Thursday, November 5, 1953. THE TRIBUNE, WILLIAMS LAKE, B.C. Page 6 Across the Country in Pictures ICELAND LIVED UP The snow-clad crest of Ondverdharnes mountain, near Reyjavik, [celand, juts through low clouds in this photograph taken on board the aircraft carrier HMCS Magnificent during NATO's recently completed Exercise Mariner. On the Canadian carrier, flight deck personnel = Travellers on the highway, 30 miles north of Sudbury, Ont.,/and confined in often rub their eyes and resolve |Burwash Industri: to change when they think they see buf-jcontain the powerful bison, who |of pasture. falo peacefully grazing a few|just ripped it out and took to/no open season on the animals, yards off the road. The buffalo, |the surrounding pastures. about a hundred of them, are/jlet men alone if not imagination as many travel. lers have believed. —Cen:ral Press Canadian ueen Elizabeth listens attentively as Colonel Sir John Hunt gives ner an account of the conquest of Mount Everest by the British expedition he organized last summer. They are standing in front of articles of equipment used in the climb. TO ITS NAME IN NATO EXERCISE ROAM UNMOLESTED AND UNMOLESTING NEAR SUDBURY, ONT. their living habits|stockade wasn’t big enough to/for itself that allows them plenty alone, and they appear to be vig-|have an opportunity to have a They arejorous and multiplying rapidly.|buffalo hunt in the western tra- part of the herd brought from ‘They have split into three herds | dition. A LESSON IN MOUNTAIN CLIMBING Guide Receives Medal For Heroic Action During Tornedo JOANNE TOOLE —Ceptray Prese canadian year-old Girl Guide from Sarnia, Ont. who saved her young sister from possible death during the May 21 tornado there, has been awarded the Gilt medal, one of the highest com- mendations of the National Guide movement in Canada. Joanne Toole, a patrol leader, was one of 10 people herded’ into the basement of the Toole home by her father when he heard the tornado roaring across the city toward their house. When it struck, Joanne flung _berselt across her eight-year-old. sister, Kathy, to protect her. I[t took 10 men to dig the two girls free, but no one was injured. $ —Central Press Canadian are seen\checking Avenger aircraft in prepara- tion for another in a series of anti-submarine patrols. In the exercise the Magnificent and four United States destroyers comprised a “sub- marine hunter-killer” group in the North At- lantic. The weather was wet and cold. HOSTESS TO QUEEN ON AUSTRALIA TOUR a ee —CentraJ Press Canadian a stockade at|and periodic checks by air report ial Farm. The/that each herd has picked a spot At present there is —Central Press Canediap Air hostess to Queen Elizabeth during her 1954 tour of Australia will be Sister Gay Bury, nurse of the Royal Australian Air Force. She will attend to‘ the personal needs of the queen throughout the trip. They /but if they keep growing in num- men let them/bers, Ontario hunters may yet MUSKRAT RANKS HIGH IN FUR TRADE —Central Press Canacian Though the most populous of Canada’s ten provinces, Ontario produces one-quarter of the $14,000,000 wild fur trade every year. Muskrat pelts, being graded by a Hudsen Bay Company official at Moose Factory, total among the highest in value in the seasons eacch. SKEETER, THIS IS THE FIRST TIME IN YouR WHOLE LIFE L EVER RECALL THAT YOU PRACTICED THE PIANO VOLUNTARILY... +.BUT TI DONT THINK GRANDMA WILL APPROVE. SHE MADE ME STAY IN .. BECAUSE L DIDN'T PRACTICE MY PIANO! BUT ITS A MYSTERY TO ME WHY YOu HAVE TO DONT WHILE 1M READING THE PAPER /! NOW YOU GO OUT- SIDE AND PLAY... ALL RIGHT, GRAMES, IF YOU INSIST. CALLING ALL MACLEODS IN CANADA Dame Flora M Leod is hereditary chief of her clan and in the traditional Scottish manner is visiting her clansmen—and there are thousands of them all over the world. Canada to see her kinfolk in Ontario and Quebec. the U.S. twice and hopes to call the clan together in John Younger MacLeod, grandson, will inherit the mantle of chieftain, Patrick, Canada and Australia and New Zealand next- season. left, right, is. his twin brother. OTTAWA RIDER TUNES UP FOR U.S. SHOW At present she is in She has visited Central Press. Canadian Shirley Thomas, 18-year-old Ottawa equestrienne, is shown tak- ing the hurdles in fine style as she practises for the U.S. national horse show, opening November 3 at New Yo ain ang Ireland. England A family of five, living in Montreal on a temporary permit since 1950, now face the threat of being deported to three dif- ferent countries. Austrian-born Paul Walter Glazer, right,and son Tony, may be deported to Aus- tria. His U.S.-born wife and step- son Richard, 10, would be sent to the U.S. Canadian-born Gary would be allowed to remain here. Mr. Glazer is seeking to have the deportation ruling of the Canadian immigration depart- ment lifted. long male Canadians, she will compete with riders from the The Canadian team recently placed s in jumping competition at the Pennsylvania U ith two National Horse Shew, with Miss Thomas registering a faultless performance. 4