1961-09-27 — Page 6

China Mail 德臣西報 中國郵報 All

THE CHINA MAIL,

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 47, 1961.

BAN THE BOMB

"If they tread on Grandma's toos many more times it'll bo bang 38odbye to the 'no violônico either side' pact."

Canadian Newsletter

Calling Mr Thomson: come home at

once

Newspapers here need you urgently

Frederiction, New Brunswick,

SHAME on a number of Canadian newspapers who have funnelled a statement from their offices in New York to their front pages which

is causing many in the vast Dominion to ask:

England this September day?"

ずいー

These Canadian papers porter that the British people want Sir Winston Church to retire from Parlament.

This shocking misstatement has no root in reality. We know the lovet Essex sonis of Wood- ford would never turn traitor is their beloved Warden of the Cine Ports.

No, the blame must rest on a portion of the Canadian Press at these Irresponsible Cana- dan editors who published the story.

But on line 1 know of label the courage to attack the Cano- dino Press for this outrage.

His Dane is Brig. Michnet Wardell, and he runs a brave, ferriess and lively pager from the city by the river called Fredericton Daily Gleaner.

Solution

Now it seems to me that there

is 4

Silence those sturdy London presses of yours. Sull thuse Útstenint serCPRs. Speed to the and at the gaudy red maple. For Mr Thanson, you are newd- ed here..

And when all is tatted and told, it is no file thing to be a prophet is your own country. You are a very rich price. are Canadian. You know the newspaper ingånern as the vil- lage smitty knows the home's

Many newspapers in Canoda are about as enticing as a sink full of old baked beans. They

read. The foreign newn s often innecurate. Their local news is sometimes censored.

"What has become of

session between the Soviet and the Chinese Communist parties.

have The sentences

quality of IL special

translations former's Cnusar.

thinl fourth from

You grasp

the noun and fallow it from participle to participle until you fall, exhaus- ted over the battlements on to # vorb

Now Mr Timson you could tron this all up in a trifle. You have the tin. You have the tools. ' send you the teket.

look dull and are even Buiter to KRIEGHOFF

In many paper the news of drunken driving ls suppressed and the stories f divorce mitter. Even death itself is called "passing over, passing on ur gone." The ending article

EXHIBITION

Tver held of Cornelius THE largest exhibition

London Express Service.

from Jean Campbell

t

"Humpb" said professon from the University. "One hun dred and nine chocolate-box tops is what I should call it all."

Krieghoft is popular us nuin- ters go hereabouls, Partly be cause he fetches high prices the highest of any Canadian painter. The gallery paid £9,250 for his best work. Merrymaking. Kreigh! Jaks to me like bateblly-notch

Breughel, Currier and Ives and Herring.

Ile was a Dutchman of Jewish descent who emigrated to the United States in the 1830s. He latended to travel over this con-

his paintings of these years were brought to England by his army friends as presents for their (smilies and there they have remalued, untraced, unt this day.

WILL

EARL RUSSELL BE MARCHING FOR

THE H-BOMB NEXT?

FARL RULSELL

woke up one morn- ing to view the approach of autumn through the bars of a prison.

I was not the first tinie

thut philosopher Bertrand Russell hid been in jail. And he is certainly

pared to go again.

I would be a loo

pre-

Pagy

10

ery sentimental teurs for the aid man's pli

That the British havn always

anti- been suckers for banan quity is well known to any tele- vision viewer who has ever been embarrassed by a quiz audience expluding into prolonged ap plause because someone has hobbled on to the state to e- swer a few inane inquiries.

for I cry no tears

Russell. Neither, be sure, does he.

MACKENZIEN.

groups of while wooden houses with their church spires acTOSS the stark waters.

But this is as it should be. for Lord Beaverbrook has long

has revered a saying that he

"Love nature Krieghoff journeyed to Europe in his garden for two years where he lived in better then art." France and in Germany, copy- ing the favourite paintings of CANADA

his time. These he shrewdly shipped to Canada for sale to the newty rich fur merchants

who favoured "European art." COMPARED ...

He did not sign his these canvasest

name to

Although Krieghoff never by-

by

Herbert

Kretzmer

Ha courted this action. ic Invited this judgment,

He even joked about it when he Thientheil, Inst.December, te star! nova), vi the cagler. Adding "Otherwise, I suppose. it would just be mallbags and the Bible. It would, of course, be most agreeable to be freed from the telephone,"

Inexhaustible

welcomed like tourists and greeted in a friendly way.

"It would take the starch out of them and they might And some interest in our way of living."

But only three years later, in the summer of 1940, Ruskeli had switched gunsights fün circle.

Miller, he decided, wna "really rather a rullan" and "I were yong enough to fight myself, I should do ND."

Panic-spreader

ik tot of the Berlin airlift, Russell hind truly left paeliism Yar Bellid him and was beginning to sound very much like the Pentagon panic spreaders he 110W sects to despise,

Incredibly. the romarkable ok! man actually began to advocate wint is now widely Russell known that

amony trigger-happy

I have salch workl be prepared to US. generala an "preven-

times tive war."

to prison again. Next

however, it might conceivably Russell rumbled: "Elther be because he will be leading à we must march for more H-bombs, Russin before she has the

rather than less.

For Bertrand Russell is man whose passion for causes Is inexhaustible.

have a war against

bomb, or we will have to lie down and let her govern 15.

living Stalin,

18 a fool's paradise, doesn't realise the

He has embraced points of strength of our resources... view with the intensity "of a Russell argued that Even promiscuous lover, offering an atomic war of extra-

his full heart to the lady of ordinary hortur would ԵՐ the moment, but discovering, Justied us "it would be the when the kissing stopped, that there was a more exciting girl Bround the corner.

war to end wars."

Dove

of peace

As the flies progressed, Lord

Over tho long years he has pusherl causes with Jutelligence and vigour, only

back-track and side-step Russell astonished nobody in away from them to search particulur by abandoning his his warlike stance to reach back- out new paths, dismaying

and puzzling his wards to grasp the followers

dove of Devociates by his intellectual prace at any price.

In another complete somer- cartwheelings.

saultin 1958 Russel now declared: "I do not care to owe

Martyrdom

a few years of precarious liberty to an ability to participate as en

crime which It has therefore come as no Accomplice in

In has no parallel

human Furprise that Russell, in his history. Enter Russell, the ninetleth year, is regarded bỷ a nuclear disarmer.. sizeable, and not particularly Earl Russell's contribution to Philistine,, proportion of his modern thought has been 13- fellow countrymen as a muddle- calculably brilliant. Nobody. In

tinent playing the flute and came Louise's husband, they had ant and charming tuleminded eccentzle with an ad his right senses would attempt to

sketching for his living.

Recruited

But whch he landed he was promptly recruited by the American army and sent to Florida to suppress the Seminole rebellion. But he deserted from

when he met the army French-Canadian girl with black cyes, a big chignon and wild und winsone ways in life New York hotel.

of

Krieghoff had the looka Mephisto with great bläcit side- burns and thick eyebrows. He followed his lady-love, one her home outside Louise, to Montreal where he painted and rolstered for ten years,

But strangely enough he only painted one nude of her which now belongs to Cockburn Smith of Ottawa. Sleighs, skules, inid- night frolles and lipsy pink- raced revellers run through his paintings of these times, su, too, do Red Indians fishing in their painted canoes, and troppers, fur-elad to the pine forests.

He met a rich young English- man named John Budden who

golution to this problemt are so long that they might have Krieghoff's paintings opens lured him to Quebee where he

pack your hopa und come honte. Pravda after

stormy

this week at the

little brook Art Gallery here.

LP RECORDS HELP

ALCOHOLICS

OFF BOTTLE

New York.

FOR the alcoholic who has tried all the "cures" and who still can't say "No" to the bottle, two new long-playing gramophone recordings have been issued which may help keep him on the

wagon.

These "recordings-to-niny.

Auber-by" are based on the McGoldrick Method of treating

Edward J. McGoldrick, Jr.,

dent English ofkets. Many of

KEEP

alcoholics in the role of a con- his drinking a due to olckness, idential advlacr. He carefully he no longer feels responsiblo explains the different stages to for his condition.

be followed in breaking up the destructive pattern of confirm- ed alcoholism.

Success

McGoldrick is the director of Bridge House, a branch of New York City's Bureau of Alcoholic Therapy, where his method has been nebleving recess for nearly two decades,

The McGoldrick

Moral element

"He even accepts this of reason to drink more. We might a well excuse the untidy slob who throws his clothes around, and leover his room in a mess, un the grounds that he is sick.

"Am I sick because I left the

op off the toothpaste tube lilia morning?"

McColdrick belloves that one "We teach a meihod by which of the greatest nords of the an alcoholic, uses his own mind aloolwolle is to be taught respon- to-cure ilmselt,“ McGoldrick sibility for his condition, points out.

"Until he is made to recog- Method se moral element, in his chronke Dicollis system belleves that the recordings will breaks sharply with other op behaviour, he will never be a

Jum

being," which has been successfully sive millions of troubled in proaches

to the treatment of responsible

McGoldrick declared. ured in thounds of essen individuals an opportunity for excessive drinking by rejecting

The director of Bridge House New York City.

honest self-examination in the the notion

plecitolje privacy of their own hunes - only drinks becouse he is alan believes that ho known Called Tormented Womes and without my "restraining bar. "sick.""

whereof he speaks. It took him Conquer Your Alcohollam, the riera" of pride.

Lows pets to work out Qua ówri #1 pisual sabotage, to pernormi falvation from

he in sick," may be. In the recordt, McGoldrick well a lust by

speaks to the male and female McGoldrick. "If a man beliavos

-(London Express Bereice),

1- are being released for world-wide diatributléti

Pailie Rozurda Ltd.

that a

is told here about a let-vanced taste for martyrdom,

a beautiful daughter named ter that the American Am- Emily who married a Russian bassador to London, John count and moved to Chicago.

ments,

Look, briefs, at the record: dispute his record, his attain- For publicly denouncing con- rcription during the First World

Hay wrote to John Foster War Russell was refleved his

He died in the household in in 1897. 1872.

2'

teaching chities at Cambridge "Lard Salisbury, in a privated spent six months in prison. When Hitler began rattling Gallery conversation Fredericton

the other day, sobres, hounding Jews, and boasts many lovely paintings in compared Canada to a coquet-proparing to annihilate half Its permanent collection, includ tish girl with two autors, play the world, pacifist Russell con- In Dall's fantasia Santiago El ing the olf against the other. I Grande presenter to the gallery should, think closer analogy templated the prospect with an by Lady Duin.

would be to call her a mariedumiretly wil:-

"Britain should disarm,” he flirt, ready to betray John Bull

"and If Hitler any occasion

but holding suggested, him responsible for her follies."

murched his troops into country when we were they should

But the lovellest picture in the whole collection is the view from the gallery wladgw of the lazy St Jolin River and the tiny

on

-(London Express Service).

EAR

THE SIT-DOWN

defended,

A LOND WAY AFTER HOPE

God figure...

But there is another, less aloof, more human, Russell, the way- ward eccentric who pranched free love, trial marriager, started a school which encouraged boys and girls bath together, and insult their teachers if they felt like 1, who married four times. This other Russell is the man This un-

who placed himself as a kind of be god Agure at the head of the nuclear disarmers, a position which led him, glowly but pre- dictably, to the road from Alder- maston, the sidewalks of White- holl,, and, the dock at Bow- streel

-London Express Service),

QUOTE

by the Rev. John Brewis, Rector of St. James's, Picch- dilly:-

THE Blavanger air disaster I made a deep impression pa us all. Why, one wonders, does the numerically greater tall, of the ronds make so much less Impression on the pubilo?

by Mix Mary Garrard, of Bacton, near Ipswich, who Vás 106 last week:

sleni

TVERYBODY is rubing about M too fast for. Iong. [We nowa

days. In my day we got up at 5 am, worked, until nightfall, and never had a holiday. But thọ Hearst was that Wo Jogged Along at Natura's pace.

by the Rev. Frederick San- ders, reelor of Sialbridge, Dur- set, defending bingo and raffles for church funds:

people who con demn gambling STO PгO- pared to make a profit if they can by buying and welling stocks and shares.

by the Blahop of Bristol, Dr Oliver Tomkins:

TIE Church and liä nolivítles nover come anywhere near the calculation of the thousands of youngelach who sen something of themselves in the whirling | dancers' al_the Hippodrome and

| hear something their inner éir lu

thetening for in ile pop-djes, J Landon Express Kerško),

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