{4 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, August 3, 1956 Drew Expects To Lead Tories Washout Halts - { In Next Federal Election Brantford Train | BRANTFORD (CP)--City work- OTTAWA (CP) -- Progressive|der to enable him to obtain a com. Me" late Thursday repaired a Conservative leader George Drew plete rest. "I plan to resume my rain-wished breach that earlier said Thursday he has every rea- full activities as soon as '1 get trapped a 16-car eastbound freight son to believe he will lead his|back from this trip," he said. |train of the Torono, Hamilon and | party in 'the next federal election TALKS TO PRESS | Buffalo Railway but the vail Fonds expected in June. 1957. The interview with reporters ati, .q t expected i | He made this statement shortly the airport was the first time Mr. |g. as hot = ol to he ready | before he and Mrs. Drew left Of-|Drew had met the press since hej, al traffic for another two tawa by air for a three-week holi-/left for a holiday two weeks be-| ys. day in Bermuda, Mr, Drew is tak-|fore Parliament adjourned. At the The 40-foot washout occurred at ing the holiday on his doctors or-/time, he said he was tired out/@ southeast city dump near a ders, following a six-day medical|from the combined effects of in- canal. It was noticed in time for | checkup in Montreal Neurological fluenza and an infected tooth. He engineer Ernest Durham of Ham- Institute. ; interrupted the holiday for the|ilton to, throw on the emergency | "I have every reason to believe checkup at the Montreal hospital, Brakes. Wo cars in the middle of; that I will lead the party in the| Mr. Drew said an attack of the train were said to have been next general election," he said. pneumonia last winter coupled derailed, while other cars tilted | "I have been given a clean bill\with a strenuous session of Par. on the sagging roadbed. No one of health." liament had left him over tired. |Was Injured. The holiday was ordered in or- 'His son, Edward, and daughter,! About two inches of rain fell in| "PET COON ACQUIRES WHOLE BAG OF TRICKS Heart Disease them off. The children will be re-|the washout. | i - listens to the phone shortly after | to. The youngster was found in Attributed turning to school. 3 E "a " Wis aon here for the ast time ve. ALBERTA TAR SANDS CONTAIN VAST SUPPLY OF OIL Davy. Crockett, three-month being taken in by Robert Speak- | the chimney of an old house in To Ice Cream Engineer Ackland fore his retirement after 45 years t w e railroad. He had been an! The rusting tanks and dilapi- | 300,000,000,000 barrels of oil lock- | world's known old Taceoom, fee fakes ro St) man, oficer of the Don Valley | Toronto and turned over to | yO wells. In ways quickly. Y conservation authority in Toron- | Speakman. | | LONDON (Reuters)--An Amer- {ican doctor, writing in the British Retiring After £5 Yoars {saginser Sines 119. Hundreds of ping Sildings Jfictred here ed in the vast stretches of tar two a : -- -|friends and fellow workers were are at Bitumont, Alta., may hold | sand hich - | on rese; : 'toy trumpet, preens himself and ter Ackland of CPR train No. 560/on hand to greet him when he left| the key to a fabulous store of | squaremil hii SR 4 eh ro | Medical Journal, suggested Thur {day that there may a link be {tween heart disease and fe] 3.Men Crews In Year Shift Keep Close Tab On Cyclones: 7 SERERRTRIIRLT "Tere 5 | Worcester, Mass., wrote that ex- SYDNEY, Australia -- The Aus-| With the temperature ranging |and caught some huge coral cod, aminations of Allied war dead in| tralian government pays three six degrees above a minimum of which averaged more than 15 the Korean War showed that the| men to live alone on a secluded 76, Willis island is a year round pounds each. prevalence of early Sorvaaiyl tropical island in the south|sunbathing, fishing and swimming Each day they opened about 40| (heart) disease was "unusually | Pacific, flanked by a coral reef,| 'resort' to men manning the tins of food, but found it better to and significantly higher" in young] nd in waters abounding in multi- weather station. feed the contents to the ducks and American soldiers than in soldiers bi d fish |" The men make the best possible fowl, then eat the poultry of other nationalities. I i the a "are supplied with the use of a very limited space. Apart] The only fresh food the men| 'There is one universal item of | The, . oks drink and phono- from a few coconut palms planted|could get was fish, poultry, eggs diet which, it is my impression, | Best a wi og Every 12 months by a pioneer party in 1922, there and bread. The fowl yielded about is consumed by all, or nearly all,| graph gn Seed by another three|is room for a vegetable patch and|40 eggs a day. {Americans, on a much larger] they 21s 4 ob is to give warning a poultry yard on the island. The three men took turns at|scale than elsewhere--namely, ice| of th IVE Pacific cyclones,| The task is just to sit and watch cooking and housework. They lived cream. he frequently sweep North/for cyclones. When the men spot/in a building electrically lighted EATEN HEAVILY I ge 12 gh 'down the eastern|an approaching cyclone, they flash and powered throughout. The main| Milk and milk products are Ques HE an f 'Australia its size, speed and direction to the building was a fibro cement on a|also consumed on a heavy scale. | Se oneal isle is Willis island, |Australian mainland where every-|timber frame, This allows the cy-| "Hardly a day goes by without| 270 HET De of Cape Tribulation, |one in'the threatened area is warn- dione waichere to carry out heir [ce cream being consumed and in| Nor i reled to start "battening down . duties withou eaving shelter. | Sut ; North Queensland, Le MAIL QUARTERLY ; th Each 'man ap his own Room taken is doubled or even trebled. pg i is ti is --| Two of the biggest cyclones they / internal and external meta v yards wide, shi iny coral ake have plotted were Annie andwork at the station is either of placed on the market Py, lawj igi hr reef connected to the Bertha which ravaged the Queens- brass or copper to reduce erosion Faust Capea Rg p hore by a coral platform exposed land and northern New South The main building is U shaped, Ce Lt Oo A afore. a nice conjec- OT tide Wales coast last March with the living room, kitchen and u "bl ere this one article of| BACK FIVE TIMES Radio operator Mick Clark of store on one side, the radio and /'Mre'0 BEC (08 rortain" single| The yearly tour of the three men| Melbourne, who has just done a met rooms on the other, and the for the high incidence of cor-| ecentlv expired and three others|tour of duty on the island, said bedrooms linking them. en ery 'disease throughout | it loft to relieve them. Two. of that beside the radio, the only con-|. In 1885 the captain of HMS [084 country. Whether a ro Ae h ® Wose are radio operators and tact with civilization was a plane Rattlesnake, curising in Australian the COUT be made easily an the third is a weather observer which dropped mail every three waters, reported a tiny islet, about | Sell Coy is another 'matter. | The new officer in charge of Willis months. i 1300 miles of the Queensland coast.| = gity "deposits on the lining of island is W. J. Hicks, who has| Clark, who said he wore nothing |At spring tides the island was the coronary arteries is said to done five tours of duty on thelbut shorts the whole year, spentiawash -- and no doubt this ac- be a contributing cause to certain islet his time between cyclones reading counted for the lack of interest | < of heart disease.) fe said: "It 1s a home away some of the 1,000 books at the sta-|shown in Willis island until 1921|'YPeS O° © : a : when the Australian government 1/ The average ice cream product tion from home to me." Hicks is not the only one to re- turn for more of the splendid iso-| lation of Willis island, where the only visitor is generally a lone world yvachtsman about once every "When we got tired of reading we went fishing. We 'even built a canoe. I was the first to try it out, but a broadside wave turned it over," he said. They made an eight foot dinghy, decided to establish a storm warn-| ing station in this cyclonic region. |? The first party to the island had |' some difficulty in rediscovering it, | but they finally found it and land- ed armed with 20 beer barrels of water and a small distilling plant. | decade. The barrels had not been scoured yroperly and the water tasted of § our beer. Fortunately the men & were able to collect plenty of| \ 1 voter off their newly erected roof bs ; ; 1 few weeks after their arrival. | ¢ " ¢ 2 Gadel Weather observers and radio] § ke Ca 3 yperators say their lasting fopres. i fi ; AT THIS LOWEST ion at Willis island is the con- i : inual movement of thousands of| PRICE EVER! sirds which appear like a 'cloud wer the island at all times of the |} ear. The birds, except for certain |i migratory types, are permanent nhabitants of the island. ; The birds are gannets, terns, nutton birds and petrels. The only | ther inhabitants of the island are) he enormous green back turtles, SHAKES . INFANTS i] THE NEW | kT = AUTOMATIC : rry-Free Washaoy ACROSS 2.Birds as'. 22. Lever [AEISIIREICIRIAIVIE] Enjoy Wo Dr. Frederick Jaffe, who per- ith Your B[ERINIE] Ug With ; |G] Agencies Transmitting News Said . : LNatural® class © 28 Ex. an es Dr Replacing Ignorance By Science | ih. "ih. RESH fod Vsho! MODEL Co? Your Own Only a limited supply available . . . This is strictly a specia' addressing the Uni- TOW opens tion Aa offer for one shipment only. ROCHESTER. N.Y. (CP)--News He also was § apple used ing 25. Some were described Thursday versity of Rochester's third annual for jelly 4 Half ems 26, Stripes Come in, . , or phone us to hold one for you. Terms gladly arranged. vhich come up the beach on moon-| A six-foot, 260-pound pediatric ight nights to lay their eggs on| purse is being held in New i the deaths of three infants re- | ported to have been shaken to Blue Bean | death while under her care. Virginia Jaspers, 32-year-old Cham 10 tor, was quoted as saying, "it Pp n was all uncontrollable. 'I don't know why I did it. Children | Of All sometimes get on my nerves." | umpers Miss Jaspers, seen above, is | . neither a registered nor a | § TORONTO (CP)--Blue Beau, a| licensed practical nurse, but the | ' , . g 1 7. H. Coad of Aurora, Ont., Thurs-| course gi oY. nh ' i | given at St. Agnes Home, day night won the open jumper| West Hartford, Conn. Police are | JURY WANTS SERUM FOR SNAKE BITES grand Shamplonship of the Cana-| reported to be checking five National Exhibition Horse| additional complaints from par- | Steps should b ) | L 3 x T z | wh . s snakes in On- | woman died from kidney failure | To win, Blue Beau took four| were injured while under the Hily 21l poisonous & attributed to the Massasauga firsts. Thursday night, last night| nurse's care. | recommended and effective € C 0 ) L > je available A she attempted to pick it out of [jumper sweepstake, On previous : | serum should be mace 2 | the water-at her summer cottage days he won the five-foot stave|Qpior 2, Sapphire, J. L. Grosch, ) : hin ; 3. , A. C. Tex- known to be found. The jury, in- | in Honey : it an " ili $ i s. G. W. Hall, at [the Sam Harris Challe T Gung into the dealkt in Orillia guest ith Ds Brown, at right, and the handy ony gpd Fler swespstake-L Borvee, ospitz < vs , 4 / | i : gi |.J Cottrelle 'oronto; 2. ye ; Hay in Cold- Other championships: | , 3 erry led : is n ps: wood, L J : died as the result of a snake bite waier. te pathologist Secon i Groen hunter stake any weight--!3. ororna Jean Knight, Guelph, blood clot, as men that every 2 . Bit 0'Gold,- Donald V: = - » . , . | Pathologist | snake should be considered seri- ; Bos) ance, Tor-'leaven, Woodstock. | and not from a he sand Haven, Conn., in connection with daughter of a former state sena- | ix-year-old bay gelding owned by| product of a special 18-months | e taken to iden- | formed the autopsy, said the |Show. | ents who say their Said | i : r's jury in Orillia tario, 3 evrone xy rattler which bit the woman as of the show, he won the $1,000 in the areas where they are lays § at in- |class, the fault Harbor. Seen ult and out stake for ter. Welland. that the Toronto woman | who attended Mrs ous until proved otherwise ol (S|LIO{PI ERS ITIRIE Iw outlet as (he ally of Canadian-American C acy in substituting knowl: 1d understanding for "'ben- Canadian-U.S. conference, - which 9. Black bird Luci this vear took as its major topic 10. Fails to win Eid og 2. ea of discussion the impact of mass : , . h A ignorance." communications on relationships 12. Baking Beast of out olRIAL IE] , ; between the two countries Chambers urden right [s[T[e[Pisigwle|s[e[r] D. P. Heeney, Canadian am- fran > 13. City (Ger.) . Insect 29. Live El) bassador in Washington, told a BECOME ACCOUNTABLE 14. Haze . Native of coals Yesterday's Angwor conference studying the communi- 'In a real sense.' he said, "you 15. Merry Rome 30. En- cations systems of the two coun- communicators have become 'ac- 16. Music note 11. Small euts dures 36. Biblical tries tha. in Canadian-American countable' to history for the con- 17. Close to 15. Cigarettes 32. Pre- " nam as elsewhere, misunder- tiruance and growth of -the nat- 18. Elevator (slang) "scribed TR e and prejudice thrive on ural friendship between our two cage 18. Chinese tea regimens 39, Region i greal peoples.' 19. Lofty moun. 19. Kind of 35. Three. "of "to i here that the con- Merchant called for a new ap tain bomb handed " scientious and informed conduct proach in the development of news Woodl 21. Si card be of the great modern means of stories to end the sometimes "real - Woodland «Sign game 40. Exclude public communication can greatly war" between civil servants and sprites ssist the diplomacy of our gov- journalists . Goddess of nent "Only by such a co-operative inlatuation 08S, ¢ Handy Loading Door o Instal It Anywhere © Fast, Economical Drying ® Dries ALL Fabrics Safely long proce replacing effort, with more restraint on the An Indian at fimishe but it is 1gh a public opinion which is well and Inter volent ignorance - one side and more conscious pro of Okla- be finiched but i ix through a public opinion Inter "WE SELL WHAT WE ADVERTISE -- WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL" by equ: iy benevo vision of le ate service on the terpre ing of news by press, radio, on a tooth television and film that mos: can uest t lestion be done to expunge misconcep Suspect Arrested ] Quest tions and dissolve the roots of . ; 3. M prejudice For Serious Offence a etter ge gy r y > - Mi Heeney aid There never WINNIPEG (CP)---I Little girl ill be any difficulty about get-{hours after a fiv | y Yabora ng American news into Canada, had been assaylted in ci inne ; to - . proved by the space provided near her home, police i Tie3 Canadian publications to the suspect {abbr : cont politic : s in C e dl cont p litical conventions in Chi- Otto Tonn, 45, pleaded guilty i p Na) duck pi and_San aneiseo court Thursday to indecently as- BSque. : The difficulty he suggested, saulting the girl. He was > like 2p 6 is the other way round--and will manded for 'sentence European Nays be Preliminary examination at hos 2 A SIMCOE NORTH RA §5-4711 helping cripnina endship be Aas nderlined bv proved th Fonr a lahor i Living r Merchant Amer- nied that he had sexualls t ; h i€ 14 é ally attacked ican ambassador to Canada. the child, ei i