ine OSHAWA IME, Monday, September 11 We A AF Tay 7 British Liberals Start Campaign By ALAN HARVEY LONDON (CP) -- Britains small but gallant band of Liber- als makes another bid this month to climb out of the po- litical coal-hole and recapture long-lost prestige. Admittedly, only a few chinks of light are showing. The Con- servatives and the Labor party have dominated the sunny up- lands for so long that hardly anybody notices the dogged, in- domitable Liberals. Now the party of William Ewart Gladstone, Herbert Henry Asquith and David Lloyd George is gathering itself for another small move toward the sun. With a membership esti- mated at some 300,000, the Lib- erals are launching a drive for another 100,000. The campaign is to start dur- ing the Liberal assembly at Ed- inburgh, to be held Sept. 21-23. Party leader Jo Grimond, a tall and handsome man who looks like a matinee idol just getting ready for more mature roles. will start the ball rolling on the closing day of the assembly He will conclude the cam- CE TA Be mr ak a po ey iy gambit in Britain. The 'but" encompasses a wide range of reservations, including the com- plaint that a vote for the Liber- als is a wasted vote; that the party is too woolly and stands for nothing clear-cut; that it is too thin in potential leaders. In some respects, it is a vic- tim of the British bias toward a two-party system, which mili- tates against all but the big bat- talions. In the last general elec- tion in 1959, the victorious Con- servatives polled 49.4 per cent of the vote and Labor 43.8. The Liberals, with 216 candi-{ dates for the 630 seats st stake, obtained only 5.9 per cent of the vote. Only six of their stand- ard-bearers won seats in the Commens, recalling the post- war jibe that the Liberals could scarcely elect enough members of Parliament to fill a taxi Of the 216 candidates, 56 lost their deposits; but on the brighter side 26 finished in sec- ond place, compared with 11 in 1955. | SHORT-LIVED GLORY | This was still scant consola-| tion for a party that had experi-| paign Dec. 2 with a speech be- fore Young Liberals in London. | nced a brief moment of glory] National Mine Mill ge Tt 1958, wh 0 gory) dent Ken Smith, Nelson Thi- REFUSED ADMITTANCE TO UNION RALLY dent Mike Solski, were all bar- | ident Don Gillis. The refusal red from attending a Sunday ' to admit the national officers was quelled by the use of tear gas. Presi- Bonham Carter narrowly won a| bault, and District 2 presi- | rally called by Local 598 Pres- resulted in a near riot, which ~CP Wirephoto LOSING BATTLE ! : LN In the iate 19th and early byelection at Torrington, Devon, | {20th century, the Liberals domi-|sparking hopes of a Liberal re-|Edinburgh assembly, Basil Wig- that there was still a long way nated British politics. Their vival oder, chairman of the agenda|to go. ; ~ i YARMOUTH N.S. (CP)--The eclipse began after the First] The 1959 election extinguished| committee, described the Liber-| Barring some radical change == con oro 00 0 The Sharp Trophy, awarded World War and they have been|those hopes. Since then the only|als as Britain's fastest-growing|in the political climate, that : Pp to the winners, was last won by fighting a losing battle ever|Liberal crumb of comfort has|party seems the best short summing. board of directors Saturday ; since, although superficially at|been extracted from the "little| In the last year, he said, Lib-|up of Liberal prospects on the/Nova Scotia government the re- Mekles a yr. Biv Renn least their avowed brand of tol-| general election' of last Novem- as been held by the Nova | : y Edinburgh confer-| : erals had d 372 local coun.|¢Ve Of the |sumption of the match next|™ erant humanism is perhaps as|ber, in which the Liberals dis:|{°r2 3 ag sane i tia government in trust until ied |cil seats and the total number| oer --|year. : close to the British heart as any|placed Labor as runners-up to 4 : : such time as the match re- other political philosophy. [pla Conservatives in byelections|of Liberal alderman had risen SENATE HISTORY Directors said the match, can-| gymeg, tides inundated large areas of | "Pm really as much as Lib-|at Carshalton, Petersfield. Lud-|from 621 to 993. This was "sat-| The first woman appointed to|celled in 1959 after no bluefin| g, far this year less than 12 weeks old, naps on a bench | ward the Texas Gulf coast. | Ga veston island |eral as anything, but . . ." is alow and Tiverton. isfactory progress," said the|the Canadian Senate was Mrs.|tuna were caught the year be-\tuna have been landed in wat- in the Calveston County Court- | Robert, and parents sought | --AP Wirephoto fairly common conversational| In announcing plans for thechairman, but he recognized |Cairine Wilson, in 1930. |fore, creates a "tremendous at-lers off southern Nova Scotia. house, Sunday morning, as | refuge in the building as high |---- te ---------------------------- : Hibachi i -------------------- porn Willing To Pay For Stolen Art By BERNARD SAVEER to an outcry to keep the paint- NEW YORK (AP)--It's been|ing in Britain. a grand summer for art thieves. | In all, 76 important works/NO QUESTIONS ASKED have been stolen in the United] Insurance companies dislike States, France and Britain, with|talk of ransom. a market value of at least $5,-| But an agent for Austrian in-| 000,000. |surers of eight Cezanne paint- Does Sus mean dhe Ynder. lings stolen bn Augen Jon the wor as gone aesthetic, giv-|Vendome Pavilion a ix-en- | ing up girlie magazines to peer|Provence, France (market| into the three eyes of a Picasso value $2,000,000) has declared: | femme? "We want those paintings| "If professional thieves are back and we're willing to pay--| involved, they're after one thing no questions asked." --money," says Huntington T., Millionaire collector G. David Block, vice-president of the Mc-| Thompson, whose house in the Laughlin Company of Washing Pinshurgh Subius wae looted on, a brokerage firm specializ-|of six Picassos, two Legers, a ing in fine art insurance. "These Dufy and a Miro (estimated works are too well known to be value $365,000 to twice that offered to a reputable dealer or|amount) late in July, has of- collector, so the probability is|fered $100,000 -- no questions| that ransom would be sought." asked. Ransom---and the profession of. One possible market would be| f lofty motives--figuréd in the among greedy collectors. latest theft to amaze the art, "I can think of collectors," | world, the snatching of a Goya|says a top museum official who| portrait of the Duke of Welling-\has been with several leading| ton from London's famed Na- museums and galleries, "who! tional Gallery. would knowingly purchase | The act is an attempt to stolen works. They are like mis-| pick the pockets of those who ers. They 'would be satisfied to| love art nore tha Shari a hide J pauting and then gloat] som note wi obin {over it all alone." overtones said. It asks $392,000) In July, 57 works by Matisse, | --the amount paid by the gal- Utrillo, Dufy and other moderns Jety and a joungation to Tl yes stolen tom an exhibit at merican collector who had|St. Tropez. They are valued at| paid the same price but yielded $2,000,000. mosphere" of inter national friendship. ASK RESUME MATCHES TINY CARLA REFUGEE Robert Lee Marciglio Jr., 6 hurricane Carla moved to- NICKEL STAINLESS STEEL TRAINS LIKE NEW AFTER 25 YEARS! The Canadian, the C.P.R.'s nickel stainless steel streamliner, has been flashing across Canada on a daily schedule for more than seven years, still as gleaming bright as the day it went into service. The world's first stainless steel train made its initial run from Denver to Chicago over twenty-five years ago. And it's still going strong after logging more than 3,000,000 miles. IN ENGLAND CLASSIC GRILLE OF ROLLS ROYCE CRAFTED IN NICKEL STAINLESS STEEL The reputation of Rolls Royce for meticulous attention to design detail is evident in the hand- crafted radiator shell of nickel stainless steel. Other nickel alloys are used in the engine and transmission to insure long dependable service. Easy come, easy go...that was me until now! | __ But with marriage in the offing, I've become | & a serious saver. The secret? Two separate | Eh accounts: a Personal Chequing Account for | ™ paying bills, a Savings Account for saving. | | More Musicals Broadway Trend By WILLIAM GLOVER ter Fonda, the son of star| Associated Press Drama Writer| Henry, in Blood, Sweat and NEW YORK (AP) -- Broad- Stanley Poole; Collin Wilcox way's new season is starting onjand Clinton Kimbrough in Look, the up and up. There's an up-We've Come Through, another turn in show production and an|drama; and Lee Venora and upsurge of fresh talent. Joan Weldon, in the musical The big trend is to more mu-| Kean. | sicals. : Two English newcomers are Twenty - nine premieres arc| Richard Johnson in The Com- scheduled between now and| plaisant Lover and Bill Travers Christmas, the mid-point of thelin A Cook for Mr. General. theatrical year. This is five|TV EXPATRIATES more than during the same| The freshman writing contin- span last year. Early planning sent includes three who have for the later half indicates totallgnotteq their skills in TV-- output by the end of May couldiSteven Gethers, author of A easily outdo the 1960-61 total of Cook For Mr. General; Arthur 45 shows. | Carter, High Fidelity, and A. E. The 10 song-and-dance diver-\Hotchner, The Short, Happy sions due by New Year fall justiTife a drama based on the one shy of the previous season's works of Ernest Hemingway. entire effort : | Also coming out with first The agenda represents invest-|seripts are actor Ossie Davis ments of about $6,000,000. © | (Pyrlie Victorious); Waldemar People who are always saying| Hansen (The Garden Sweets); Broadway should give greaterithe prothers James and William opportunity to fledgling artists|Goldman (Blood, Sweat and should note with relish that 10 Stanley Poole); Harold Pinter ventures involve new authors((The Caretaker); Morris L. and composers. Several others|West (Daughter of Silence). have verdant directors and pro-| In the musical division, Jerre ducers. |Herman does his first score in THE OLD AND NEW Milk and Honey, and Peter Familiar stars will dominate|Stone supplies the book for the on-stage action, but a sprin-|Kean. | kling of fresh faces have leading] Departing from the pattern of recent seasons, only four early arrivals are imports from| IN ITALY Modern transportation builds world markets for nickel - a , NEW LEONARDO DA VINCI MAKES WIDE USE OF STAINLESS, OTHER NICKELALLOYS The new Italian luxury liner Leonardo da Vinci uses gleaming nickel stainless steel and bright nickel silver for hardware and ornamental accessories, strong, tough and durable nickel alloy steels for heayy duty engine parts. Nickel stainless steel is used widely throughout the world in the construction of modern streamlined trains, planes, ocean liners and automobiles--because of its bright beauty and ability to withstand corrosion and high temperatures. Nickel alloy steels are the strong, tough, durable materials that carry the load in modern transportation. They're used for automotive IN THE UNITED STATES transmissions and engine parts, for the heavy duty machinery and structural parts of ocean-going ships and lake freighters, for planes, trains, trucks and buses. Canada is the world's largest producer of nickel. And Inco, through sales, research and market development operations, maintains a NEW JET AIRCRAFT PROMISE HIGHER continuing program for the expansion of international markets for SPEEDS FOR COMMERCIAL FLIGHT ...The "Royal" calls this its Two-Account | roles. Established headliners in j Inco nickel. clude Barbara Cook, Bette Davis, Julie Harris ,Sally Ann Howes, Kim Hunter, Molly Pi- con, Elaine Stritch and Julie Wilson--who is making her in- itial bid in drama instead of song. The overseas contingent includes Elisabeth Bergner, Ka- tina Paxinou and Googie With- ers. The stellar, male company lists Sydney Chaplin, Alfred Drake, George Gobel, Frederic March, Burgess Meredith, Rod Steiger and Rudy Vallee. Yves Montand, Sir-Michael Redgrave and Emlyn Williams are among transatlantic visitors. The opera-concert world pro- vides Mimi Benzell, Jean Fenn and Robert Weede. Y oun g performers tackling important assignments are Pe- abroad. Pinter's avant garde | charade, Graham Greene's comedy The Complaisant Lover, and Robert Bolts historic! drama, A Man For All Seasons, | were London hits. The Maid's| Room is an adaptation from al Paris fondant by Marcel Ach-| ard. { The established drama writ- ing contingent includes Tennes- see Williams (Night of the Igu-| ana) and Paddy Chayevsky| (Gideon). Prominent on the mu- sical lineup are Frank Loessner (How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying), Arthur Schwartz (The Gay Life), Rich- ard Adler (Kwamina), Noel {Coward (Sail Away), and Betty Comden, Adglph Green, Jule iy (Subways Are For Sleep-! Plan. And it has proved to me I can keep my hands off my savings, can give them a chance to grow. It's a life-saver for serious savers. Simple. Sensible. And it works! Try it. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA More Inco nickel than ever before wi ine expanding late Canada's economic growth and create world markets . . . helping to build trade balances, stimu- 11 be exported to Inco's more jobs for Canadians. Today, designers are planning commercial jets capable of reaching Mach 3 (approximately 2100 miles an hour). At these speeds, nickel stainless steel and other special nickel alloys are necessary to withstand intense heat and high stresses. THE INTERNATIONAL NICKEL ro COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED 88 YON GE STREET, TORONTO