® re Ab 30 Haming Death NASHUA SETS MONEYâ€"WINNING MARK â€" With Jockey Eddie Arcaro in the saddle, Nashua romps home to victory to win the fitle of the world‘s leading moneyâ€"winning thoroughbred in the Camden Handicap. Fisherman finished second. The race was worth $22,750 to Nashua and boosted his allâ€"time earnings to $1.100,365. There is no doubt that these accidents can be drastically reâ€" duced ‘for Gen. Curtis LeMay, chief of Strategic Air Command, eur longâ€"range striking force, was able to cut his accident rate in 1954 to a new low of 13 accidents per 100,000 flying hours,; despite the fact that he is dealing with such fighters as the 800 mph Fâ€"100 Super Sabres and the swift new jet bombers, Bâ€"47 and Bâ€"52. His safety campaign, LeMay figures, has saved $60,000,000 in tax money since 1950. No data is available for 1955, but 1356 started out ominously. m ay after New Year‘s, a ago couple and their two daughters were killed in the family plane while returning from St. Louis; and in Minesota, two other light plane accidents killed three men and left a fourth critically injured. ‘lines, but it‘s the littleâ€"plane §6 statistically, the puddle: Jjumpers had more than 50 times as many mishaps as the airlines and kiled more than 25 times as many . persons. In 1954, for example, U.S. Government files showed that: Commercial airlines had 56 Eeidenu, five of them fatal, ling 24 persons while . . Small private , aircraft had 8,010 accidents, 304 of them fatal, killing 608 persons. erashes that really make work for the undértakers. i(» But what explains the crash last October that killed two famous Northwest Orient Airâ€" line pilots, Don King and Charlie Ryan: What sent their Navion down in the Minesota backâ€" lands after a duckâ€"hunting trip, killing Mrs. Ryan, too, and inâ€" juring Mrs. King criticallyâ€" This was all too abvious in the case of young Joe! Thorne. the millionaire playboy whose Beechcraft Bonanza plummeted through the roof of a North Holly wood, Cal., apartment house one misty night last Ocâ€" tober. He died in the pyre as did a bride and a baby in the buildâ€" ing. Seven more dwellers were grievously burned. Thorne had taken off not long before into weather which called for an instrument rating he didn‘t posâ€" sess. It was a simple enough case: he just had no business leaving the ground that night! Sad statistics testify that the pilot, not the plane, is almost always to blame when they pick up the pieces, writes George Carroll in The Police Gazette. An outbreak of fatal crashes had brought this fact into foâ€" cus, and the Crowleyâ€"Slattery bulletin undoubtedly has saved a good many lives. Its sledgeâ€" hammer warning: "Air turbuâ€" lence is invisible and therein lies its great hazard!" goes equally well for the nonâ€"professional pilot who proceeds into stormâ€" whipped skies where he has no business flying. lcnutnï¬uw‘kodahrr plane could flip around a light ship "like a cork in a maelatrom" if it followed too closely on the final approach for its . landing. Citing the increasing speed and hazard of military and airâ€" line aircraft, ‘ Hartranft points out that "we have millions of modern autos that can go 100 miles an hour, but there is no highway in the United States where such speeds are permitâ€" Speed (up to hypersonic now) has been aviation‘s chief comâ€" modity, so it‘s something of a shock to hear an airman even hinting at putting on the brakes. "One airline spokesman," says Hartranft angrily, "wants some method to permit our little planes to keep on flying below 5000 feet." ted!" reached _ critical proportions" because of aerial congestion. They reported more than 65 midâ€"air collisions involving civil aircraft since 1950, with heavy loss of life, then sharply warnâ€" ed: ‘"The collision hazard is beâ€" coming greater as the increase in civil and military air trafâ€" fic outpaces capabilities of outâ€" moded traffic control facilities." In the face of all this it‘s naâ€" tural that there be pressure for more stringent‘ regulation of private fliers. But Joseph Hartâ€" ranft, Jr., president of the Airâ€" craft Owners and Pilots Assoâ€" ciation, charges that the presâ€" sure is going way beyond stringency. He declares that‘ the military, the airlines and the airline pilots‘ union are aiming at regulations that would just about ground the 312,000 civil pilots in the U.S. 2 ‘‘The new aircraft," he "must be regulated just as and cars are!" Mt may be, though, that Uncle Sam is going to have to hang a few amber (for caution) lights somewhere overhead â€" that is if they won‘t get in the way of the ten earth satellites we‘re getting ready to launch. In May, 1955, the Eisenhower Administration chose a panel of eight experts to study the naâ€" tion‘s aviation facilities. Their report made the chilling anâ€" nouncement that "the risks of midâ€"air collisions have alteady reached _ critical proportions" because of aerial congestion. She and her employer, W. C. Wilson, had been flying from Santa Fe, N. M., to Winslow, Ariz. He fought his way afoot to the nearest ranch for help but to no avail. Miss Thompson died. on ground .. xo 819 Inadequate flight planning .. 277 Failed to avoid collision with objects ... 273 Government investigators ofâ€" ten find two or more factors inâ€" terwoven in air tragedies. Thus both weather and inadequate fight planning seem to figure in the harrowing case last year of Melba Thompson, 22, a Denver secretary. Paralyzed from the waist down, she lay four days in the snowâ€"covered wreck of a light ptane that crashed in Ariâ€" zona as she was attempting an emergency landing in a snowâ€" storm. The most frequent types of fatal accidents in 1954 were: Spins or stalls ... 56% Collision with ebjects ....... 13% Collision with ground or water ... w.l. 11% The most common cause of all nonâ€"airline accidents that year were: Weather ..unmummmmenmenmen 897 Failed to maintain speed ... 401 Operated in unsuitable area 356 Lost directional control ous effert to fight boredom, fatigue and inattention, pilot error will remain the No. 1 eause of smallâ€"plane crashes. the way they did>? There doesn‘t seatm to be any answer, but the tragedy cerâ€" tainly indicates that when you‘re bandling a small plane, you‘ve got to be on your toes, _ As a matter of fact, unless inâ€" dividual pilots make a tremendâ€" Stratocruisers, get washed out Drive With Care adds, boats now) comâ€" of a even }110‘1 they enjoy life! How graceâ€" fully they float among the clouds and carry the sunlight upon their beautiful backs. Symmeâ€" trically, _ smoothly _ they _ sail. mindful of neither time nor space! â€" From "Better Than Gold," by George Matthew Adâ€" As these birds fly above the earth, how happy they seem! And just think of the day‘s work of one of these filying birds. Take the friendly little house wren. It is recorded that it has fed its young 1,217 times during the period of a single day! And there are birds that pile up food for their young beside the nest for future feedings, Busy creaâ€" tures, these feathered friends of ours. Few drones among them. â€" The tiny humming bird is the only lard bird known which can fly backward! And when its frail and delicate bill is inserted in a flower to gain its honey, its wings work so fast that its small body seems stationary in the air. The down stroke then beâ€" comes an almost horizohtal forâ€" ward stroke. It can even rise straight up into the air! But nothing is so remarkable as the use to which these wings of birds are putâ€"many migraâ€" ting thousands of miles from their different stays throughout the year. Birds in Hawaii, for example, nest and breed in farâ€" away Alaska and then fly back to those flowerâ€"scented islands to play out their days of joy Wonder of wonders is the wing of every bird. When outâ€" spread, soaring high above the earth, what is there more fasâ€" cinating to watch? An eagle, hawk, sea gull, pigeon, heron, crane, starlingâ€"and that exquiâ€" site creature the humming bird â€"each has its own marvelous wings that fan the air in flight â€"and each is a spectacle of wonâ€" der and delight. â€" makes up a fabric, ind how it will perform in wear and cleaning. Mrs. Humphries claims that the solution for this problem lies in ad equate labelling â€" not Just a label with the manufacturer‘s name on it, but one which tells the fibre conâ€" tent and gives clear instructions for proper care, Housewives can help bring this about by insisting on adequately labelled goods nnd passing up the ofhers, she advised. She stressed the fmportance of reading labels very carefully, For example, if looking for a fabric conâ€" taining terylene to provide durable pleats, one whould know the per. centage of that fribre incorporated in the fabric. People mre Inclined to overlook the label and then blame the sales man if the garment isn‘t what was expected, said Mrs. Humphries, »l though the blame really lies with the inadequate label. Manufacturers of fibres are tryâ€" ing to have finished garments conâ€" taining the fibre properly labelled as to fibre content and with in structions for proper care. But as yet an adequate system of Iabelling for Canadianâ€"made | garâ€" ments has not been established. What is "creaseâ€"resistant" to one anufacturer is not to another, Mrs. Humphries in her article suggested that Canadian manufacturers should get together and adopt a system of labelling which would provide all necessary information. We had only of late years seen the earth, upon which we walk and work, from the same height that birds have known it for centuries. Our gliding planes of today are but the pictured eviâ€" clence of flight long, long ago before man ever trod this earth! From nature is to be gained more knowledge than from any school or college. In fact, most of the knowledge in books is but what mas has learned from a careful study of nature. Sciâ€" ence has gone back a hundred million years. ... Just as much care should be taken when buying clothes as in buying a hbouse, according to Mary Huw phries, chrirman of the textile com: !nninee, Canadian _ Consumers. _ No one would buy a bouse with out finding out the details of the materials which went into building it. We should be just as cureful wbout knowing the kind of fabrics from which our clothes are made, said Mrs. Mumphries, , In the days when there were only the natural fibres â€" flas, cotton, silk and wool â€" it wis easy to recognize the fabric and know up proximately how it would behave. But in this day of manâ€"made fibres uo housewife is expert enough to tell what fibre â€" or blend of fibres Look For The Label MARIE DIONNE QPENS FLOWER SHOPâ€"The four surviving Dionne Quintuplets officially open the florist shop started by Marie and named the "Salon Emilie" for deceased Emilie Dionne. Left to right during the ribbon cutting ceremony in Montreal, are: Annette, Cecile, Marie and YÂ¥vonne. Wings in Flight Joan Burcombe has come up with a sureâ€"fire way of finding enough swimming space at a crowded beach. When she goes for a dip at England‘s famed Brighton bmach, she wears her pet python, Phil, as a scarf. HOW TO LOSE CROWDS â€" Mrs !WHAT‘S ON FIRST? â€" Sort out ‘ths characters and you . get iOrioles’ Tito Francona (looking least) nipped at first base by |Yank‘s Bill Skrowron (looking ‘west) during a game at the ‘Yankee Stadium. Q. How can I make easy the task of reâ€"knitting a sweater? A. The task of reâ€"knitting a sweater can be made easier if A. Either wet the lace and spread it where it will freeze, or wet it and spread in a very hot sun. Either method may reâ€" quire several days to bleach thoroughly, and it must be kept wet all the time. : Q. How can 1 remove rust from iron or steel? A. There is nothing like a touch of kerosene, applied with powdered bath brick to give it the proper amount of roughage. Q. How can I remove yellow spots from old lace? Q. How can I leakâ€"proof for tak luggage on a trip? A. Any bottle can be made leakâ€"proof, if, after the cork has been tightly fitted into it, it is dipped _into melted paraffin, Then tie a piece of heavy paper over the top to make it even more secure. Q. How can I prevent rugs from curling at the edges? A. Make a thin starch. Disâ€" solve a small amount of gum araâ€" bic in a little water and add to the starch. Turn the rug upâ€" side down and apply the soluâ€" tion with a paint brush. Let it dry. How Can 1? By Anne Ashley can I make bottles for taking in my Ledru then presented the eviâ€" dence to his superior, who at first refused to believe him. It was revealed during the subâ€" "I know who the murderer of Andre Monet is," he announced, "and 1 have the evidence to convict him, but I do not know what the motive was." Ledru studied the footprints â€"and then a terrible suspicion entered his mind. A toe was missing from one of the footâ€" printsâ€"a toe on the right foot. At once he knew the signifi~ cance of his wet socks. While the other police looked on he pulled off his right shoe and made an impression wtih his foot in the sand next to the murderer‘s footprint. ‘ The two prints were identical. _ Ledru went to the surgeon who had performed the postâ€" mortem and obtained the lethal bullet, then he fired several shots from his own Luger into a bagful of feathers and reâ€" trieved the bullets. The lethal bullet was identical with those just fired from his gun. He hurried off to Paris where he saw his immediate superior. Ballistics experts said that the fatal bullet had been fired from a Luger revolver, a common type of weapon such as was isâ€" sued to all members of the poâ€" lice force. The footprints were clearly imprinted in the wet sand and apparently the man who made them had been in his stockinged Fat feet Ledru established that the murdered man was not rich and that he had many friends but no enemies. His clothes were left by him in a neat pile on the beach; there was money in his pockets and a gold watch, but nothing had been disturbed. It seemed to be a motiveless crime. The only clues found by the polcie were footprints which it was obvious had been made by the murderer because they did not fit those of the dead man and because they were the only footprints near the victim. The Surete asked if Ledru would assist the local police in solving the murder. Late in the afternoon he reâ€" ceived a telegram from his suâ€" perior in Paris stating that the body of a man had been found shot dead on the beach at Saint Addresse The man @had apâ€" parently gone midnight swimâ€" ming. A. Cover the spots with paste made of fuller‘s earth and watâ€" er and let it remain twentyâ€"four hours. If it is oil from oiled streets, scrub with benzine. Q. How can 1 make the taste of olive oil more agreeable, if someone considers it unpleasant? A: A pinch of salt aids considâ€" erably. Wet Socks Clue To Beach Murder Change of Plans Q. How can 1 remove oil spots from carpets? Q. Can potatoes be boiled rapidly? A, No; this makes them soft and broken on the outside, wWith hard, uncooked centers. He had just recovered from a nervous breakdown caused by long hours probing a murder mystery, and had been advised to rest for a month. One morning Ledru awoke in his hotel room after twelve hours‘ sleep and, as he was putâ€" ting on his socks, felt that they were damp, At the time he did not think anything more about it. in a warm place to dry. The kinks will be gone when the yarn has drier. Q. How can 1 renew velvet? A. Steam velvet over the spout of a teaâ€"kettle. Place a funnel in the spout and you will be able to cover a larger area. A. Shoes can be made waterâ€" proof and also preserved by. meiting a little .beeswax, and adding enough sweet oil to make it pour. Then warm the shoe soles and pour on the mixâ€" ture while it is hot. Hold the shoes near the fire until the mixture is absorbed into the leather. Robert Ledru, famous French detective of the Surete, Paris, was on holiday at Le Havre. Q. How can I make shoes wat erproof? the kinks are first taken out ol the yarn. Wind the yarn in a skein, tie together firmly, and wash it in lukewarm | water. Then fold in a towe!l and put I e id EMERALD OIL aots instantly to quiet pain, reduce Inflammation and stimulate elreulation bringing fresh blood to the injured part. Just follow the simple directions. EMERALD OIL is sold by all druggists. This is the season when mothâ€" ers go crazy trying to keep track of the children they‘ve been longing to turn loose outâ€" ofâ€"doors all winter long, > If the picture from your pleture window is always rather hazy, tike a tip from the housewives in Holâ€" land. They keep their windows sparkling with a solution made by mixing one cup of cider vinegar and oneâ€"andâ€"aâ€"half gallons of hot water. The simple EMERALD oIL home treatment permits work as usual while those old sores are being helped. You got relief real quick for EMERALD OIL helps promote nulthl healing. esn LERCCOP B â€" 4. A Denver paper once mixed up an ad for a toy automobile with one for a lingerie shop. This was the scramble; "This model (showâ€" ing a lovely young female in a comehither nightie) . features built in fenders and a new adjustable bumper " 5. Long Beach (California) Pressâ€" Telegram, ran furniture copy this way : 2. In the Magnolia 1;\rknns:ls)i Bannerâ€"News, an ad for a dry. | cleaning service: "Get them in Friâ€" ) day. We will have them black Sutâ€" | urday." | Simple Ulcers Boilsâ€"Open Sores Now Get Real Help At Homeâ€" No Time Lost From Work 1. In the Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal : The lovely white blouse on the top of the hill out Medina Road is open once agnin. DR.*VINCENT HALTER PSYCHIATRIST POSITIVE CURE IN TWO YEARS OR YOUR MANIA BACK sequent 'uwonl;flqg that Ledru lad left the hotel his sleep and that he had shot Monet while asleep, returned to the hotel, and discarded the wet socks and gone back to sleepâ€" without once being aware of what he was doing! _ _ But _ 33 â€" year â€" old Henry Chancey, a railway clerk in Boston, was questioned while he was asleep to solve a mysâ€" tery which he knew nothing about while awake. It was a purely chance reâ€" mark that put the F.B.I. on the right trail. _ Someone . said to Chancey: "Are you sure you didn‘t take the money while you were sleepâ€"walking?" The F.B.L established â€" that Chancey had for many | years been a confirmed sleepwalker and that he did many odd and unaccountable things during his lengthy bouts of somnambulism. To the astonsihment of the officers, Chancey, who was ‘obâ€" viously in a deep sleep, replied to all their questions, and a litâ€" tle later when they said to him, "Lead us to the place where you put the money," he arose in his sleep and left the house. The detectives trailed along behind over rough ground for eight miles, until Chancey beâ€" gan to dig in soft earth and unâ€" covered the bags of money! Then he turned areund to reâ€" trace his steps but one of the detectives slapped him sharply on the back to awaken him. The girl was arrested and charged with murder, but the d efenee brought conclusive evidence that she had had preâ€" vious nightmares and that she was a confirmed sleepâ€"walker. An equally odd case was that of John Cooke, of Denver, Colâ€" orado. who â€" stabbed _ himselt four times while fast asleep. A few minutes before he died he awoke and revealed to the docâ€" tor and nurses trying to save his life that he had dreamed that he was surrounded by enâ€" emies who were going to torâ€" ture him. In desperation and facing torture he had grabbed up a knife in his dream and stabbed himself fatally. With his full permission they sat in his home one night and waited until he fell asleep, then they questioned him closely about the money. After several slaps Chancey awoke from the deep sleep. He had no idea of how he got where he was, nor of how the money had been placed there. Ledru was not tried for murâ€" der; instead he was sent to a farm in the country where he was given protection against himself for he was a danger to the publicâ€"but only when he as asleep. He died having rptnt fifty years on the farm where Rlo was put under guard only while he was fast asleep! A few months ago in Kenâ€" tucky, 16â€"yearâ€"old Jo Ann Kiger dreamed _ that â€" burglars â€" had broken into her home and that hl: family was being murdered. She left her bed, seized two revolvers and dashed into the "dream battle" during which she fired ten shois, killing her father and sixâ€"yearâ€"old brother, and _ seriously _ injuring _ her mother. This evidence and the fact that the prosecution could ofter no motive at all, resulted in her being acquitted. CHAIR: SWANK MODEL RARELY COMFORTABLE, TOO 3. Classified ad ponviiiiin o rertwanhi neiae ie nallfeaunapar uin inpatinige nugete m ced ie i use iz c i PROOFREADER LEAVES TOWN ISSUE 23 â€" 1956 shooters at the first Canaadiag Bkeet Cbampionship Shoot held t@e cently in Moptreal. ( â€" This is one sport where there aren‘t auy "ladies rules." The waâ€" men use the same guns, shoot om the same squads under the same conditions as the men â€" and are mot fuvored by any bandicaps. \ Most women who shoot skeet toog up the sport in "selfâ€"defence," be ‘ln;: marrled to ardent marksmen, Rather than stay at home while husbands participated in shooting ‘mwlx, they guave it a try themâ€" selves. Now they are every bit as keen as the men and compete with them successfully, In Canada, about 40 per cent of the membership im skeet clubs is femining. _ Once bitten by the skeet bug, evem the most petite of these enthuslasts happily totes a seven or eight pound shotgun. Absorbing the "kick" from a .12 gauge shell perhaps 100 times in an afternoon requires certain physical fitness! But when they discard their shoot, ing elothes and don party dresse@, Canada‘s shooting women look for all the world as if they would rum in terror from & cap gun. OLYMPIC GARB â€" John B. Kelly, right, sculling champ and brother of Princess Grace of Monado, models parade uniâ€" form to be worn by members of the United States team compet ing in this year‘s Olympi¢ Games at Melbourne, Australia. It features offâ€"white, tropical wool â€" blazerâ€"cut jacket with matching cap â€" and _ tropical worsted Navy _ blue _ slacks, Thomas _ W. Courtney, _ left, American 800â€"meter record holder, wears the travel outfit of Navy blue wool gabardine Eisenhower jacket and match» ing cap. Slacks are gray flanâ€" nel. to make bathirlg suits briefer, t uis clothes trimmer and ski suite lighter, would look aghast at the outfits worn by the women skeeg As the meet opened on a windy, rainswept field, skirts were cover ed with large waterproof ovralis, an oversize waterproof Jacket gave freedom for shooting, and curig were hidden by a sheet of plasti¢ wrapped turbanâ€"style around the head. These â€" crackâ€"whots, who would rather spend their tine shooting 8t elay pigeons than sipping tea, prac« tice their sport winter or summer, In snow, sleet, wind or rain. Thi@ time it was rain. In fact, it was difficult to diÂ¥ tinguish the women from the mew â€" and the way they bandled their guns would certainly not give them away. These days mest people work under pressure, worry more, sleep less. This strain on body and brain makes physical fitness easier to leseâ€"harder to regain, Today‘s tense living, lowered resistance, overwork, worryâ€"any of these may affect normal kidney action. When kidneys get out of order, excess acids and wastes remain in the system. Then backache, disturbed rest, that ‘"‘tiredâ€"out" heary» headed feeling often follow. That‘s the time to take Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. Dodd‘s stimulate the kidneys to normal action, Then you feel betterâ€"sleep betterâ€" work better. Ask for Dodd‘s Kidney Pills at any drug counter. sa ALLOUT Lady Gun Toters canada‘s STANDARD PiPE tosacco \U Svhleet and cool in any Pipe ou cant go 5; If you Feel 2 RLLIN