journalism falls to lowest levels in teuton nation gruesome find i would not care to be a ger- aai newspaperman mostly this is there must be some reason for it a newspaper doesnt have the re- beeause of the artificial founda spect thai comes from a demand- tion of the press here resulting from the defeat of germany the sudden suspension in 1s4 of all publishing and the method by readership in the united states or canada if you cant print the news your readers will take a paper that can hallmills murder case was sensation of 20s which licenced subsidized papers i germany the frustrated report- were set up by the occupation cr is accepted as a consequence of powers it has created a system their wsv of life and if he cant in which the sheer will to publish ge t story his own editor deftrs to utter to report is secondary t0 he detection as a natural re to an economic question of survi- su 0 german methods val the licenced papers nev er had it so rood must ence menuo t the reader isome 41yearold ence monitor from bremerhav en accordinglv and wiuing to take germany had been printed i readers as the pic woman b jcaue she raised hofis near th learned muider sceue testified she sa- mrs hall her brother willie st vens and a cousin henry d csc couple made a wuh remarkable calm she i i- d lonely lovers l0 po uer husband went out h and 3 r of mr- new brunswick nj tap teas of words somebody knew but nobody told 1 about it the uneasy secret of the sessaj special prosecutor liooal hallmills murder mystery that the widow mrs trances ste- thirtyiwo years have passed veils hall took her husbands since a strolling couple made rucsome find m hall henry furthermore a newspaper is e- jonh- the unlicencod dicers ratiiirr iraw a ei duuptu beat them ws writes pected t he opinionated and even i 0lrt ere the b laue 01 e ni of s sep h af telrbcteo nrl chirped under a erabapple tree neatly ceivins a phone call the next i ana cnara bodies of the morning she called police to ask itj stevens were ai with the mtt casualties had beer rc- facts as opinion or opinion as fact and he never lays down a hard germany h3s some good news papers but it is true that there not in germany today a paper is obligated to act upon kf in xieven so many times here 1 re- can be quoted in foreign d h b tth dispatches as they used to quote i wolf lhe german news m hrli evrnlfnrr h llm crieo w01i id uirillul news hall hand- if any new brunswick ported clergyman and attractive mrs james mills church eleanor mills 34 choir singer and janitor and wife of the church sexton idest means said hi opened nov 3 1925 th pit woman now seriously ill wit cancer was the major witnes testifying from a stretcher ca man of mo- j t courtroom knew nothiugi t1 ma mrs hiehl despit sexton which which other former sports greats at conacher funeral six representatives of the sports and athletic world stand as a guard of honor by the cas ket of lionel conacher of to ronto one of canadas great sportsmen they are left to right primo camera former world heavyweight champion mervyn red dutton former president of the national hock ey league tommy gorman ot tawa sports promoter dr jack egan of toronto maple leafs in ternationa league baseball team jack corcoran toronto sports promoter roy worters former goalie with the old new york americans of the nhl cp photo rich uranium field brings wealth to poor northern australia area rum jungle is one of the worlds richest uranium fields it is part of australias vast wild northern territory one third the size of europe yet by happy chance this radioactive el dorado lies along side a road and a railway with an airfield and abundant water close by and an ocean port at darwin only an hours drive to the north from holes amog the scrub gum trees miners dressed only in boots and shorts they are within 800 miles of the equator grub tons of soft drab slate with pick and shovel when it comes from the ground it is colorless but as it stands in the air it oxidizes and glows with emerald green or canary yellow the colors are hallmarks of atom ic energys raw material crushed and tumbled into drums it begins as odyssey that takes it possibly into the heart of an american hydrogen bomb pos sibly into the power plant of an american atomic submarine or electric generating plant possibly into the british atomic energy ef fort for us links with out atomic energy commission and the corre sponding british agency are equal ly strong to the rest of the world rum jungle may a part of the twi light of the gods or of the millen nium but to the northern terri tory it may mean realization of a century old dream alan moorehead tells of the dream and the continent it ob sessed in a new hook rum jun gle scribners 350 the northern territory is about onethird the size of europe with a couple of sizable deserts in the centre the rest is good grazing land and a queer kind of jungle where mangrove swamps eucalyp tus scrub kangaroos crocodiles and tree pythons are mixed up to gether rich in minerals its earth has produced gold sil ver lead zinc tin and copper its big cattle stations ranches we would call them have been tremendously profitable at times soldiers who planted water melons cabbages tomatoes and almost everything else in the seed catalog found the yield tremend ous but somehow there seemed to be a hoodoo on the place white men who drifted in would stay a year or two and then drift away again to melbourne sydney bris bane and adelaide at the last cen sus there were fewer than 30000 persons in the whole territory in cluding half castes and those most primitive of men the aborigines once there were an estimated 50000 blackfellows roaming the australian bush today there are probably fewer than 10000 and they are rapidly succumbing to the tragedy of progress as did the american indians in the wild the aborigine tills no land builds no house wears no clothes and except for dogs do mesticates no animals he counts up to two or three on his fingers after that its a lot he eats raw kangaroo or lizard tree grubs and fish he has no concept of private property his language contains no word for yesterday and none for tomorrow like all of history and off of the future yesterday and tomorrow are part of the dreaming almost onefourth of the north ern territory has been set aside for his use but loo often he has tasted civilization and lost h 1 s taste for the wild rather than hunt with his boomerang or his spear and woomera he gets a job as a garage mechanic or cowbov or better yet no regular job at all then he can do a little fetching and carrying for the white man enough to enable him to live and to sit in the sunshine outside the kub with his sombrero pulled over is eyes and the back of his bright shirt against a wall his wife is more likely to listen there are times though when the blackfellows feel some urge that comes to them out of the dreaming then they go walk about return to nature the native will tell his employ er that he will be gone a little while throwing off his clothes the aborigine will pick up his spear and his boomerang and stride out naked into the bush to live as his forefathers did two months later he will return slide weeks or a month or two into his clothes and civilization and take up work where he left off the beginning of the end for the aborigine and in a sense the he- ginning of the beginning for rum jungle is dated 1838 that was when a 21yearold scot arrived in australia there was a passion to discov er what lay in the heart of the continent which is as big as the united states only its fringes had been explored ami the south australian government of fered a prize of 2000 for the first man who made the two thousand mile journey from adlaide in the south to the indian ocean the crossing became an obses sion with stuart he made six separate attempts there were times when he went blind and he almost died of starvation thirst fever and scurvy but each time he got a little farther it was on the fourth journey that he got to the centre of the conti nent he and his colemn compa nions raised a british flag on a mountaintop and according to his journal gave three hearty cheers for the flag the emblem of civil and religious liberty and may it be a sign to the natives that the dawn of liberty civilization and christianity is about to break on them the natives apparently did not want to be liberated in full war paint they closed in and with fearful yells sent their boomer angs whistling about the white mans cars stuart sneaked away in the darkness and went back to adelaide not until july 24 1862 did stu art finally succeed in reaching van diemens gulf on e north coast twelve months and 13 days after he left adelaide he was back to cliam his money a gold medal and a watch from the royal geo graphical society stuart told great tales of the northern territorys possibilities for mineral and agricultural wealth an el dorado legend was born never panned out somehow it never panned out the history of the territory is one of hardship and frustration the cattle were either speared by na tives or wiped out by a venomous tick brought in from the east in dies riots broke out in the mining camps either among the whites or between the whites and the orientals who came by sampan across the timor sea drough and flood wrought alternate extremes of havoc to australians there was nothing surprising in the fact that port darwin should take the brunt of japanese bombing tough luck was traditional in tile north legend says that rum jungle got its name from one of the min ers riots there was for a period some fairly aciive tin mining at a place called simply the jungle a store keeper moved out from darwin to supply the miners with such neces sities as tea sugar flour salt pre served meat liquor and tobacco for a while things went well and the customers paid in tin then the shallow ore petered out and the deep mines flooded with no machinery to pump them dry there came a time when the storekeeper refused the miners further credit thev marched 011 him with vio to a phonograph than to sing and lence in mind the rum barrel was dance in the ancient corroborce overturned and smashed and iis or tribal ceremony contents flowed out of the store and down a slope into a spring for a few hours the spring had characteristics never claimed for the waters of waukesha and from that day on the area was known as rum jungle it was one day in 1949 that a veteran prospector named jack white came fossicking through rum jungle he was looking for copper but the rock he found in the old tin workings seemed to him to be a kind described in a government pamphlet as uranium ore he gathered them off to the mines department office in dar win they proved to be strongly radioactive claim shares that was in october and the tropical rainy season the wet they call it in australia was about to begin but the next march through rum jungle the ore was rich some of it 2 per cent uranium oxide and ap parently boundless the wet came and went again and then the boom was on the government promised a reward of 1000 for every new find and a bonus of 1000 for every 20 tons of ore up to a maximum of 25- 000 white sank his own experiment al shaft using only a pick shovel and bucket windlass he was in such a hurry he neglected to tim ber properly and narrowly escap ed being crushed when his mine fell in but his rock was ail good uranium ore and he became a moderately wealthy man moorehead was unable to inter view white when he visited rum jungle the prospector was out in the bush this time with a geiger counter to check his sites for radio activity nobody pretends that rum jun gle by itself will bring about the civilization of the northern ter ritory any more than the corn- stock lode alone civilized nevada it does hold out hope though for development of an area where most hopes were nearing death for the moment it is causing the australian government a con siderable headache in the courts colony considered back in the 1860s the govern ment got the notion of establish ing a colony in the north an area around rum jungle roughly 40 by 60 miles was arbitrarily cut up into blocks of onehalf square mile each and anybody willing to try to settle there got a tract in per petual freehold for a while there was a mild boom a few shiploads of adven turers arrived a few even tried to cultivate their land for a while more probably left without lay ing eyes on their own parcels most of the original owners are dead but their heirs and descend ants are not hardlv a week coes bv without some new claimant turnine up at the lands depart ment in darwin the stories run in a pattern greatuncle charles or william or george who was a sort of black sheep came to australia in the sixties and had some land in the north all sorts of documents are com ing to light from solicitors files and family archives title deeds records of hillsides won or lost on a bet bankruptcy records the issue is complicated by the fact that the land never was proo- erly surveyed a half mile one way or the other out in the worth less bush meant nothing in the old days the government has taken the only way out the uranium it takes for itself with some com pensation to those who can prove ownership of the land over rum jungle today hangs a buoyant atmosphere like that of a las vegas casino somebody is winning maybe youll be next for the northern territory pros perity may be just around the corner and if the work keeps its col lective head we may some day share in the benefits that can de rive from the soft rock stained cockatoo yellow and jungle green the old berlin frankfurt and ham burg papers there is a confusion to the whole picture which rises not out of any internal confusion of germany but from the diff culty of applying quintuplicate political and military orders to the elusiveness of editorial thought and content the free press we 1 speak of is not a functionary de- tail of invasion and conquest how ever pure our motives and they were pure you dont run a paper that way all suspect any german reporter whose birthdate goes back far enough to give him experience today is sus pect however he rationalizes his participation in history you have to wonder about him the only thing you can say for a nazi is the lefthanded compliment that he is bolter for us today than a com munist this is essentially an absurdity and ought to have no intellectual acceptance but it is not an uncommon rationalization during the past few decades the profession of journalism has not attracted many young people i saw very few women in posi tions higher than secretary or sten ographer there are only three women publishers in all of ger many and i met all three of them in the main i think history has dealt unkindly with an editor and i reporter here they didnt do so well both in terms of the german people and in terms of the occup- 1 ing powers then the german people dont look upon the press as we do if a german paper should say po lice chiefsoandso refused to give us the particulars the ger man reader would never feel that he personally had been deprived of public information he would defer lo authority and decide paper is never in a position to in sist on being taken seriously what this does to a writer can easily be imagined plain economy most detrimental of all i think is the plain economy of the ger man readership which takes one paper and seldom makes compari sons an editor is supposed to keep his readers happy so he wont lose them but he doesnt operate on the theory that they might change over because of something he doesnt print this makes for an insipid kind of approach and obviates any true conception of competition the editors scrutiny of a possible story runs like this now will this make anybody mad and how many cousins has he got no reporter is faced with the urgency of digging up something before any other paper gets it or even of giving a full factual treat ment to even the smaller stories and news as such is never dis played on the front page where the daily political comment must be printed if anything does happen its on page six and therefore relatively unimportant of course german readers look at page six first but the editors are so traditionbound that the neglect to assess this as important then too the german paper doesnt offer the writers much if you can do a political piece con gratulate goldenwedding couples report a foornall game or turn out a little local history feature you are then done there is nothing amusing in a german paper of traditional stripe an article such as this one would be considered out of place and merely stealing space from more important mat ter wiles affair with hal hlr husbands testimony that sfc at his feet his eyeglasses were i though both mills and mrs mall received a bribe of 5000 to kee carefully in place a hat covered i professed they knew nothing of testified mrs hall plaves his face and the single bullet hole any love affair 11 was common solitarv at home on the murdej hi head the trial was marked by a ti vclation by a local business mai tryman m the church tht he was in the lovers lane wil i next to him lay mrs mills shot three times her throat slashed a scarf over her face love letters between the couple were strewn at their trysting place missing two days hall married to a wealthy woman seven years his senior and mrs mills mother of two teenage children had been miss ing tot two days when their bod ies were found before the case came to its baf affair it gossip in new brunswick their jaieht love notes apparently had been passed in hymn books four years passed j then in the summer of 1926 1 arthur riehl in an annulment singerjust 300 fe suit against his wife louise geistj rich former downstairs maid in the hall home claimed she was i bribed to conceal facts july 28 1926 mrs hall was ar- otised at her home at midnight and i from the murder scene the jury alter sitting throng the monthlong trial took onl five hours to return its verdict 1 not kuilty thfihvp- tf s three others ulamld alive last link to a mystery sti at a preliminary hearing mrs jas deep as it was three decad fling climax four years later mil- jne gibsonsoon to be known to ago editors note last month wil liam l ryan associated press foreign news analyst during a study tour of the fa reast and southeast asia surveyed frances fight in indo china now investigating current af fairs in north africa ryan re ports today on the troubled sit uation in another vital french overseas territory by william l ryan casablanca morocco ao j but despite the extraordinary i military measures trerorism con tinues almost every night there are killings or other violent inci dents in casablanca scene of the most persistent attacks split widening the terror is frightening away both french and foreign capital some french are already begin ning to pull out of casablanca j anger has been rising steadily during the nine months since the ssssf 3 c fs tn med c tionmm soriistf na sultan moulay moham- tionalst teirornsts mcd ben arafa on he throne of casablanca moroccos big met- j the sherifian empire tropolis of 700000 falls silent by night streets are virtually de serted movie houses and restau rants are bare of customers the french and those moroccans ter- rozied by extreme nationalists are staying home at night outside the central prison dozens of veiled moslem women cling to the bars of the iron gales and wail for their men around police sta tions crowds are herded daily to have identifications verified as strict security measure heavilyarmed moroccan gover nment troops roam the streets on bicycles watching for trouble in the medinas the native towns in the medinas and bidonvilles the fantastic slums of moroccan cities there is an air of tension it is there that extreme nationalists carry out terror against moroccans suspected of being profrench there is nobody on the throne a group of moroccans told me dur ing an interview the new sultan is nobody they added and what is happening the gulf between french and moroc cans is widening theres danger the gulf will become so wide that morocco and the rest of north africa will be thrown fully into the asianmideast bocl of notions a i and become asian rather than western in outlook francis lacoste incoming french resident general faces a grave dilemma one thing on which all moroccans i saw agreed was the issue of the sultan before sidi mohammed was desposed they were not particularly passion ate about his leadership now it is a question of principle and they are insistent that he must return straightening cabot prefabs may be answer to handymans problems when is the housing industry not from scratch going to follow the example of the one amateur craftsman put it automobile industry and give us this way low cost mass production im not ready to build a home homes i from scratch and even if i could i his precut house into one of the loveliest establishments we have i seen easterners cant agree when explorer landed by irving c whvnot canadian press staff writer halifax cp when john cabot sailed to north america in 1497 he touched off a historical argument that has been tossed around for centuries but now a nova scotia archivist says that on the basis of present knowledge the best theory is that he landed on cape breton island and then doubled back alone the const of newfoundland the main dispute is whether cabots landfall was in newfound land or cape breton the island that rorms the northeast part of nova scotia ack proper record there even are some side issues cape ilretoners cant agree which part of the island he hit if he with builtin radio phonograph and storage cupboards lighting concealed tlo wall above this unit is pan- cled in decorative plywood tiles and above them concealed lights landed there at all and some etaim that his landing spot actu- aly was st pierre and miquelon the french islands south of new foundland c b fergusson assistant archi vist of the public archives of nova scotia writing in the dalhousie review says the dispute is clouded because of lack of proper records of cabots voyage as fnr back as the end of the 19th century a committee of the royal society of canada looked into the records and said all evi dence indicated cabots landfall was on the most easterly cape of cape breton island but they decided hint an 1897 celebration of the voyage would not commit the society as a whole to the definite acceptance of that theory the celebration was held in halifax neutral ground in the landfall dispute room for speculation althougn ihe records are not complete some accounts of the voyage exist a mnp by john it is set well hack on a wooded cearntshed gr in br s0 sebastian compiled in the effect mstw iabis lmdwi takes no credit himself must as on cape breton shows what can be done with 3 bu 0 these records mr ler- ssfv rnadrnicd 1 thaiabois not and careful landscaping cc do it a year ago the house blend right in the house jack chose has three ness let with picture windows at the rerr facing out on an idyllic stream a natural stone fireplace twhich jack built himself sets off 1 the from and the natural wood finkh maki scotsmen curl miladys hair sheeps wool disentangled mol ecules and two imaginative scots men there are the research in gredients of a british home perm anent waving kit although they are never listed on the package says robert c cowan in the christian science monitor they have been used by dr j b speakman internationally known textile expert at leeds un iversity to develop an effective self treatment for a feminine coif fure for this bit o research the wool and the molecules provided the idea and the two scotsmen the stimulation roots in inverness the story of this development has its roots in the small town of inverness in scotland there the scotsmen two brothers named macdonald began an imaginative approach to hairdressing that has rescued britisli locks from the fry- and drying of the old fashioned hairdresser in inverness they developed a steam mthod of hair waving that was gentler than contemporary techniques and that was an imme diate success soon they were es tablished in london as macdonald waving ltd a fomidable name to day among european beauticians but although their steaming sas a success and their business grow ing the brothers werent satisfied they decided to put a natural scientist to work on the problems of hair and see if h could unravel their complexity that was where dr speakman eame into the story no one could have been more surprised than he to be presented with such a problem his years of textile research did not in his mind particularly qualify him as ail expert beautician nevertheless one of the macdonald brothers had a mthematical bent and had been following his work in the technical journals they had decided that dr speakman was the man for the job and that as far as they could see settled that dr speakman took the job major industry that was in 1930 since then the macdonaldspenkman combination has revolutionized the permanent waving business in britain in a development that has parrallelcd the rise of home waving kits in the united states they have turn ed their business into a major in dustry and taken their art into the refined precincs of organic chem istry in his laboratory dr speakman found a basic similarity between waving hair and the shrinkage of wool he studied the molecules in both these fibers he discovered how they were tied together and how they could be untied and then tied together again in a different arrangement the result was shrinkresistant wool and permanently curly hair these molecules he found are strung together in long chains chains which are tied to one an other by what chemists call di sulfide bonds in somewhat the manner that ropes aretiedtogeth- manner that ropes are tied togeth er to form 0 ladder it is these bonds that make the molecules curl back when wool fibers shrink if they are broken the molecular chains can slide past one another in the case of wool the fibers become shrink resistant this dr speakman thought could be applied to hair as well if the bonds could be broken after the hair was wrapped on curlers the molecules would slip and the hair would relax into a curly shape then by reorming the bonds the curl could be permanently locked into the hair this he found was what was actually taking place in the steamy atmosphere of a macdonald wav ing machine at the high tempera tures under the hood the breaking and reforming of bonds took place spontaneously but thcactioncould and reforming of bonds took place spontaneously but the action could not be controlled now that he knew with what he- was dealing the trick lay in find ing the right chmicals and tech niques to do the job parallel development he went on to develop these techniques and improve his chem icals until a modern system of cool permanent waving and homewav ing kits emerged at the end of world war ii that is familiar to all british women similar techniques were introduc- flunked school ops by sarn1a of horatio jack gearln 10ugh tlus ont cp the stories j he lived with hoboes in jungl alger hnve nothing on icamps washed dishes and wniti the reallife story of robert c dennis 38yearold native of the nearby village of courtright dennis quit sarnia collegiate in stitute 22 years ago because he flunked so many subjects includ ing english composition today hes known as the cre ator and script writer of two na tional weeklv televised film shows in the us the affairs of china smith with filmstar dan duryea and passport to danger star ring caesar romero he also writes the tv series big town for grosskrasue pro ductions back for wedding dennis will return from califor nia on june 26 to be married at exeter to miss norma wilson an attractive brunette whom he met in 1939 while working in a meat packing plant at exeter the ceremony will be performed at the home of the bride so that her invalid father lee wilson can attend miss wilson one of the few women movieprojectionists in canada works parttime in the theatre at exeter and also runs lhe village post office dennis left courtright as a pen niless vouth 15 years ago and hitchhiked to california a local doctor had advised him that a southern climate was needed for his arthritis the parttime laborer then had only one ambition to be a pro- fesional baseball player on tables in cheap restaurants h worked as a bell hop and theati janitor 1 guess i was lucky to sq america the hard way to ru shoulders with the very unde privileged before i put any idee 011 paper but it was a ruggc 1 existence he commended r cently i his fortunes changed when a v cational guidance counselor in ix angeles advised him to take u short story writing in the money after taking a course at nigl school bob sold more than if short stories and novelettes an broke into radio he eventual wrote for many of the top u dramatic and mystery shows fd such stars as george raft bart sullivan patricia neal job payne phyllis t h a x t e r job wayne susan hayward claudetl colbert and humphrey bogart bob has written more than television scripts for shows otht than his own during the past fiv years he occasionally instructs a spt cial class in tv scriptwriting fit beginners conducted by the city 1 los angeles bob is the son of mrs clar dennis nnd the late earl s dei nis of courtright he has tw sisters and a brother in ontarkj marion in sarnia grace a kii dergarten teacher in niagara fa and wilfred in sombra two drowned available together with the vague- 1 jar in part this was a parallel of at least the verbal cvi- 1 development to that in briiian al- aod more arc going up every day they have achieved a degree of dcceptance which many experts prephesled would aever take place and newfcere have th y been more popular ukw with handyraeo a friend asked us that questiondc it i wouldnt have time but wvthltssurrwndinss beyroomtttwrv quite dcnceregardtnthriandfat projthough some of the fundmcntals the other day and it must have the prefab im buying will go up n small for lis gride onr dauchter vided room for speculation discovered by dr speakman were been the hundredth ume weve quickly and cheaply and i can j b rv- newfound- involved heard it asked with minor vara- give it individuality and spec 3 1 f n jac no is appren- j iivin rnom rnm landers will continue the argu- tiens the answer is of course features by finishing it myself accountant by profession otj s combina mnocrs that h already has precut pre- industry production figures i percnce a carpentry l ji a s tyoc being pro- and to remind them of the ds- fobrieated homes are lived in by show many others have the amefef p sh by mo prefartand pcu pe there 5 the cabot strait thousands all over the continent idei sales last year were up plact housinc firms and elu in the separating cape breton and ncw- r lrom i sca a t his living room its beau- 000 range exclusive of founda foundland the cabot trail a pic- pcesmen predict uw will be t fully panelled with decorative tion plumbing and other extras turesque drive through the high- r ntggett year in history plywoods which give a uniform he was able to move into the lands of cape breton and the sinrs bey i surface ith no visible joints acjhoue when its basic structure cabot tower 0 an sinning b ac m an c r ne end is a combination was complete ard finish off the locking the harbor ai i juan a immm- i m 10 lid quamtaacc of ours who has made bookshelf des built of fiveply interior room by room wld iadvance has been made beyond unj of a researchers microscope 1 in 1910 it was largely a c aseof j involved it was largely a case of the american- being able to get linot production- faster than the 1 macdonalds and of their being less hesitant to introduce the new tech- eeis in rev richard morley rev herbert jianlon two members of the society of st john the evangelist on anglican missionary monastic or der were drowned in muskoka ijke of bays when their out board motorboat overturned rev richard i morley super ior of the order and rev her bert f hanlon had set out from port cunningham to bayswmcr their overturned boat was found in rough water central press canadian bonn reuters a campaig by west german trade unions ft a 40hour work week is bcin strenuously opposed by the goi ernment and employers union leaders want a 40hoi week with the same pay as fc the 48 hours most workers now d the newspaper industriekurn which reflects the view of hul industry described the 40hoi week as an american institutic which west germany should n import the 40hour week would me lower production a decrease of tl national income and lowering f the standard of living said th paper our plants are not equij ped in the same way as those i america or those of some othi european countries j a similar view was expressed h the federation of german en ployers associations we ca not it stated make up for reducton in working time by increase in production as long the capital and technical cquil ment of our plants lass far b hind other european and ovcrscf economies average weekly wage was 590 canadian industry averaged 59 c at april 1 slightly lower than th march 1 average of 5922 bi three cents higher than the 571 of april 1953 the bureau of statistics reporte today that average earnings in thl manufacturing section of industrjl were 0121 a new maximum apr 1 against 6113 the month befor and 5943 a year ago cant make rain winnipeg cp canadas ni 1 weatherman says theres no sue thing as rainmaking andre thomson of toronto controller the meteorological division of th department of transport in an ir tcrview here tuesday said n scientific proof has been given an no experiment has shown thi cloud seeding can control wet thcr or produce a drenching e fective rain baby has cancer coeur dalkne idaho ap a fourth operation for cancer o isixmonthold jeffrey peterson wa postponed tuesday after his do jtor said other symptoms hav developed the infant has undei gone surgery three times alread for removal of growths from hi temple and breast th n 1 them in britain although dozens of but dr speakmans discoveries chemists have been working in that have been a fundamental in all field since the problems of this according to the aspect of brmsn glamour were guioe companies were formed the girt guides first two canadian signal hill over- lhese processes ac or at st johns macdonaid brothers gir a ht under the cold seru- itoronto and st catharines ont