ot. Cothlllt News serene, cr | - a a} : Tree | ore | Veen A ema) hl Sali — Earl's death unsolved ~ CANADIANS 7 NAIROBI (AP) — Lady Diana Delamere took with her Ascot, England. She was buried last week in the small to the grave the secrets she possessed about the unsolved cemetery she built at Soysambu ranch about 160 kilom,etres murder of her lover, an English earl whose death scanda- northwest of Nairobi. lized colonial Kenya 46 years ago. Born Diana Caldwell, she was married to the man jobs, finances and lower interest rates. Further, Canadians who have also gone deeper into debt to finance many of their purchases — yet whose disposable incomes have barely kept pace with inflation — may have exhausted their savings and may now deal the Semis “With her death, history has been robbed of the last witness to the events surrounding the murder of her lover, Lord Erroll,” author James Fox wrote in London's Daily Telegraph newspaper. Lady Diana wis 76 when she died of a stroke Sept. 3 in Mba. Wwestariirbe: WANTED © White Pine Logs, All Sizes © Cedar, Fir & Spruce — Peeler Size Top Dollar tor Top Quality! CONTACT: CAM BARLOW 365-8437 ¢ 7 a.m. - 5 p.m. Renting Quality Cars at Great Prices wis ~Q 95 ¢ SUB COMPACTS AN: + MID SIZE pel km. Charge) © FULL SIZE WAGON! TRAIL 364-0211 Ai _| aN % CASTLEGAR GRAND FORKS cO-OP 442-6200 }. -a-wreck GARAGE NELSON 365-2711 362-8122 © accused of the murder and was the last person who acknow. ledged seeing Erroll alive. She did not testify at the trial of her husband, Sir Jock Delves Broughton, who was ac- quitted. She was a striking blond beauty with pale blue eyes, Fox wrote in his book White Mischief, which concluded Broughton killed Erroll. ‘The victim was Rt. Hon. Josslyn Hay, 22nd Earl of Errol, Baron of Kilmarnock and High Constable of Scotland. His slogan, “to hell with husbands,” may have led to his death, Fox conjectures. BAWDY GROUP ‘The earl was at the centre of a small group of Britons who whooped it up in Kenya during the Second World War years. Their sexual exploits, drunken brawls and endless parties shocked those who were toiling to carve farmland from African bush. When Erroll met Diana in 1941, he already had scanda. lized British society by eloping to Kenya with a married woman, Lady Idina Gordon, whom he later married. They were divorced amid rows about debts he ran up in her name. By 1941, Erroll was the widower of an older and richer woman, Molly Ramsay Hill. Diana has been married for six months to Broughton, a 57-year-old divorced man who had signed a peculiar marriage agreement with her. Broughton agreed not to stand in the way should Diana fall in love with a younger man and to provide her with a comfortable income for at least seven years after a divorce. On Jan. 24, 1941, Erroll’s body, with a bullet wound behind the ear, was found in his car just outside Nairobi. Diana had told Broughton she loved Erroll and wanted a divorce. The night Erroll died, the three dined at Nairobi's F... a D.... Cars Are Pléntiful Now and Will Be in Short Supply As Winter Approaches! Buy Now While Selection ts Best! ! SPECIALS 34 p0065(0" SAQRS ences. 95995 SLA OS 9 OF supsiore $4AQS sient SABQH Wor 30965. Now .. $ 99 DOWN OAC. Will Deliver Enso $3485 Club, where Broughton toasted Diana and Erroll with champagne. After Broughton was acquitted of murdering Erroll, Diana left him. He committed suicide the same year. A month after Broughton died, Diana married Gilbert Colvile, one of the richest men in Kenya. He was a taciturn, lonely cattle rancher who would not even talk to women, but he oversaw Diana's rehabilitation into society. Noted for being close-fisted, he indulged her passion for jewels and fine clothes. He bought her Djinn Palace, once Erroll’s home. The Diana fell in love for the last time, with Lord Tom Delamere. Colvile agreed to a divorce in 1955 and, when he died, he left Diana estates worth millions. Grizzly bear mauls cyclist KIMBERLEY, B.C.(CP)— to Foothills Hospital with A local hunter is in a Calgary injuries to his head, chest and hospital after being attacked one arm. The grizzly, which by a female grizzly Sunday had two cubs, charged and morning while he and a attacked Plant without warn- friend were riding mountain ing. Plant's friend was able to bikes. escape the attack and call for Bob Plant was taken by air assistance. SPEND MORE SAVE LESS OTTAWA (CP) — Canadians are spending more and saving less of their incomes than they have in 15 years, The ongoing spending spree, especially for big-ticket items, has helped fuel the rapid economic growth and the ensuing surge in employment the country has enjoyed this year. But the sharp reduction in the savings rate may bode ill for the economy, turning free-spending consumers into Serooges and robbing the economy of the usual fund of savings used by business for new investment and by government to finance its chronic deficit. Figures released last week by Statistics Canada show the savings rate — the proportion of after-tax or disposable income that individuals don't spend — dropped to 8.8 per cent in the second qnarter of the year from 9.7 pér cent in the first quarter. That rate is the lowest since 1972 — when the savings rate was 8.6 per cent — and is less than half the 17.8 per cent peak_hit during the 1982 recession. And the decline is not statistical blip. The rate has steadily declined since the end of the economy a blow by citting back on spending. Or, worse, they may demand higher wages, raising the threat of furthér increases in inflation. Those are all possible implications of the slide in savings rate that, while still high when compared with the United States’ — roughly three per cent — and some other countries, is well below the normal! for Canada. “Even at eight per cent it’s substantially higher than the U.S. rate,” says George Saba, chief economist with Montreal Trust. “And the eut into savings has been the spur to consumer spending,” he says, noting “real personal income has barely kept pace with inflation. “What that implies, combined with the rise in interest rates, is that you're going to begin to have some bite on the economy, the consumer will not be able to sustain that kind of growth momentum,” he says. HIGHER WAGES? With a strong demand for labor, Saba says, workers are in a better position and in a more determined mood to demand higher wage increases. “There's going to be some tougher bargaining, higher wage increases and perhaps some retrenchment on and that will be i especially on some big-ticket items such as cars, furniture and appliances, by higher interest rates,” Saba says. Caribbean ties offer little OTTAWA (CP) — There are only limited advantages to political and economic as- sociation with the Turks and Caicos Islands and it would be priate for Canada have been exaggerated. For example, it would barely make a dent in Can- ada’s deficit in tourism. “Even if all the people who to move | in that direction for now, a committee of Con- servative MPs has concluded. “Any initiatives in that regard must be taken by the Turks and Caicos Islands government if the people of the islands give it the man- date to do so,” the committee says in a report released Tuesday. “Therefore, the committee recommends that no further Canadian action be taken until after the anticipated national election is held in the islands next year and a duly elected government of the Turks and Caicos Islands is given a mandate to enter into discussions with Canada.” But it added that even if the Caribbean islands want closer association with Can- ada, the benefits to Canada on the islands in a given year were Canadian, our best estimate is that only $23 million would be gen- erated-and applied against our $2.2 billion deficit in the tourism account,” committee chairman David Daubney of Ottawa West Said in a state- ment. POSES PROBLEMS The status of the islands as a tax haven would also pose problems, the report says. Although that status pro- vides 11 per cent of the is- lands’ revenue. Ottawa prob- ably would not allow one part of the country to enjoy tax advantages not available to the rest. The chain of some 30 is- lands, north of Haiti and east of Cuba, is home to about 9,000 people. The idea of annexing one ROPE YOURSELF A NEW PONY FACTORY AUTHORIZED REBATE PONY CX or more Caribbean islands has been raised for decades. As early as 1917 there were suggestions that Canada an- next the entire West Indies. In 1974, led by then NDP MP Max Saltsman, attention was focysed on the Turks and Caicos. But the government rejected the idea. It was revived last year by Winnipeg Tory Dan McKen- zie. But an External Affairs Department study written in May 1986 said annexation would be too expensive, could lead to racial tension and would provide little or no benefit to Canada. In addition, it would under- mine Canada’s efforts in the rest of the Caribbean and give the Soviet Union and Cuba grounds to claim Can- ada was engaged in~ neo- colonial activities, the de- partment said. Prison study misleading VANCOUVER (CP) — A study that found prisoners freed on parole or mandatory supervision committed 180 killings in Canada in the past 12 years is mi and only way to do better is to not let them out and that carries very heavy costs. “We're talking about 130 killings and thousands and who does not represent a failure by the National Parole Board, an expert on incar- ceration said. “The overwhelming major- ity of offenders who are re- leased on parole finish their parole successfully,” said Michael Jackson, a Univer- sity of B.C. law professor and member of a committee studying crime and punish- ment for the Canadian Bar Association. In fact, about 65 per cent of prisoners successfully com- plete their parole and are not readmitted to prison, ac- cording to reports published by the Correctional Service of Canada. “We simply do not have the means at hand to do any better,” Jackson said. “The of are released early over 12 years.” But Inge Clausen of the Citizens United for Safety and Justice said there is a definite problem with parole board policy. Clausen cited a solicitor general's study on condition- al release from 1975 to 1979 that showed 391 Canadians were victims of paroled crim- inals who committed violent crimes. Clausen’s 15-year-old daughter was killed by a man who had been released on mandatory supervision. Brian McLean, a Univer- sity of Saskatchewan pro- fessor of criminology, said the parole board is far from lenient. Supplement to the Castlegar News of Wednesday, Sept. 16, 1987 yo slid — ikenberry, Harry Hamlin (r.) and Corbin Bernsen star in “L.A. Law,” which has 20 Emmy nominations. 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