V Channel 1l--Hamilton WGR-TV Channel 2---Baifale WKBW-TV Channel 7--Buffale WROC-TV Channel 5--Rochester WEEN-TV Channel ¢----Buffale WEDNESDAY P.M. 5:00 P.M. {1--Family Theatre 6--Art in Action S--Playhouse 4--Fun To Learn 2--Gene Autry 16 P.M, 4--Feature Film 5:30 P.M. 7--My Friend Flicka 8--Huckleberry Hound 6:00 P.M, 7--Early Show 11.6--News 2-Jet Jackson 6:15 P.M. 6--8ea Hunt 6:30 P.M 11---Family Theatre 8-4-2--News: Weather 6:45 P.M. S----Huntley-Brinkley Report 6-4-2--News 7:00 P.M. 6--Tabloid S5--Leave it to Beaver 4-C 2--Manhunt 7:15 P.M 7--News: Weather 7:30 P.M, 7--Black Saddle 6--Leave it to Beaver $-2---Wagon Train boards iutside small i1--Family Theatre 5--Playhouse 4--Fun To Learn ( 2 Three 4--Life of Riley 10:00 AM, 4---On The Go * 5-2--Dough Ra M) 10:30 A.M. 7--Morning Show 5-2--Treasure Hunt 4--December Bride 11:00 AM, 11--Jane Gray Show 52--Price Is Right 4-1 Love Lucy 11:30 AM, 11--Anything Goes 5-2--Concentration 4-Top Dollar 12:00 Noon 11--Bugs, Bunny and Friends Restl ¢ an_ ordinary "f Feature * Film price of an ary "for eature ou 6--Roy Rogers Several Lond on newspapers 11:6 Metro News 11--Family §-4-2--News: 6:45 3 PM. S5--Huntley-Brinkley Report 6-4-2--News 7:00 P. Another system the girls have and hire men to distrib- "model: and hostess 6--Tabiold Gun 5.2--Tic Tac Dough 4--News; Weather I-Site Trooper 2~Highway Patrol 12.15 P 7:1 + .M. 6--Matinee 7--News: Weather 12:30 P.M, 7:80 PM. 7--Love That Bob 5-2--It Could be You 4--Search for Tomorrow 12:45 P.M, 11---Movie Matinee 4---Guiding Light 1:00 P.M. 7<Music Bingo 5--Movie 4--Meet the Millers 2-Mid-day matinee 1:30 P.M, 7--For The Ladles 4--As thé World Turns 2:00 P.M, 7-Day in Court 6--Chez Helene | 4--For Better or Worse 2--Queen For Day 2:15 But again police can do noth- 7--Gale Storm 6--Nation's Business 5--Border Patrol 4--To Tell The Truth intment. £5 ap rg ill has created new While th P.M. 118-Live A Borrowed Life 7--Ossle and Harriet 5.2---Price Is Right 4--Men Into Space 00 P.M 6--Scan 8:00 P.M, 11-6--Deputy 7--Donna Reed 5-2--Bat Masterson 4--Betty Hutton 5:30 P.M. 11-6--Talent Caravan 7--Real McCoy's 5-2--Staccato 4--Johnny Ringo 9:00 P.M. 11-6.5-2--Perry Como 4--M'llionaire 7--The Hawaiian Eye 9.30 P.M. Police believe many of the girls 4--1 Got a Secret 10:00 P.M 116--The Unforseen 7--~BoxiLg 5-2--This is Your Life 4--Circle Theatre 0:30 PM. 11---0.H.A. Hockey 7-Pat Boone 6--Close-up 5-2-Bachelor Father although none of the 11.6--Nursey School 2:30 P.M, 11-6--Open House 7-Gale Storm 11-6--Exvloration 5-Home Cooking 9:50 P.M. tion around her mouth. Simply dressed in a tweed suit and small black hat as she trav- elld here with her husband. she explained that she "loves all the things all women love," clothes included. "But I wouldn't trade the free- dom of my life for city living and the loveliest clothes," she said. ernment has lifted a ban on 227 Communist Chinese posed by the former government before this British colony be- came partly independent last May. 5-2--Wichita Town 10:46 P.M. 7-Time For Sports 4--House Party 2~-Thin Man 3:00 P.M 7--Untouchables BAN LIFTED SINGAPORE (AP) -- The gov- hawk 5-2--Tennessee Ernie 4--Playhouse 90 7--Beat The Clock 10:00 P.M. 5-2---Dr. Malone 6--Manhunt 4-Big Payoff 4 '2:30 P.M, 11---Music For You 7-Who Do You Trust 6-Fi~hting Words 11-TBA Film 11-7.6-5-4-2---Newr 6-TBA books, im- 1:15 7--Playhouse 6 Viewpoint 11:50 P.M, 11---Late Show 6--Stage Seven 10.30 P.M, 11--Headline 6--Live and Learn 7-Border Patrol S8.3-Jack Parr 8 2-From These Roots | S5--Flight THURSDAY EVENING 5:00 P.M, 6--This Living World 7--My Friend Flicka 2--Hucklenerry rouno 6:00 P.M. 5--Capt. of Detectives 2--Law of the Plainsman 7:45 P.M, 11---Provincial Affairs 4 -Zane Grey TIheatre 6--~Man From Black. §5-2--You Bet Your Life Family's Story In B.C. North VANCOUVER (CP) -- Lillian Collier, a woman with Indian blood in her veins and a love of the woods in her heart, has looked a bear in the eye and tended a trapline in the primeval forest. But in the city she prefers to stick close by her author hus- band, Eric Collier, Mrs. Collier came to town with her husband to launch his first book, Three Against the Wilder- ness, a story of the Colliers' 30 vears in the wilds of the northern Cariboo where they restored wild life to a trapped-out area of 150,- 000 acres. Twenty-eight years ago, at the urging of Mrs. Collier's full- blooded Chilcotin grandmother, they had begun to live the story of the book. MOVED TO WILDERNESS They set out in a buckboard with their infant son, Veasey, and| drove 25 miles north from Riske Creek into the woods of the trap- ped - out Chilcotin area, deter- mined to restore the wild life to a 150,000-acre area to which they had been given trapping rights. Lala, Killy's grandmother, had | told Eric that if beaver could be restored to the area other ani- mals would follow to live near the water. "My grandmother believed that if a young man went back into that country and worked hard to bring the beaver and muskrats Once a year they were able to make the 140-mile return trip to Williams Lake for supplies that the woods could not provide. Some-times they went far afield for game and Mrs. Collier tells, as simply as most women men- tion their favorite brand of short. ening, how she helped her hus- Wand shoot a bear during their first winter. "We needed the fat to mix with moose tallow for cooking," she said. "I threw a lighted pine [toreh into the bear's winter cave aud Exile shot him as he stormed out." She recalls, too, a day when her son was separated from her on a berry-picking outing by a bear and her cubs. "I was so afraid she'd notice him but she didn't. We both stared in each other's eyes. Sud- denly she gathered up her babies and ran and I gathered up mine and did the same." Mrs. Collier met her husband at Riske Creek, a trading post on the Williams Lake trail lead. ing west to coastal Bella Coola. Eric worked there as a clerk and Lilly came in with her grand- mother. ATTRACTIVE VISITOR 'She wore a neat, home-made, blue print skirt which fitted her like a glove, and her attractive face--shaped like a plover egg, and freckled like one too -- was CROSSWORD PUZZLE id B. Coin of India @. Brightly colored end of & church 8. Revetment 4. Extremity 21. Sheep's [SIPIACIERBIEICIOT] PIETRI TILL ILIAMIA] AD] TIMHIEN IEIETR] 2 [BIOJANRF HA 28. Cone sumed Di fish 9. Projecting 25. Danc- ers cyme bals 9. Its capital 26. Spear is Madrid 11, Makes tidy 27.Small child 28. Bridge charges 17. Confederate 30. Declares (dial) 15. God of pleasure 18, Jellylike substance handle 83. Sleeveless garment 34, Hastened 85, Russian inland sea for score 37. Male swan in pinochle 388. Miner's goal &--Verdict 4:00 8:00 AM. 1 7---Window on the World 5-2--Today 4--~News Roundup 8:15 AM, Captain Kangaroo 8:30 AM, 7---Devotions 9:00 AM. 7--Komedy Korner 5-2--House Street &-Serials 4:30 7--American Bandstand h 6--8ee For Yourself 5.2--8pl't Personality 4---Edge of is Yours 2-Tombstone Territory P.M. 1:00 P.M, 11-76-5-4-2- News Sports "ns P.M, 7-Playhouse 6 Viewpoint 2-8ports Reel . 11:5 °.M, on Hig I in Late Show S--International Detective | 5-2--Jack Paar Night SETS PRECEDENT SALISBURY, Southern Rhode- sia (AP)--A brilliant boy of Asian origin, Ashwin Shingadia, 15, has cracked a 60-year-old color bar here by being admitted to the 4--Film Festival Church of England's Peterhouse | school at Marandellas. Rev. Frank Snell told other parents of the boy's exceptional qualifica-| tions as a student - athlete and | |they assented. | Finds Hea" - ~ Substan Toronto, Unt. (Special)--For the first time science has found a pew healing substance with the ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain and itching Thousands have relieved with this b Science Now Shrinks Piles'\ Without Pain Or Discomfort ce That Relieves Pain And Itci.ng As It Shrinks Hemorrhoids that sufferers were able 10 make such statements as "Piles have ceased to be a problem!' And among these sufferers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid con ditions, some of even 10 1020 years! right in the privacy of their own home without any discomfort or inconvenience In' one hemorrhoid case after another, "very striking improve. ment" was reported and verified by doctors' observations Pain was promptly relieved. And while gently relieving pain, actual reduction or retraction (shrinking) took place And most amazing of all--=this improvement was maintained in eases where doctors' observations were continued over a period of many months! In fact, results were so thorough All this, without the use of nar coties, anesthetics or astringents of any kind. The secret is a new heal- ing substance (Bio-Dyne) -- the discovery of a famous.scientific ine stitute. Already, Bio-Dyne is in wide use for healing injured tissue on all parts of the This new healing substance is offered in supposilory or ointment form called Preparation H Ask for individually sealed convenient Preparation H_ Suppositories or | Preparation H ointment with special applicator. Preparation H is sold at all drug stores Satisfaction guaran or money refund | | TELEVISION LOG Once Famous Sportscaster CBLT-TV Channel! 6--Toronte Bares Fantastic Career Bill Stern was a man known to millions of sports fans from coast to coast because of his colorful broadcasts of the bigger events, The whole sensational story of! Stern's tacular career is told for jacket of the book, "THE TASTE OF ASHES" ( J. McLeod! Ltd.) by Bill Stern with Oscar Fraley, explains: "His rise was fast; his fall was fantastic; his recovery was inspiring." He col- lapsed at the mike before an audience of millions while he was an established star televising the Sugar Bowl game. This is the true story behind his collapse, and it is just as exciting as any of Bill's fa- maus broadcasts. Despite the fact that Bill Stern wa. constant- ly before the public, no one knew that behind the scene he was waging a relentless war against drug addiction. No one knew the pain and anguish he suffered following amputation of a leg, nor the dis- illusionment and despair that preceded the crack-up. This is a frank and outspoken auto biography and tells the whole story, including the shocking de- tails of the medical origin of the addiction. It is also a revealing account of his public life. The reader travels right along- side one of radio's brightest stars, meets famous personal ities, and witnesses big moments of broadcasting histor". Stern's collaborator, Oscar Fraley, is the well-known sports writer whose daily UPI syndicated column "Today's Sports Parade" has appeared since 1938. e first time. As theo col-|we are to do less This is an inspiring book for those inside and outside the sports world. ANNIVERSARY EDITION been published. The author explains why it is that humans have so largely con- tinued to fail; and what it is we need to learn about ourselves if failing. To do this he uses a quotation by Dr. G. Brock Chisholm, Canadian World Federation for Mental Health, as follows: "So far in the history of the world there has never been enough mature people in the right places." The author says most adults remain mostly adults because thev never do more than skim the surface. They get the habit of being surface-minded; with surface opinions that be- come surface dogmatisms. The author has performed a mature function in writing "The Mature Mind". He has mirable clarity the na mature adult and liant suggestions on 'us can achieve a greater degrée hiatrist, and former head of|eriti § COULD YOU A NUGLEAR If your family lived through such a raid, could you look after them? Find out what you should know about survival in this week's Star Weekly. SURVIVE ATTACK ? OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS Suggest That You Don't let Old Man Winter beat you to the punch! Be prepared. Now's the time to get your house ready to weather the cold . . so you and your whole family can keep warm, comfortable and healthy no matter how hard the winds blow or how low the tem- peratures drop. Let OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS | help you get your home ready before Winter comes FOR THE DO-IT-YOURSELFER! YES... OSHAWA WOOD PRODUCTS Are Conducting Another FREE INSTRUCTIONAL COURSE In Recreation Room Building DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED . . . ENROLL NOW To be held on 3 consecutive Monday evenings commencing November 9th at 7 o'clock in our Courtice Showroom. back, then everything would be good again," Mrs. Collier said. "So we went. First we lived in a tent and them we built our cabin." It was a one-room, sod-roofed log cabin that served as home| for 15 vears, a headquarters be-| side an unnamed lake half a mile| from Meldrum Creek and nearly 300 miles northeast of Vancouver. To My Fellow Citizens! Once a year the good people of this city ban them- selves together as one unit under the banner of what is called The Greater Oshawa Community Chest which raises funds so that sixteen philanthropic or- ganizations in our City might be able to carry on humanitarian work in their various fields. Each of these organizations fill a very definite need in the general life of our community and all of them operate on funds supplied to them by the Com- munity Chest. NEW DIETARY SUPPLEMENT WAMPOLE LETHINAL - SOYA LECITHIN | As Mayor of the City of Oshawa and as a citizen | heartily endorse this activity and urge every citizen to assume his or hershare of this great responsibility. We are certainly fortunate in Oshawa to have a large number of citizens who are willing to give of their time so generously that these various organizations might operate and all we as citizens are asked to do is to help provide the necessary funds. While few of us know intimately of all the work of all the organ- izations yet each of us, | am sure, are familiar with at least some of the organizations. This being so, | am satisfied to support to the best of my ability the Community Chest, and, therefore, ask my fellow citi- +zens to join me wholeheartedly in this great cause. Lyman A. Gifford Mayor, Corporation of the City of Oshawa - i Downtown Oshawa Main Office and Sh 84 SIMCOE ST. 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