Diamonds Hidden In MONTREAL (CP)--R. G. Brit- 'lton, president of the Montreal Gem and Mineral Club, says there | are diamonds to be found in Que- bec. "Although very few diamonds have been discovered in the pro- vince," he admits, 'geologists claim rock formations in certain northern areas are of the type which yleld these precious § |stones." As an amateur prospector-gem collector, he has been looking around himself, So far, he's dis- covered stones he thinks are blue sapphires--just 65 miles north of Montreal, in the Grenville, Que., area, : It's his hobby, and six months ago he and seven other men with| similar inclinations formed the| Montreal Gem and Mineral Club, | first of its kind in Quebec. | "We collect simply for our own pleasure and enjoyment and do Quebec | | of his history. | a Artist In Boy Scout Head | | By JACK VAN DUSEN ! Canadian Press Staff Writer | OTTAWA (CP)--The beauties of Canada brought out the artist in warrior-scout Lord Baden-Powell. The South African war hero and founder of the boy scout move- ment drew sketches of the places he saw and even wrote a poetic essay about Canada's autumn in a personal diary. . e South African War hero and founder of the Boy Scout move- ment drew sketches of the places he saw and even wrote a poetic essay about Canada's autumn in a periond] diy. Personal photos show friends he PENS SCOUT HISTORY SONA) Dg 0 IV ic met during the tour, dressed in It was sent to Dr. Stiles, first the styles of the early 1900s. CA ean br go Hi 3 Glued 01 a back Dage is aletian at the University of New Bruns- re eady) Roosevelt wick, by Lady Baden-Powell when|'s "that ordl hleti she learned he was writing a his.| 38reeing "that ordinary athletic y . ~~ | sports, excellent though they are tory of the movement in Canada. do not take the ' 3 place of life in the Dr. Sitles is nearing completion open as you teach it." The man who founded the Boy Victoria, Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Winnipeg, Toronto, Ot. tawa and Quebec City during the 1910 tour. He supplemented the with photographs of most of the cities he visited and sketches and water colors he made in Quebec City, Winnipeg and the Rockies. WIDE VARIETY { Other photos show huge piles of | lumber, a log jam, and dog teams in the north; Buffalo Bill with a young boy scout and an Indian chief; canoes, and hunters with a dead moose. The book contains hundreds of of gloom when wears, storms or Tarragona, former capital of Spain enchantment of discovery, Canadian Wilds Bring Out | Tourists | Are Main Industry MADRID (Reuters)--A tourist invasion has turned this trade iato Spain's first industry in recent years and has revolutionized the life of Spain's coastal towns. For some 2,000 years, these towns have alternated between periods of prosperity and periods pirates have laid them waste. Now the northeastern coast of Spain, from Cadaques, the home the artist Salvado Dali, the Costa Brava (the wild coast) down to Barcelona, and on to Sitges and under the Romans, is invaded by droves of tourists roaming in the The number of tourists visiting Spain in the first months of this year wag about 20 per cent higher than in the same period of 1956. Before the civil war began in 1936, Spain had only a small trick. ™E DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Monday, July 15, 199% 98 _ WILL MAKE REPLY will be in answer to demands ... FORT WILLIAM (CP)--Ralph made by the council on Northern .* 'K. Farris of Vancouver, president) 4 of Northern Ontario Natural Gas! OPiario as to who has shares im "+ |Company, said Friday he willl Twin City Gas Company and when make a three-point reply to the the public offering of shasss > Fort William gas committee with-| Twin City would be placed on the in the next nine days. The reply market for Lakehead residents. » Tae sell < which we souvenirs of Baden-Powell's first| Scout movement in 1907 was so howe out and polished" Visit to Canada in 1910, ranging impressed with the Canadian), Fo "Rl Coll fade foreign Fhe members meet n the sum {rom persal notes and o rallyay autums he Wroie posi FRM Vitor vo ald" Andalusia | i ips and in the win. ticket to photographs and an ie se 5 | her Sor fiela us A i Canadian $1 bill, A Kiss in Canada. | Toledo and Escorial in the spring "B.P." as scouts affectionately] A typed copy, "bylined"" Gen-|OF fall. Now these resorts attrac bY wl EL TORO WINS - INSIDE | but was unable to continue the | fight, SPANISH MATADOR Jaime | was the first Marco faced in his '(El Choni) Marco flies heels | Mexican debut at Tijuana, Mex- high as bull tosses him. The bull ico. He was not seriously hurt Waiter Now Highest Producers COTTAM, Ont. (CP) -- Wilbur Haggins thinks he has developed the laziest cows in the country but says his profits are higher. Haggins, who operates a dairy farm on the outskirts of this Essex County community, has stopped turning his cows out to pasture, instead he brings the pasture to them, "1 found when I turned the cat- tle out to pasture, they tramped down considerably more than they ate, It looked as if the entire farm would be needed for hay and pas- ture if I continued this method." There are 48 Holstein and Guernsey cows on the farm and by this assembly-line dairying the work has been cut and returns are higher. The cows never leave the barn- yard. Mr, Haggins has designed and constructed a '"'cowfeteria" which lets the cows select and eat as much feed as they want. They are free to walk into a bunker silo and eat green ensilage or dry hay Owns Eatery TORONTO (CP) -- A man who Bad only 18 months schooling and was once a $12-:a-week waiter now is proprietor of a popular restau- rant in Toronto's Chinatown. Harry Lem, who is also grocer, postmaster and importer, says the surest way to success is to "work hard, save all your money, read all you can and make friends." He came to Canada from Hong Kong when he was 12, At the dock- side his grandfather quoted a pro- verb which has been a contribut- ing factor to his success: 'Never wait till you are thirsty to build a well." At 16 Harry was on his own, his father having returned to the Far East for health reasons. After working in a laundry since his -arrival in Canada, Harry got his first "real job"--as a waiter-- when he was 18, Out of his $12- a-week salary he saved $11.95 He worked 18 hours a day and "never saw the world outside the door." A few years later his father re- turned to Canada. The two took over a little cafe and later bought a place of their own. + After restaurant ventures in Bowmanville, Whitby and Toronto, Harry moved into Chinatown and opened the International Chop Suez House in partnership with 10 ether men. Four years later, with three friends, he opened Lichee Gar- RETAINS WORLD TITLE SOOKE, B.C. (CP)--Jubiel Wick heim of Sooke made quick work of defeating his brother Ardiel Saturday to retain the world log birling title. For the second straight year the brothers met in the finals for the world title and for the second time, Jubiel won it from Ardiel. It was the first world champion- sociation held in Canada ship of the International Roleo As- | they've found. Most of the mem-| bers are in the trade anyway -- three jewelers, a stone-cutter and two jewelry salesmen. Mr. Britton is an aircraft tech- nician. ' Toronto Couple | Injured In Crash BRIGHTON, Ont. (CP) -- A Tor- |onto couple was seriously injured |Friday when their car apparently, veered into the path of a truck on| Highway No. 2, 15 miles west of | Belleville. Police identified them as Rev. - R. S. K. Seeley, 49, provost at Trinity College at the University $12 A Ww k hd lot Toronto, and his wife Marjorie, - - 35. Each suffered vere fractures eek Laziest Cows But [iii smo 3 in g, 28, of Port Hope, the truck's p |driver, was uninjured. AMBASSADOR LEAVES OTTAWA (CP) -- Netherlands which is just a few feet away in Ambassador Antonius Hermanus a feed chute, Jchannes Lovink, whose 6% years Only at milking times are the representing his country here led cows allowed into the main barn, him to feel "partly Canadian," The rest of the time they rest in left Friday for Holland on re- a "breezeway' adjacent to the | assignment might be found after a bomb blast called their founder, was so im- eral Sir Robert S. S. Baden-Pow- pressed with Canada that he ell, is glued on the book. visited here several times before! "No one has seen autumn tints his death in 1941 at the age of till he has been to Canada," he| 84 wrote, 'and nobody has seen them Clippings from papers across who does not long to see them the country describe his visits to'again." | Army Learning To Step When Defence Needs Aid | NIAGARA - ON - THE - LAKE, has been stockpiled. Special sec- Ont, (CP)--Members of the regu- tions of walls, which can be filled lar army and the militia are with rubble to simulate actual con-| learning how to step in when clvil-/ditions have been built. | ian defence workers need a hand| wock casualties, made up with] in an emergency. |gaping wounds and other injuries, | The course at Camp Niagara, are part of a regular Tuesday] first of its kind for the Canadian|night display by members of the! Army, is in charge of instructors St. Catharines rescue squad. rom the federal civil defence] Development of nuclear weap- school at Arnprior, Ont. They ons has outmoded the army's for- teach first aid, rescue techniques, mer belief that shelters and tem. and the care of persons injured porary dugouts were sufficient! in bombed buildings protection against bombing. CD Toronto militia men taking the planners now pin their faith in course will continue training at €vacuation, especially in key tar- home during the winter. gel, areas. riainty of wh Bomb tnt hi ertainty of where bombs Rubble similar to that which will fall, however, makes rescue work of .prime importance. The barn. In wintertime the air vents are closed and only the door lead- ing to the feeding area remains open, . There are two silos. One is the ROOM AND BOARD {army's aim is to have trained men {who can be called on to help when |they're needed, says Brig. R. G. Whitelaw, zone 2 CD co-ordinator for Ontario. bunker silo--two slabs of concrete 12 feet high, 105 feet long and 25 feet apart. The other is an ortho- dox upright silo. "The green hay feedings keep cow milking steadier for the whole year," he said. 'This herd will produce an average of 1,200 pounds of high grade milk every day of the year." Using the new system it takes only an acre of hay to feed each cow for the entire year. "By not allowing the cows on the field, 1 can get as many as four cuttings off one field." 1 KNOW YOU USED THE ROOF SHINGLE JOB AS A SCHEME TO FRIGHTEN CONRAD INTO THINKING HED SPEND HIS VACATION HERE WORKING... SO HED LEAVE-- ED AND THE JOB! BETTING INCREASES | TORONTO (CP) -- Betting at New Woodbine race track's sum- mer meeting this year was $16, 154,788 up from $11,498,004 at last vear"s inaugural session, officials announced The 36-day meet, seven days longer than last year, had 30,578 customers with a daily average of 8,349, up 341 from last year's daily BUT LISTEN... IT'S BEEN TEN YEARS SINCE A wear e al Oil STAINED... SO LETS YOU AND I REALLY DO "There is a real interest in the army," he says. "Everyone in 7 HWP. THIS GNAT WOLD 4 8, {civil defence is delighted." SUGGEST THAT: J} e LINKED BY COPTER ip DETROIT (CP)--A helicopt people of all classes and August is the peak month, : ON OWN INITIATIVE LONDON (AP)~The foreign of- fice Friday night made it plain for the first time that Prime Minister Nehru of India Is trying to mend Britain's broken money, trade and political ties with Egypt But a spokesman emphasized that the Indian leader's talks in Cairo with Egyptian President Nasser. were undertaken at his own initi- ative, \, aN LJ v ® Now's the Time to Call . .. RA 5-3589 | Call LANDER-STARK this {| week to put your furnace If in shape for next Winter. Avoid the rush . , . call i [| this week ! ' { ELD DURING RAIN AND STORMS ALL THAT TIME, SQ THEY DONT NEED aw service linking the city's big Wil- |low Run airport with downtown Detroit will be started on Mon- day. Helicopter Airways Service | |Ine., have established the service | charging $10 a person for the 25- | mile, 22-minute run. 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