CABINET DIS ftioa in a letter to the UN Security Maxims of a More Man Take dual h taraiag a eeeus. 14 PAGES ,7Ize Guardian CHARll)T'l'ETOWN. SGANADA, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 4., 1956 Covers Prince Edward Island Like -the Dew NQBQQY WINS ELECTION French Hopes Oi Stable Gov't Dashed By Result PARIS (AP)-France's hopes of establishing a stable government have been doomed by an election that nobody really won. Balloting Sunday by a record number of Frenchmen only streng- thened one extremist party. camb- lished I new one. and left 110 single party or group 0f Dame! powerful enough to rule alone- Unofflcial returns Thursday MEN from all of France and some ov- erseas precincts showed: 1. An impressive gain of 52 seats 3 the National Assembly for the munlsts, the largest single French arty. 2. A s rtliug succes 40 seats- ior the anti-tax, avowedly obstruc- tionist followers of Pierre Pou- jade. 1. An assembly majority again split between t.he left and right wings of the centre, moderate par- ties whose leaders have been al- iu-nating in short-lived, shaking co- glmon governments for years. This unresolved struggle of the centre parties appears certain to push the unwilling forces of Premier Edgar Faure and ex-premier Pierre Mn- des-France into each other's arms if they are to survive. CAN'T ITAND ALONE Confronted by the Communists and the Poujadists. neither the light-of-centre party alliance led by Faure nor the leftof-centre group of parties under Mendes-France is strong enough to take over the new government alone. But the bitterness engendered by l'aure's dissolution of the old Na Iona! Assembly and the heated charges and counter-charges oi the for a long time. - The unofficial results give a pre- cise party label to each dOPIItY elected. But some ran under two different party banners. and party discipline is weak in France- aside fromlthe Communists, So- cialists and perhaps the untried Pouiadists. There is no accurate advance gauge of how most of the men elected will vote in the assembly in selecting a new premier, or on the urgent issues awaiting their decision. COMMUNISTS GAIN Unofficial tallies gave the Com- munists and their splinter party Allies 147 seata.52 move than they won in the last election in 1951; the Socialists (members of Men- des-France's Republican Front) fill. compared with 04 in the 1951 elec- tion; the Movement Republican Populaire 70. or 13 fewer than in the old assembly. In 1951, the totals of the Radical Socialists. Union of Democratic and Socialist Resist 3 and Rally of the Republican Left were linked together for TI seats. This year. these figures were separated giv- ing the Radical Socialists 49. the Rcsistants six 'and the Rally 19, for a total of 74. In 1951. Gen. Charles de Gaulle's Rally of the French People got 107 seats. but later broke up into several groups. The biggest off- shoot of this party, the Social Re- publicans, took 15 seats this time. In 1951. the independents and Peasants were credited with 87 seats. This year, with the addition of some outgoing Gaullista, this in- dependent-P coalition got 01 ndt fit with any of HOUDI. II PER CENT VUIE RED The interior ministry issued in the region, however, and do artment. They showed: 0.9 resented in 061) the strength of the "Republic had been supporting Faure. the party. again. party labels are sometim eampaip may make cooperation among the t t imposible seats. Four deputies were elected Sun- names. Israel Refuses To Keep S h ip.-":1 AUNPIID NATIONS. I. Y. (AP) larael turned down Tuesday a United Nations suggestion that she keep her police boats well out into the Sea of Galilee to avoid alarm- ing nearby Syrian batteries. Israeli delegate Mordecai R. Kfdroa stated his country's posi- Couacil. The council has been dis- cussing lie raid Israel carried out Dec. 11 on Syrian posts Just north- east of its Israeli-eontrolled sea. Mai.-Can. E. L. H. Burns of Canada. the UN Palestine truce ehlef.inaI)ec.3rs-porttothe council said the raid oost M sy- rlaii and six Israeli lives. He said m I followed Syrian shelling of u Israeli police boat the day before and suggested that Israel keep ""31! 508'! DWI! from the shore- llle. which is only about 83 feet from the Syrian line. Burns de- eiared: "The Israeli right to send police boats to patrol anywhere in Lake Tiberlaa (the Sea of Galilee) would 1- no way be impaired by a new lentlasnen's agreement to keep giwe: "at a certain distance from WILL DEFEND IIGIITS Kidron. in his letter. said this nucleation "seems. to be based on the thesis that Israel's rights .3. M 0' paper but not on the water- ” "'0 Ill. where their protection Coming Events 05" Dirty Hampshire liall, luuary I. ' Let as l-lail dance Wednesday sum. January 4. Kginbes-a Wbiheadey nln . 54100.! east: prises aml Tlirotlwog. Curd may at Winsloe Station Hall. Wednesday. l.Ii. New Tourna- ment beginning. Auctioa and dance Wednesday. Jan. 0. Vernon Rail in ald'of Cherry Valley Hockey team. bane: won Royalty nan. Wed- . Hollis lfcKaasia'a Orches- Ira. tau Irvlce Dill Is ilm. is. of importance to Israel 'and where they have been challenged by Syria." He added: . "Israel is determined to ensure that her rights shall remain in- vlolable and unrestricted." Burns suggested the police-boat restrictions as part of a "gentle- men's agreement" whereby Isracl also would let Syrians cross the 82-foot-wide shore strip to get water, Syria would let Syrians apply for Israeli permits to fish in the sea and the two side: would exchange prisoners. He said this pact should supplement the 1940 Israeli - Syrian armistice agree- ent. But Kidron declared it was "im- possible to accept the assum tion that solutions cannot be resc ed" arrangements within the Icooe the aniistice ...eemerit. "Little will be achieved by dis- carding provisions of the armis- tice agreement only because they have been repeatedly violated by Syria," he said. "Such a course will only lead to further encroach- OTTAWA (CP) -- Canada's big- ence. The conference. called by Health Minister Martin at the request of the Canadian Heart Association and the Canadian Medical Associa- tion. will group about 30 special- ists with officials of federal and provincial health departments. Cardiovascular dis e a s es. the group name for all types of ill- nesses associated with the heart and Hood stream, kill more people thing else. Begin Ocean 25-Ft. Motor Odom VII so no t,-n..'" a cam. When: an Delve- ile vs. fa-spend. Game time Igas ram. simunar. insio mun W was Ill: instead . i&:'i.-""m" ..........i.-.2-In Away Fro m Syria ments.” FIRED on sons the batteries 1 ponsible." ate violation" the police boat. hers asks that it do so. National Heart Meeting In Ottawa On January 16 1 In 1964. the last year for which gest killer-heart disease--"ill gatlbureau of statistics figures on the third-degree treatment from a available. heart diseases resulted group of experts meeting here in 41,297 deaths. one-third the total Jan. 18 in a national heart confer- of about 124,000 deaths. The second est cause of death was cancer his lwf roughly 20.000 deaths. WILL POOL KNOWLEDGE Some of Canada's outstanding medical men in the field of diagno- sis. is atment and research of heart diseases will pool their know- ledge and experience with beads of public health services. The purpose of the meeting is to provide for a general discussion of the heart problem. evaluate cur- e-ch year in Canada than . any-. rent..meiu.um..to...fl cases and consider rther steps. Voyage In Sailing Boat tug apparatus. automatically con- trollad by a wind vane, The boat headed north along the - T0 TOUR FRANCE They ii!!! to navigate the day under party labels which do Canadian apples valued at about other 9600.000- - companies. The orders would call complete official figures on the for both Nova Scotla and British percentag of popular votes for the Columbia apples. main parties. excludlnghthe Paris a Moselle that Canadian apples have been mmunlstts 5401"" mr exports were valued at 3433,- PGT 000? 5 r- "9 . ed ith an averag o.o; Radical Socialists and Repub- mmp” W 9 lican Left 12.0. up 1.0: MRP 11.3, 1933 down 1.5; independent - Peasants 13.9, up -1.6; Pouiade 11.1 (unrep From all sides came varying est- imates of the strength of the big- geat blocs. There was little argu- ment about the 147 seats for the Communists or the 40 for the Poujadists. But trouble started in trying to make a breakdown of Front" led by Mendes-France and the right-of-centre grouping which The best estimates that could he made gave the Faure group 100 to 200 seats and 125 to 150 for the Republican Front, which includes 86 socialists as the biggest Returns covering 38 of the 50 seats disputed in overseas areas were announced Tuesday night. The results: C munists and Al- lies 8. Socialists ii. Radical Social- ists 1. Social Republicans (Gaul- lists) 5, independents 5, Union of Democratic and Socialist Resist- ants 5. Rally of Republican Left 8. overseas independents 8. Here meanin eas because overseas dep- uties o ten run: under local party Edward lslanrkona each: I-le accused Syria of firing on Israeli fishing hosts as well as their police escorts and of tun- abated obstruction of Israel's econ- omic development." This. hs said. "necessi pied action by the fbraael forces on Dec. 11. 1955. to silence The ll-nation council has held two meetings to discuss Syria's complaint about the raid. Burns' report called the foray a "deliber- of the armistice agreement. 1-le said Syria also had broken the agreement by shelling Syrian delegate Ahmed Shulrairy told reporters he would file a re- quest that the council hold another meeting soon to act on his pro- posals. These include Israel's ex- ulslon from the UN. economic penalties against her and a deci- sion that she should pay Syria damages. The council will act on the request only if one of its mem- t heart dis- '....... West Germany Wil Purchase Canadian Apples OTTAWA fCP) - The German. embassy announced Tuesday tthat the West German government has granted import permits for the purchase of some 310.000 boxes of An embassy announcement said the apples will be bought by Ger- man traders from Canadian man This is the first time since 1938 sold in the German market. In that value of 5221.000 between 1934 and West Gennany is importing Ca- nadian apples due to a poor crop in 1955 Canada's 1955 crop is estimated at more than 18,500,000 bushels. compared with 14,000,000 the previ- ous year. Bumper crops were pro- duced by Quebec, Ontario, British, Columbia and Nova Scotia. The. lurplus in Nova Scotia is approx- imately 2,000,000 bushels. - bl Deaths In , Fires. Accidents Over Holiday By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canada swung into 1966 with the blnckest New Year's holi- day in her history claiming 61 lives in accidents and fires throughout the cohniry. Traffic mishaps caused 30 deaths and fires 14. A Canadian Press count from 6 pm. Friday to midnight Monday shows every province but Saskatchewan con- tributed to the New Year's re- cord ” -3 death toll. Ontario led with 19 deaths. Que- bec had 15: British C ' ” 11: Manitoba eight; Newfoundland. Al- berta and Nova Scotla two each and New Brunswick and Prince The carnage on Canadian high- ways prompted the Canadian high- way safety conference to an- nounce a new 36-point action pro- gram almed at cutting into what it called the ever-mounting acci- dent rate. The mark exceeded last New Year's record 35. of which traf- fic accidents claimed nine lives and fires nine more. Manitoba Plans Salk Program WINNIPEG (CF) - Manitoba's 1956 Salk vacination program will begin as soon as supplies of the polio vaclne are received from Connaught Laboratories in To- ronto. Dr.iM. R. Elliott, deputy minister of health. said Tuesday. Supplies had been expected in time to begin the program in Jun- uary but none has yet been re- celved. Dr. Elliott said about 110.000 school children will receive two shots of the vaclne and about 50,- 000. whn got two shots last year. .The Govcrnmvm iccbreaker N.' B. McLean is shown charging Last Freighte with Aid Of The final chapter of the icebound shipping in Charlum-town harbour was written yesterday, when the government icebrcaker N. B. Mac- Lean released the Ireighter Mexico from her berth in the Railway wharf. The N. B .ilacLean slip- ped her moorings at six am. and made several cuts in the harbour ice. the Mexico slipped out into the stream about seven fifty. By seven thirty the ships were passing Battery Point and making steady progress; by mid afternoon they had reached Wood Islands. At this point the McLean report- ed steady progress and that the ice pressure had eased consider- ably as compared to her inward l cussrs IX F0 Curious. Find 331.910 in Box PETERBOROUGH. Ont. (CPl-- Two curious shop clerks sawed the padlock off a metal box Saturday and found 837.910 is! bank notes. The box, apparently lying for years almost unobserved in the basement of a silk shop. was un- covered while Derek Ilolme. 11 and Jack Freeman. 17. were clean- g. Police said the small fortune comprises bills in denominations of S100. 350, 20, and 810. all issued in 1937. The youth: and Robert A. Graf- heavy ice in her work of ssh!- lng shipping. r. Cleared Icebreaker forenoon. Behind the scenes of all Nutt. Department (of Marine Agent. and Major D. F Tierney and their staffs have work- ed endless hours. They have had to deal with radio. telegraph and telephone messages by the dozen staffs become trip Monday. The vessels expect- ed to reach open water early this 0 OTTAWA (CF)-Federal Works Minister Winters, in a year-end Trans - Canada highway progress report issued Tuesday, promised the provinces federal co-operlltinn in an all-out operation to complete ihe highway within the next four ycars. ”Evcr'y possible effort would be made in co-operate with the pro- vlnclnl governments in concentrat- ing construction on gap closing and paving operations along the highway in order to ac-eleraic the completion of this important pro- ject." Mr. Winters said. WILL ASK BOOST He said he will ask Parliament to boost the federal maximum for the 4,580-mile highway project to 5250.0(l0.000 from s150.000.000. This would permit the federal govern- ment to bear 90 per cent of con- struction costs of up to 10 per cent of the highway mileage in each province where gap-closing opera- tions were no:-ccssiiry. Cost of other mileage will continue to be split 50-50 with the provinces. "Rapid accptance by the moi- will receive an additional one in 1056. OTTAWA. Fire WNCD , 1 H K 1 3 orlng public," he said. ”indicalcs that the Trans-Canada liichxvov is ing efforts and planning of Mr MacNutt and his staff. Winters Asks More Money ra' s ' Variafda Highway a useful. large and permanent con- tribution to Canada's fuiure." its completion." once in Ottawa in November. OTTAWA PAYS MOST 11 cent of the outstanding the project "good" highway by March. 1951. or dards each side. this movement of shipping during the past trying weeks, Mr. E. X. Mac- ransport It is often inconceivable at times the amount of work the shore involved in with ships moving in the area, in con- dltlons such as these. It is realized locally that a large amount of the sucess in the movement of ship- ping during the past two or three weeks, has been due to the untir- With the proposed new agree- ment between the provinces and the federal government to close the gaps and provide a paved road coast-to-coast. the minister said, "we shall be pressing strongly for The boost in the federal maxi- mum outlay to 32.50.000.000 under the highway agreement with the provinces results from a confer- At that conference the federal government. agreed to pay 00 per cent of the cost of building 10 per in each province providing the prov- inces maintained their outlays on and completed a Mr. Winters reports that up to Dec. 31 a total of 2.583 miles or 63 per cent of the 4.580-mile route has been pavcd but only 30 per cm)! 1.315 miles to Trans-Canada llighwny standards. These stan- called for a 22-to-2-i-foot roadway with 10foot shoulders on stein. Droprietnr of the Uptmvn' Silk Shop. are claiming the money.l next Tuesday. mu LA Still Under Consideration . OTTAWA. (CP)-The cabinet Tuesday d-iacuaeetl a federal tax-sharing fomiula to replace tax rental pacts with the provinces but apparently oould reach no firm decision on immediate acceptance of the scheme. Prime Minister St. Laurent, who earlier disclosed to reporters that the formula was to be discussed at the session, later announced that another cabinet meeting will take place Thursday morning. Parliament opens PRICE Se He made no disclosures as to allow deductions of 10 per cent Holme said he "mt noticed lhe what took place at the 2 1-2-hour of the federal levy on personal meeting but some of his collea- income; 8 1-2 per cent on cw. lgues later said the formula had poration income; and 50 per cent not been scrapped. It still was of succession duties in provinces box three years ago. Thought to be a carpenter's tool chest, it was thrown on a shelf and forgotten. l Curiosity proved too strong when -Holme and Freeman rediscovered -the box Saturday. ”We were so shocked we threw the box back on ihe self." they said. Police. who are seeking the own- ers. said the holes may have been cached when the building was uvcrli as a restaurant. The notes in-cl, valid currency. Ford Factories Set New Record Dl-ITROIT (AP!-Ford Motor Co and trucks last year. 1.764.524 Ford cars: 373.898 trucks 434.911 Mercury cars; 39.905 Lin coin and 1.231 Continental cars. ord 1929 Sheriff Gordon. are: Fred Coady,Sabinus Commissioner meeting. Freighter En Route To Souris Damaged NORTH SYDNEY. N. S. port here Tuesday at trouble off Cape North Mondn reported Tuesday its factories built mm hr "mum !ed"a1 payme"”' a record-smashing 2.814.559 cars The total. which compares with 1.990.020 vehicles in 1954, included The previous single year's record for Ford was 2.019.000 cars and trucks built in 1023. The Mercury total also was I record, topping the 1950 mark of 334,081 cars. he truck total upset the previous rec- of 355,453 units asembled in The Commissioners named by the Lieutenant Governor in Coun- cil to carry on until the general election of village Commissioners on the first Tuesday in February John- stone and P smond Roberts. The y will probably ap point a Secretary at their first (CPl- The 500-ton freighter Fergus made reduced speed with damaged steering gear. The Fergus, bound for Soiiris. P. E. 1., to load potatoes, ran into night. She will be repaired here. under consideration. It is understood that some as- which accept the formula. Equalization Payments would pects of the formula would make bring provincial per capita income it more acceptable to the prov- to the average of the two highest iuces than the original federal suggestions put forward at the October federal-provincial con- fcrence of premiers. But the re visions would mean increased costs to the federal treasury. EXPIRE NEXT YEAR Under the rental agreements which expire in March 1957. the provinces rent out their direct tax fields-personal and corporation income and succession tolls-in re- All provinces except Quebec have signed agreements. The new formula would have the provinces return to the direct ; tax field with the federal admin- . istration allowing certain deduc- tions from federal levies to pre- vent a measure of double-taxation. At the same time it would make equalization payments to the less wealthy provinces to spread Can- ada's wealth more evenly across the country. The central government tenta- tively proposed lalt I” 5 bar to cognition of Kinkora as an incorp- orated village under the Act of Incorporation, Mr. P.A. Murnag- han, Deputy Minister of Industry and Natural Resources said that with the inclusion of Kinkora in the group, the number of incorp orated villages now totalled 14 with a population exceeding eight thousand. All these citizens now have a status which enables them to speak with authority when ap- preaching the Government in ad- dition to having acquired certain ytutory financial benefits under e The Association of Village Com- missioners. composed of represent- atives from each of the incorp orated villages. meets several times a year under their president J.E. Arsenault. Spring Park. when matters of common interest are discussed and views exchanged. The immediate responsibility for the routine working of the Incorp- Pofoto Warehouse Destroyed By Fire PERTH. N. 3.. (CP)-Flare be- Y .r l W5.-.-that town A - :3" '”"””'" ' rfshsriu Research Search an- mruag The at 1:06 an Inside Lieved to have started from as overheated stove destroyed By- rout Tomli.nson's potato ware- house at Arthuretite Monday nigit. The building and more fJh'an 1,500 barrels of potatoes it contained were a total loss. The owner estimated damage at 06.500. Campney Denies Rift Reports OTTAWA (CP) -- Defence Min- Kister Campney Tuesday denied that there is any rift between him- self and Lt.-Gen. Howard Graham over public statements made by the chief of the general staff. Mr. Campney. who returned to he capital by air Tuesday from a hirogean vacation following the MT council meeting in Paris early last month, was asked by re- mrters on his arrival for comment ion a news report which said be had taken exception to atements made by the general at a press conference here Dec. 5. Gen. Graham said then that the army will recommend to the gov- ernment within six months a plan for creation of its own air force. The report quoted informants as saying this was conslde ed a mat- ter of government policy and publicly when a definite policy still had not been decided. Mr. Campney said he has great admiration for Gen. Graham and was as surprised as anyone b read the report. to TALK or nan OTTAWA (CF) - The scientific problems of Cans 'a hheries are undc discussion here by continuing committees of fish- as a warm-up for provinces-British Columbia and Ontario. made so that the revenues of no provinces would be less than those obtained under the rental pacts. CONSIDER REVISIONS Federal officials it is understood have been considering two revi. sions to the original suggestion to make it more palatable to the provinces: ., 1. Revise the federal allowable r tax deductions, perhaps by n 2 larger income. tax field for the provinces. Increase merits perhaps on the income of Ontario alone 2. rather and Ontario. Ontario has the highest provinces. Apparently the cabinet haa yet to reach a firm conclusion as to, Adjustments would be deduction in corporation This would widen the l equalization pay- by basing them than the average of n.c. per capita income of all which of the two revisions to ae- . cepbltitalnroatsrnetoaoeeptl one, but not both. l Kinkora Takes Status As 0 An Incorporated--Vii-lag ey Kinkora moved into the ranks of commenting on the official re- Incorporated Villages by vote of the citizens of that area on Thurs- day last. The new status of the village was made official yester- day with the signing of the nec- essary authority following the sub- mission of the. ballot figures by orated office day. trill! Iowan Kiah TORONTO, tzures issued by the paddle wea- tharofflc Dawson Vancouver Victoria . . . Edmonton Calgary St. .l'ohn's " . namrsx, (OP)-The wasuiar Regional forecasts: . g Northern Nova Seotiat . wifli snowflurries: milder: Gem east winds 15. becoming it; VillagaAatbassiien .. Town Planning. who advises th " several other villages are through their leading citizens. making dil- igent enquiries into the operationa- of the act of incorporation with as view to seeking acceptance. ' (CP) - Tomperer is aaaaassssaaa9:s.cagE? aa:;G3og3..33g.3S&S says a weak dfetnrbaml caused light snow over most d the Maritimes Tuesday Another disturbance ever tario is moving east and i Iraqi the weather aasdHI If moraing. Low-HQ at New Oiaagowsands. PI-bee Inward lalaarl. - oceaeianol Nu saew. one-hafllrnlsg : g this today at Cbarlottaulf 1 end 3: , D.