ON ave rr ar. Ae tee Lost professor life as Dr. Carl Vernon Holmberg, a Syracuse Univer- ‘tified as the missing chemistry Dr. Holmberg, a native of 1 -about War i in Syracuse May 11, 1955. .Uni- of Europe are not worried about : Mr Walker tola members of! pression from talks with people ‘fiention Hinking him to the pro- There are no air raid shelters “It seems rather incredible,” arouses. laughter. ‘another, I don’t know what ’m ‘leclion is that a motorist gave “Tt has been shown that they had a few dollars, but no per- they always back down.” He said he decided to call him- America has asked the B.C. La- moved to California with her appoint a representative to con- | Holmberg two years ago. Last pany’s planer mill at Topley, 90) Menlo Park. hour, 16 cents more than the arna-on-the-Lake, Ont. had ts sue Canadian F stretches fr eK eo we Ne ONE OF THE LARGEST ice bridges is shown. at. right.centre in this side of the falls. American Falls alls hidden behind the mist spray. The om bank to bank. ~vveN 8 eBVoewse af to form below Niagara Falls snot taken from the American are in the foreground, with the ice bridge — CP Photo MOVIE COLUMN Eddie Cantor learning to live longer, slower HOLLYWOOD \? — Reflections at 70 by Eddie Cantor — “Some- times you almost have to die in By BOB THOMAS order to live.’ Cantor Giscovered this 10 years ago when he suffered a heart attack. He's still around to talk and other matters, and he did so on the occasion of | passing his three-score and ten: town die too terrible. They work, i meeting deadlines. Pretty soon they meet about “People It’s early. work, it in this work, always headlines. “TI remember when I had my, attack 10 years ago. heart woman wrote me: | Unemployment in Australia at record high CANBERRA (Reuters) — Un- | employment in Australia reach- | ed a post-war record of 131,500 | during January, Prime Minister | Robert Menzies told a conference ef state premicrs today, The figures showed that the January rise of 15,500 followed increases of 15,879 ber and 3,500 in November. Registered unemployed In Jan- uary represented 3.1 per cent of the country's labor foree, com- | pared with 2.8 per cent in De- cember, Before tne Gregorian ealendar ROCKFORD, Il. (AP)—A pigment grinder in a sity professor who disappeared in 1955. a i Wanse, 45, who works as a Europeans ' |) professor through a routine FBI Sandpoint, Idaho, was married ;and the father of three boys TORONTO @ — The nations | YCrsity officials at the time ex- a nuclear war, Works Minister: VCUM. ; Walker said Wednesday night. The giant, bespectacled Han- the Ontario Insurance Adjusters | ford Paint Manufacturing Com- in England. France and Sweden ; fessor. in France or England, he said, he said. “I don't see how a man Mr. Waiker said it is evident) #oing to do now.” \ no country desires war less than | him a lift from Elgin, Ill, to get other nations steamed up to. sonal identification cxcept an empty briefcase with the initials Appeal to LRB 3 PRINCE GEORGE The self Verne Hansen, bor Relations board to require; three sons —- Carl, 18; Lee, 11, duct wage negotiations a union Yeah she married Gordon Bab- spokesman. sald Tuesday. Some cock, a consulting clectronics miles west of here, have been on To strike since last week, The TWA UNIQUE PORT basic wage now paid by the Al-; defences in the shape of a five- berta firm, | pointed star. FINDS HIMSELF DIVORCED factory, Verne Hanse, refused to talk today about his /$1.90-an-hour laborer, was iden- f rn d : fingerprint check, :when he was reported missing ipressed fear he was an amnesia ‘sen was informed at the Rock- Association he gained this inv, pany Wednesday of the identi- Jast November. , | “SEEMS INCREDIBLE” and mention of the subject, Can break off one life and start Hangen said His earliest recol- Russia, Pockford sometime in 1955. He get concessions but in a crisis : VH on it. International Woodworkers _ of The professor's wife, Dorothy, Quality Spruce Mills Limited to, and Richard, 9 — and divorced ©5 union workers from the com-. engineer, and the family Hves in local is seeking a basic $1.76 ani A fort buiit a 1814 near Niag- hati a CMa eae wt tee rt ey ‘ hf ne ae ie met Mn TROOPER ROD. GLOVER, (eft) of Dow unmy boots but he doasn't let holds his own with Cpl C, ¥. Defoe of Creston, B.C, Jelund, ob ane bl armored regiment elaims he Ix the shortest soldier with the Royal Canadian Unpineors, set. January 1 as the start of the lycar, March 25 was usually con- ‘sidered the first day of the year. Altu.. da only four foot his size prevent him from an argument at the spectal Medicine Sat, Alta. Thr, Grover Ig. A mombor of the South Alberta In CGannda'’s reserve awriny. OLD CALENDAR vase with anyone, in Decem- olyht inches in his Vore he militia tralnhiy anit. tn torse and the niiitde: Cpl. Defor is That’s not a bad idea. the nurse told able to sit up and dangle legs over the side of the bed. STILL KEEPS BUSY singing “If you knew Suzie.” “T still keep busy.” -Fanny Brice, W. C. Fields, etc. ‘ “Sometimes nn icause I going, but I know , been. “Those times. much you've were Nowadays selves on the highways iwhy I prefer to reminisce?” -uted to _tlons. The program “Ask Eddie Cantor.” “The mall is fantastic,” is ‘tions about everything.” eee _ Inspector here prevention inspector for of | part iweeks, | : | | “ OP Vhoto Sh ewe EEE NEN EH want to see less of you—longer.’ “T think it was Heywood Broun who labelied me ‘The Apostle of Pep. One day after the attack, me I would be | my | had to laugh. Look at the Apostle of Pep now — getting to dangle his legs over the side of the bed.” It has been 10 years since Ed- idie pepped up an audience by ‘tapping his palms together, do-, so many deadlines they become ing his hop-skipping dance and: he said. A «Tm writing a monthly column ‘@ska_ division Cantor, We jn the Diner’s Club magazine. -It’s mostly reminiscence of peo- ‘ple I have known —- Wil! Rogers, people ask me, ‘why the hell are you always) reminiscing?’ I tell-thern it’s be-! don’t know where I’m where I've! better got. Khrushchev and the bomb and hundreds of people killing them- every ‘holiday. Does anybody wonder | Eddie also reported that he! thad just finished 195 five-minute ‘radio shows which are distrib- 1,000 independent sta- called he sald. “I gel an average of 2,000 ‘letters a week, asking me que¢s- T. R, Anderson, area accident the Workmen's Compensation Board from Vancouver is in the city as a tour of the Prince j Rupert and district area, He will ihe In the aren for two or three veer eee eee f QOciinee Rupert Daily Mews Lt. - Thursday, February 15, ‘1962 NAMES ‘IN THE NEWS Mourning salute fired or Et ‘eo e hiopian empress t ADDIS ABABA Empress Menen of Ethiopia, who claimed descent from ‘King ‘Solomon and the Queen of Sheba, died ‘here ‘early today after a long illness. | Twenty - one guns fired a | mourning salute for the empress, £ awe eS forward — come up here and tell me.” Only one student of JogJak- arta’s Gadjah Mada University came forward with a long ques- tion referring to the U.S. ‘“cap- italfstic and monopolistic soci- ety.” wife of ‘Emperor Ifaile ‘Selassic, who left the recent African sum- | -, oF + | mit conference in Nigeria to be ! | ELSINKI —- President Urho ‘Kekkonen today was re - elected by the electoral college of ‘Fin- Tand to another six-year ‘term. i + ‘BURBANK, Calif. — Attend- ants at St. Joseph ‘Hospital say that singer Lindsay Crosby's wife, Barbara Diane, has regain- ed consciousness and is off the at her side in her last days. The deeply religious ‘empress, who was more than 70, was a ‘sevond cousin of Selassie. They ‘married In 1911. * r + \ | TARZANA, Calif. Former { ! radio news commentator ‘Fleet- 'Wwood Lawton and ‘his wife, Vir- | ¢ ; ‘ginia, were found shot to death! critical list. - Wednesday, Police said they had: A spokesman said physicians 'kiHed themselves in a suicide | believe Mrs. Crosby, 23, may be i paet at their home. suffering from a kidney distur- * bf !banee connected with her pres- i CAIRO — President Nasser has nancy. The Crosbys are expect- ited Arab Republic approves the | Soviet premier’s proposal for _. summit disermament talks ig | Said the’ majority of the 18 countries concerned agree, the authorita- tive newspaper Al Ahram report- today Aloisius | loaeas ed today. ‘dition and near deal. : - + + . . | NEW YORK — John Ross, de- JOGJAKARTA, Indonesia —| scribed as the “largest retail dis- Robert F. Kennedy drew a mix-| tributor of narcotics in this ‘ture of cheers and jecrs today) gountry,” has been sentenced to after challenging student heck-j 41, to 15 years in prison for pos- Or se ne ; Ly ; pos |. lers “if you disagree with any! sessing heroin. General Sessions aspect of American policy step) Juage Mitchell D. Schweitzer ‘imposed sentence Wednesday ‘against the 41-year-old Ross. f + cy CHICAGO —— Two Chicago fire | Seattle urged to get ahead fehiefs were killed .three - storey apartment build- ithe basement. Division Marshall | Robert J. O’Brien, 52, and Batta- ‘lion Chief Thomas A. Hoff, 44, ‘Seattle must hustle if she wants ‘were on the third-floor building ‘to keep her place as supply cen-; directing firemen when the roof ,ler for Alaska. ieave way. C. W. Sneddon, publisher of the Fairbanks News-Miner ana. former president of the Alaska 2 SEATTLE w— The publisher iof an Alaska newspaper Says i 'Phillips today rapped Toronto iChamber of Commerce, made ischool trustees for planning to ithe remark in a talk of the Al- spend large sums on what he of the Seattle called “extravagant” items Chamber of Commerce. Sneddon said estimates indi- leate cargo rates to the Alaska ‘“raitbelt” ithan half by railcar-barge ser- fat abolishing ivice through Prince Rupert. ‘several schools. He said the board of education ‘Wednesday night demanded a ‘with something constructive, | dryers. ‘she’s going to find herself out, of the surface transportation | UNITED NATIONS Adlai -business to Alaska.” he said. — | Stevenson accused Cuba and the The Aiaskan said Seattle has Soviet Union Wednesday of advantages that Prince Rupert,waging cold war propaganda in cannot match, and the people ;the United Nations in order to F b+ + Cuba and its Communist sip- ; ;porters with “pross misuse of Gets two-day term | . ; ‘bate on Cuba’s allegations that. Rennie Joseph Fagan of Ter- nae _ . ithe United States is planning race was sentenced to two days |inilitary aggression against Fidel in jail yesterday when he &p) | @osira’s regime peared in police court before : PAGODA Magistrate E.T. Applewhaite on a charge of attempted theft of gasoline. Drive-In Fagan who had pleaded not " guilty was convicted February 6 | S P E Cc I A L and remanded until yesterday | EVERY WEEK for sentencing. He was charged in connection | 3 VARIETIES 1.75 ; with an incident January 31 Phone 6226 when police said he attempted |} Chinese Food. Fried Chicken, Spaghetth, Hamburgers, Fish & Chips, We pay delivery charges Up to #f.00 on arders of #400 or over, Onen Lo steal gas from a bus in Port | Edward. A similar charge against Rich- ard James Anderson of Kitimat was dismissed, | eet mem eee Be ne 20 pom, fe ako am, Wednesday |: | when the roof of a flaming], 1 ‘ine collapsed ¢ ied them: of Prince Rupert sic? Sieasenaing ruben: can be reduced more |$12,000,000 capital budget aimed firetrap schools, then a few hours later decided | of his state would rather see hide “Communist sub version their cargo moving through ‘against the American republics.” j 1 . : ~ | Seattle. | The chief U.S. delegate charged | | told Nikita Khrushchev the Un- ling their second child in June. | ' " b+ + + ROME — A medical bulletin, Cardinal | iMuench, 72-year-old Wisconsin- | | born former bishop of Fargo, | 'NLD., is in extremely grave CON-| 7 { | | \ a VU ee a TORONTO — Mayor Nathan ‘ in | | “unless Seattle gets underway !to purchase $4,625 worth of hair ) t , i ‘ } 1 1 i i 4 ' ‘UN machinery” in pressing de- | ! t f free home delivery: phone 4032 ee LUCK Cee tet ee ete eee eee Te EEE HOH EEN Ewe TE GARRY TIWELEN, a University of Alberta student in Edmonton, holds up the one-in-six billion 13-spade bridge hand he was dealt during a game on the campus. — CP Photo The Most Popular Shoes in Town Tops in casual comfort Here’s a shoe that every inan will want for that extra comfort in leisure wear Mile-hi foam rubber soles are the feature of this surprisingly lightweight casual oxford. Hew- etaon welt construction makes it extra flexible, too. ggg , HMEWweETSOR C. E. and 7 EEE ‘Widths George Hill & Sons Ltd. 624 - 3rd Ave. W. Phone 2016 Skeena West Electoral District TERRACE, B.C. During the spring break up it may be necessary to impose load restrictions on some Highways, pur- suant to Section 27 of the Highway Act. These re- strictions may be imposed on short notice and trucking and transportation companics should govern themselves accordingly, and are requested to take advantage of the present road conditions. The restrictions will limit the axle loads of trucks and buses. Vehicles wil solid tires will be prohibited from using the Highways. Dated: Terrace, B.C. February 9th, 1962 Cc. S. SHAW, District Superintendont ede . : * : - wee te meme 1 he ee arnt metetngenenngyaanenene & * f i Iv’s LUCKY WHEN YOU DO WHAT YOU LIKE This advertisement le nat published ar displayed by ihe Liquor Control Noard or hy the Gavernmont of British Columbia.