| SUB: SCORE a OUR SUB TARGET 1,000 OBTAINED TO DATE 1,342 Dear Keader: Our sub drive this year has been one of .the only reached 900, and in 1950 the figure was 1,003). a few more days left in the campaign, 50 percent above our original target. Paper. “Final figures’ doesn’t mean the end of creasing circulation is a year-round job, and our press clubs will their yearly sub objectives before Christmas. During November | am planning to visit Michel, Fernie, we will surely come ¢ ) Final figures will be published in next week's, — best for some time (in. 1952 we With 1,342 subs already in and lose to 1,500 subs — about our drive for subs, however. ..In- be fighting to reach Nelson, Trail and other Interior points to help press clubs win new readers. Rita Wiyte VANCOUVER PROVINCIAL Subs: 800 . Subs: 542 Press Club Target Obtained press Club Target Obtained LSS Te a eee a0 4 ORI IES ohee ta ae 20 t 15 11 A} Ei Smith 20 : : 25 51 Building Trades -...-..------ 10 8 15 1 Civic Workers ....-..------------ 25 25 43° Bast Bad: kos tee 10 3 ae ze Electrical \ .2.....------s--e---000°° 30 . 7m 8 Fairview --.------cto 0 75t) 5 : 3 Forest Produicts ¢ -nce-.-tes 20 : 10 me. Gepregia nis . * 20 36 Grandview | .--s--------p----r¢t-077 6 we 13 Hastings East. ....------------- 10 > Mi. re Kitsilano | ..--------.-----------0- 45 ; N 75 119 Moberley > .-..------------------777 2 a N 10 24 , Niilo Makela .........----------~ ao e New Westminster 30 24 Norquay se 2 : North Vancouver ...........- 80 57 Ol gin... 10 ee PAUL nance 10 a Ding Pai 2 cree 5 2 Port Kells 7 9 Philip Halperin ceseenecennteestes ~ a | ene me es ee es “ Bice Rupert 20. 15 28° Sea and Shore Salm ion Ane Fats hee ae 5 8. Wood Products “4 a OO SS ee RS 20 14. Drydock 2... so Be ee Steveston 10 2 Ship and Steel... 20: f rail-Rossland 25 26 = Strathcona . a: ‘ o i :non-Enderby LS 3 Victory Square --....--------~ i“ és 2: gett eae 50 65 Waterfront .....--------------- a ‘a pie Surrey 15 4 West End ‘ney 3 iss uth Surrey 20 ii Eee mee 30 21 Sa iss ier egeveeeN ed 5 2 South Burnaby Bales ee < rc Sess Plains 5 g§ Vancouver Heights -.---------- io - aan Falls 10 2 Fed. ai tee 1D 2 , JScellaneous pe! 49 Miscellaneous. -...:-----------~ ‘ Paper Sale credits included. * Paper sale credits included. Sparen sft tt . . nd sd . ne 3 One-Year Subscription to Pacific Tribu | (Regular rate $3.00) . AND THE GAME OF (Effects of the Cold War on By Albert E. Ka (Paper-covered edition of reg BOTH FOR NAME CLIP AND MAI TRIBUNE PUBLISHING COMPANY LTD., ROOM 6 - 4 ALEASE ENTER MY SUBSCRIPTION T ND SEND YOUR PREMIUM OFFER. O THE PACIFI | ENCLOSE $3.50. DEATH our Children) hn ular $3.00 book) $3.50 26 MAIN ST., VANCOUVER 4 C TRIBUNE FOR ONE YEAR’ Randy Turpin (right) looked the fresher, but Bobo Olson took the title Gert Whyte's SPORTLIGHT Randy Turpin’s thousands of admirers. in this country were certainly disappointed by his poor showing against Bobo’ Ol- son last week. It wasn’t so much Randy’s physical condition as his mental condition that caused his defeat. Plagued by personal troubles (he was named as cor- respondent in a divorce case just a few days before the title fight) Turpin obviously didn’t fight the ° . kind of a battle he is capable of fighting. , Having said that, one must hand it to Olson for the fine two- handed attack he -kept up throughout, and the knockdowns he scored. Never known as a paralyzing puncher, Bobo is al- ways a busy fellow from bell to bell, and will make a worthy middleweight champion. * * * One of the toughest sports events held annually’ in Europe is the six days’ reliability trial of the International Motor-Cycling Federation, won this year by a British five-man team, with Czechoslovakia second and West- : ern Germany third. In the individual gold awards Czechoslovakia took top honors, 35 or her 50 riders gaining this most coveted honor. Next came Western Germany with 24, Hol- land 15, Great Britain 13, Swed- en 12, Poland 6, Hungary 5, Austria 5, Bulgaria 2, Switzer- land 2, Finland 2 and Rumania 2. Prague News Letter describes_ the gruelling conditions under which the teams and individuals competed last month in Gott- waldov, Moravia: - “The main purpose of this world-famous event isto test the reliability of the motor-cycles and the skill of the riders. Major parts of the machines are sealed ‘before the start of the event and are not accessible to- the riders. All repairs and maintenance work must be done by the riders, and’ there are rigid time-checks all along the route, checking points having to be passed within pre- scribed time limits. - “To come through such a gruel- ling test, over first to third class roads, cart tracks, mountain paths, through woods and water and over open country, is a feat in itself.” The -starters included three women, of whom Ludmila Rut- Kova of Czechoslovakia gained a gold medal and Olga Kevelos of Britain won a silver medal. The third woman entrant, Mrs. Molly Briggs, Britain, retired on the last day after puncturing twice in five miles. : * * * No matter how much you like to slip into the saddle, it’s not so easy to ride °em when you’re past the fifty mark. Bald-headed Earl Sande, 54-year-old saddle veteran, outrode Eddie Arcaro on October 14 to score on a long- shot ($27.10 for $2) in his come- back attempt at Jamaica. :Arearo was up on Will Be There, odds- on choice, but Sande, the “handy guy” of the Dempsey era, brought his filly, Miss Weesie, under the wire half a length in front. For the week following his vie- tory, however, Sande didn’t take another mount. “At my age you gotta go easy,” he says. * * * The hockey experts are pick- ing the National Hockey League race to finish like this: Montreal, Detroii, Boston, Toronto, Chica: ~ go, New York. Montreal and Detroit are un- doubtedly the cream of the NHL this season. Red Wings could conceivably top the league, but Montreal packs a terrific playoff punch, something like the Yanks in baseball. PACIFIC TRIBUNE — OCTOBER 30, 1953 — PAGE 11 « .