i Ha Att x 2 = SR We, * gh, I A Bader NE hi S oF a a Sy v ad a EYE Mrs. i rr i i 1d },hijvan average five room you," "Pleased to HY our ' In Hiroshima bropOus Problem gl bursting its ogi wie oa bs pleasure 1 in H Schools seams, re must have been L] Wises a0oepbs They Hope And Pray 9 close to; indred guests as there | ed, "How do you do. It is quite natural, of course, that Hiroshima, of all cities in the world, should be the one . which displays 'the greatest in- terest in when,' where, and by whom the next nuclear testing performances will take place. The citizens of Hiroshima, al- most - down to the last person, have powerful and unquench- able urges toward peace, They organize. They sing. They pray. They demonstrate by marching ° single-file in silent, snakellke lines. In foreign eyes, they might be considered to have a fanatic ear of nuclear fallout. But to a single American who has lived in Hiroshima and who has been forced to accompany several dif- ferent waves of visitors through the haunting and explicit evi- dence of the effects of an atom bomb in Hiroshima's Peace Mu- seum, the fear somehow does not seem so fanatic. Most American visitors come to Hiroshima with a certain un- easiness. They are usually quite surprised. "But there are so many trees!" they exclaim, "I didn't expect so much greenery and foliage." "It's completely rebuilt," they notice, "It's just as if there had never been--" and their voices trail off. "There is always one inevitable question. "These people. What's their attitude?" they ask. "I mean is it hard to talk about it? The bomb? 1 mean, are they, would you say, bitter?" I always reply, almost with- out reserve, that they are not. The new Hiroshima is only 16 years old and it has a certain frontier quality about it. The frontier quality is noticeable in the people, too. Hiroshima was such a vacuum at the end of the war that it became the natural place to settle for returnees from Korea, Manchuria, and Formosa. Of course the. survivors remain- ed, too, and the two groups to- gether seem to have developed a sort of "let's start all over -- let's roll up our sleeves and build it all up again" attitude. The central monument in Hiroshima's Peace Park contains a sori of stone vault with the 69,706 names of persons who are known to have been victims of the bomb. It is, of course, dedi- cated to all the unidentified vie- tims, too. On a plaque above the vault is an inscription which, youghly translated, reads; "Sleep in peace. We will never again eommit such a grievous error." "Who's the 'we'?" one Ameri- Twice as smart! Keep warm all winter with this bulky hat, mitten set, in knitting worsted. Jiffy jumbo-knit! Takes little wool. Turnabout hat can be worn 2 ways. Pattern 677: hat direc- tions fit all sizes; mittens small, medium, large included, Send... THIRTY-FIVE CENTS -- (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. 2, Print plainly PATTERN NUM- BER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. __FOR THE FIRST ZuME! Over 00 designs in our new, 1962 eedlecraft Catalog -- biggest ever! Pages, pages, pages of fashions, home accessories to knit, crochet, sew, weave, em- broider, quilt. See jumbo-knit hits,- cloths, spreads, toys, linens, Sighans plus free patterns, Send ¢. Ontario residents must include 1c Bales Tax for each CATA- LOG ordered. There is no sales: tax on the patterns, 53% FAIR LADY -- Princess Lee Radziwill, Jacqueline Ken- nedy's sister; radiates charm as she helps open the Chelsea fall antiques fair in London. can visitor wanted to know. "Who said 'we':" "1 don't think they're refer- ring to any particular group or nation," I said. "I think they just mean hymanity in general." One recently erected monu- ment in the park is dedicated to all the children who died either during the blast or later, from the effects of it. It is dedicated with particular reference, how- ever, to one little girl who, ac- cording to legend, thought that if she folded 1,000 paper cranes in the origami paper-folding style which is familiar to all Japanese, she would not die, She sat in her hospital bed folding furiously, but she was unable to complete the task before her death. So - her classmates finished .it for her, writes Dorothy Stroup in the Christian Science Monitor. ) They folded relentlessly and unremittently, and today they have been joined by other chil- dren from all over Japan. Thou- sands upon thousands of paper cranes are hanging beneath the Children's Monument in the park. In Japan, at least, the folded crane has replaced Picas- so's dove as a symbol of peace. The children themselves, some of them high school age and older, have organized the Folded Crane Society. They continue to fold cranes which they sell for money to help atomic victims who are still in the hospital. They per- form various other philanthropic tasks having to do with bomb victims. They have the custom of flying the flag of Japan to- gether with their own Folded Crane Society flag on a pole near the Children's Monument. When the Soviet Union an- nounced that it would resume nuclear testing, the Folded Crane Society promptly displayed a So- viet flag, flying at half-mast and ~accompanied by a black crepe | paper streamer, And when Presi- dent Kennedy announced reluc- tantly that there was no other choice but to resume under- ground testing, the Folded Crane Society extended its unspoken condemnation by decorating the American flag with a black streamer and hoisting it next to the Soviet one. . : Both are rather large flags, and it is an unsettling sight to see them there, hanging halfway up the pole, sporting their black streamers, Both seem to be beat- ing out their unheard arguments against the wind like two prison- ers in the village square with their hands locked in the stocks, shouting their objections to un- sympathetic passers-by. FRANKIE FLIES HIGH -- 'AND FLOSSY! Hollywood's Frank Sinatra and and a dozen guests hightailed to Las Vegas on the shakedown flight of the latest Sinatra play- thing -- a jazzily redecorated, twin-engine Martin 404, former- ly in the TWA fleet. Among the tan - and - coral craft's appoint- ments: A master bedroom equip- ped with black leather chairs and a couch that turns into a bed; swivel seats and a four-place divan in the passenger lounge; a bar, a refrigerator, a piano, a hi-fi set, sliding window panels displaying the faces of playing- card kings, queens, and jacks; an _ overhead light "designed to re- semble at full moon, and 96 tiny ceiling lights that twinkle like stars, : 7 . plete and benefit " rebelled and sued --- The U.8. National Education Assoclation, disturbed by figures that show about one-third of high school students drop out before - graduating, is embarking on a study aimed at reducing the number, y High-school drop-outs are poor prospects for employment, and their chances are getting poorer all the time as automation pro- gresses and jobs in general re- quire more skill, training, and in- telligence, Even the high school graduate for that matter, is not in a good position. It is found that a youngster who drops out of school is likely to be unemployed, in trouble with authorities, or on the ros- ters of social agencies that assist the needy. Insofar as students drop out who have the capacity to com- from high school education, corrective mea- sures are in order to give them the assistance that will enable them to go on. But if the correc- tive program takes the direction of making it easier for misfits to remain in school by watering down academic content, the dif- ficulty will only be compounded. Then, instead of untrained non- graduates, we will have a larger number of untrained graduates, who will be liable to the same difficulties besetting the drop- out. We hope the experts studying this situation will consider the possibility that high-school in- struction in places where it is aimed primarily at preparing students for college, does not fill the needs of those who have no interest in college, no prospect of attending, and no chance of getting anything out of college | even if they entered. But many of these youngsters might make excellent tech- nicians, mechanics, and artisans if their-true-bent were discover- ed and their education given the same direction as their potential abilities at the right time, be- fore they are bored, discouraged, and repelled. --Pasadepa (Calif.) Star-News Composer Finally Gets Credit Booming through the mist of nostalgia that hung heavy in Salt Lake City's Mormon Tem- ple assembly hall came the sen- timental strains of that old and tired favourite "I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now." An audience of 2,000 served up the corn lusti- ly while on stage a short, silver- haired figure bowed, waved, and smiled at his serenaders. At 76, Utah's native son Har- old Orlob last month was reap- ing his rightful honour at last. for composing the barbershop ballad which the world has long credited to another man. Mayor J. Bracken Lee gave Orlob the traditional key to the city, and Stanley Adams, president of the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers, paid tribute 'to one of ASCAP's few surviving charter members. Earlier in the evening an array of soloists, a chorus, and the Salt Lake Philharmonic had rol- licked through several other Or- lob oldies. Some hours 'after the concert, at a table in the Hotel Utah's rooftop restaurant overlooking the mountain-rimmed city, Or- - lob spoke quietly of a musical lifetime in which he had seen sheet-music sales lose out to the phonograph, records make way for radio, and movies move over to TV. He recalled how he had gone to Chicago as a youngster. "I. was so green the cows could eat me," he said, "but somehow I went on the road as a musical director for an opera company. I pounded the piano with my right hand, conducted with my left, and hoped for the best. Eventu- ally I settled down and started to write music." One vaudevillian he worked for ,was Joe Howard, for whom he wrote "I Wonder Who's Kiss- ing Her Now" in'1900. As was the custom in those days, the copyright with assigned to the performer, "I never claimed roy- ---alties;"- Orlob. said, "because 'thie industry' knew I was responsible for the hit" When the movies made a biography of Howard in 1947 titled "I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now," Orlob finally not for damages, but for recognition. Out of court, Orlob settled for credit asa co-composer with Howard. Looking out across a changing "city at mountains still familiar after half a century's absence, Orlob summed up his big day in this way: "I didn't come home rich, or really: famous, but a night like this, a concert all for me, with so many of my old friends and neighbours -- {t's awfully gratifying." i ---- It's more blessed to give than fo receiveand i's deductible, Ne MISS TEEN-AGE AMERICA -- Miss Diane Lynn Cox, 17, was winner of the Miss Teen-age America Pageant. She stands with second place winner, Holly Mae Shick, right, 17. + The pageant was held in Dallas. INGERFARM 7 Gwendoline P. Clarke . Am 1 ever happy! During the summer I made an afghan. It was my small contribution to- wards a fund--raising campaign for our local hospital. The hos- pital W.A. and our branch of the W.I supplied the money -- and 1 supplied the work. I might add it took me three months to make and required $20 worth of wool. Then we sold tickets on it for a lucky draw. And do you know that afghan brought in $168! So why wouldn't I be happy? The draw took place at a "Country Fair" organized by the W.A. All kinds of country pro- duce was offered for sale -- fruit, vegetables, honey, homemade pork sausage, eggs, cakes, pies, bread, aprons, stuffed toys, flow- ers, cut and potted, and a table of white elephants. The hall was very attractive -- fruit and vege- tables stacked up on the floor in the centre of the room, a - stuffed ~parrot in a bird cage hung over the platform and a SPOOF -SPOOK -- Wide-eyed, frozen with fear, this kitten watches a witch streak across a Halloween sky on a broom- stick near Ottawa. simulated beehive was set among the cans of honey. Of course, the whole affair was a tremendous lot of work -- these things al- ways are -- but our combined efforts did bring in a fair amount of money, I thought I would give you all the main details as new ideas for raising money are usually welcome in almost any district. And now just one more word about the afghan. Many people exclaimed at the fact that I had done it all myself and that it must have been a terrific under- taking. Well, mayhe . . ., but to me it was not work so I feel I don't deserve too much credit. All those little crochet squares had been made during the eve- ning while watching T.V. I al- ways feel guilty it I spend too much time in front of the televi- sion doing nothing. But if _hands are occupied = well; that's -- another story. The winter will soon be with us once again. May- be you know someone in your local organizations who would be glad to help you raise funds in just that way -- or maybe you, yourself, are good at crochet or knitting. It is nice pick-up work for anyone, but particularly good for a semi-convalescent. If the hands are occupied the mind has less time for self-pity -- in which too many of us are apt to indulge after a period of invalidism, Any handwork .requires a certain amount of concentration -- and thus relieves constant attention to one's aches and pains. : Now I've dispensed with end of the week activities 1'11 go back _ to the beginning. Monday night we had a bevy 'of visitors, among them my sister-in-law who was - returning to spend her last two days with us before going back to England. Tuesday I left Part- ner and his sister to have a visit to themselves while I took off with the Press. Club for a dinner meeting at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Wees. (Frances Shelley Wees -- well-known author). They live several miles the far side of Stouffville in the sort of house one dreams of but seldom _ sees. I can't begin to desoribe it except to say the lving-room THE PRIDE OF FORMOSA Is Nationalist China's Women's Amy Co of tha corps, wearing slit skirts and high-heeled shoes, put their best . Chiang Kai-shek's army is in fine shape and It offers one more rea: was on theartered bus-load and about "1 sen filled care -- and the hou vasm't even crowded. We had marvellous time al- though. got lost three times trying 1 d the place, Our b in 1'ONEally 4 w the way find tha ice. Our bus-driver naturall ankknew the way #0 Stouftvigooput this house was away ob 1 beaten track, across back « 1ssions . and along wooded] ls. Some of the mem- bers hat en before and were quite sv hey would know the ~ way. B? »u know how it is -- one nan country road looks much lijzck.nother -- and semi- darknesy ;, nakes identification even ma onfusing. Fortunate- ly our bf" iver was a very oon- genial | v and seemed to be getting | theck out of the whole affair, he was saying to himself 'These women!" but he didnr ow the least sign of impatiez. N. We arrived nearly an houn. I: and believe me we were TIMypg, for the delightful buffet ss r that had been pre- pared fé r enjoyment. - That ""% I stayed at Dee's and too _e first bus home in the mon The rest of the day was takk » in last minute chat- ter as C( iie prepared for her return -: t. Bob: and family, and Pan and I went to Mal- ton to 12% ier off. From the Observa roof we watched as the giant revved up ready for take-off. 1e heat was terrific and the 2g ust fumes stung our eyes. TI she began to move and in & itter of seconds was up in air, her twinkling lights soc st to sight. Queenie's visit to | ida was ended. For 17 days had visited friends 3,000 mi from. home. Now I suppose ~--s visiting with other friends Ertan, no doubt re- lating h= f@xperiences in Can- ada. Isn=Whis a wonderful age in which==glive -- if only gath- ering wizNouds would let us enjoy itA= : Anne Ashley Q. Wh ntroducing one per- son to a 1p, are you supposed to introd him first to the wo- men in group, then to the men? . A. The re no rules of prece- dence in case. Perform your introduc in the easiest way -- by 17 "ducing the person around t group in order. __.nvited to the birth- card enclosed with » not required to do = Q. Wh-__re some expressions to avol hen acknowledging introduc ? A, Suc! tited or pretentious- soundin 'ages as, "Charmed," "Dellghif(> "Pleased to meet t_ may do so It you Q. Even if the wedding is be a small one, fo ® for the bridegroom te have A. Hla oi am y but he sho should choose a brother of bride, or his own best frend. i NEW TEEN TRIO PRINTED PATTERN - 4750 torts by-Hhane Alon Wear them together or sepa- rately--this dashing (but easy- to-sew) trio gives you lots of changes! Note how low neckline of jerkin reveals the blouse. Printed Pattern 4750: Teen Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 jerkin, skirt take 17% yards 54- inch; blouse 1% yards 39-inch. Send FORTY CENTS (stamps cahnot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NU- MBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, | Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto, Ont. oo FALL'S 100 BEST FASHIONS -- separates, dresses, suits, en- gembles, all sizes, all in our new "Pattern Catalog in color. Sew for --yourself, family. 35¢c. = Ontario residents must inclu le Sales Tax for each OAT LOG ordered. There is no sales tax on the patterns. ISSUE 45 -- 1961 ~ FALSE OF DEATH D RATE PER 9% CHANGE" , 0 Hoon: HEH ai dntase .. _ |. 69410 | 3664 Up 3 VEY Terr a i 2320 | 14 V ce ene aren | 192720 107, 0s ME ive dritaveies g 93,330 Down es of infancy ...... 66,510 . Doves 9 nza and pneumonia 65,820 Up 1 ning of arterles ..,. 36,500 Dove ; TERI TE 30,790 7. nital (inborn) defects 21510 F120 ff Ooh r sis of liver ..... =v 20,200 11} latory diseases ..... 20,160 1. Er A wiso | 108 blood pressure .. , 12,750 BA Sova y disease ORCI) 12,360 69 Down boas Zou, ve ¥ 0000 10,830 6.0 U, Jes ruptured arberles, blood elots, gangrens, etc, LY LIST--Latest figures trom the U.S, Public Health show that heart killer, with an increase of thr othef circulatory diseases sho BOTlod. Chass abtye Joss as dropped two per con Hiberculosis; Nor 1 iss ye, 15.teadin 8 now No, 16, having claimed 10,670 continues to be the nation's er cent since 1050, up 129 per of se at the t During a recent parade in Taipei members forward. If this is a typical outfit, President Pt, for a strong Taiwan defense.