- 1 -- VKPLA . or Ml gap 14. The Guardian Saturday.Dec.24,1955 pp. 77 ;;;:Seaway Project Activities To Schedule T By JOHN LeBLANC ” tcanadian Press Staff Writer ity and the St. Lawrence Seaway orraw AICP) - After genera-;::ve:)lpmen.t ”' "'” "ST Inns of delays and frustrations. er bodies. 3” been pushing ., 51. Lawrence seawaymydm ahead with early work on a series ff;-sjcct was in full swing during of canals, locks. artificial channels ,, '5. .and dredging between Montreal Along a stretili of more than:and Iroquois .100 miles between Montreal and The U.S. entity is building two jaroquois. 0nt.. more than 6,000 locks on its side of the riaver oppq- tworkers were engaged on the huge slle Cornwall. The Canadian body l -uniieriaking to open the continent's it Constructing three downstream .-heart to big imniii ships and and one upstream of the U.S. create ?1lIliI.tlll0 h..i--i-pimer oi Pl0C- lurks. all in Canadian tvrrilory. '-triclt ' .. . . Asltlic ii:-ii iicai:-ii xiii end will I" RYPA53 Ruilns atriictinii it via :5-'llFidilV nn M im1.' lliiiadiaii xiiirk this year t'(-lllired 'lllI. First pour-r was due to ctiitie ll93VU.V in ill? RFP8 Rrttllnd Mont- off an lnti-rnatioti.'i'. dam nt-arllilliilv WHEY? ill? 1-8ClllllP Flilildl 'Cm-uwall Ont . in lifilix wuh -g7..have to be bypassed by l0t'liS and fa(lh”L.s al diked clizinnel Sections oi the me (OWN. river in this area hate been walled off uith coffer dams and drained to allow excavatmn BIG DIVERSION ' Raising of Montrealls Jacques on the S(',()tl.()()it.l)1l4l pincer end. Cartier bridge to give ship clear- major con.-"-siittlirtit in N35 involved 'hT"'" '"'"TT T” " foot-draught ii;ixi;:.i'iiiii scheduled tnr opciiiiii: ing spring diverting the mursii oi the St. Lawrericc in the inicrnatioiial rap- D ids S9('lln"i v.- p:-nitric a dry arca for criiist-wwioii nl pllltCTllt'iuSP5 Th? Wonicnis Aiixili:-ii') .1,-an-mu; gr ;iiii fog-i im-.tl-(in can P6-leis Church. Lot 11. hold their ads and the l'nitcd Slnlcs A sericslanmml mating 0" Thur-V'-83' PV& 0; mm... (;..,,,,u ,.m.,..1 yr". ,-may nina. Nov. 24th at the home of Mm ma.h,m.s tlliic Tuplin. The following (illic- .-isirle and lri int-ii start rliggin: ttlll Niiiio :ltW).0()l) N” ll"? 9199'?” ill" "195 ('0lTllnS yards of iii;itei'ial ilniii its bed. 3987' P'"95ld9l'”- -l11”3- Annie The Onlam, m.m.,, . Electric Banks: Vice Pres. Mrs. Regin- hmmlmg the aid Palmer: Sec'y-Treaa.. Mrs. Sterling Palmer The next meet- ing itill be held at the home of Mrs Annie Banks Power Cnniiiinsion. (Yanadian nspcri at lhc power de- velopmcnt. Illrll was cimuitzcd in re- locating ;iliou' h'iii'ii'l pct-tins in eight Ni-:1ii:.v x.illm” ininiiiuni- ties that :irr- in tic fluodod unit by at g;:&:l?n:ndpFm:;'uDlEnnl hNllepn1TlleS(lay evening. Dec. 6th. with 7-Wholesale rcnioval of lroriunls' E Wind represemauml 0' .me.m' -1180 person: to .i hrzinrl llf”l town-lhprg. Meinng Opemd by slllgmg rsne gm 'mWH M” In W” M”, ltw udc. follmied by thetiiced. Negotiation.- til the t)illll' ialley mans for "hP..l'hmmmS Lumen residents and .ii'r.'iii7'ciiii-tits for NW9 madei Hm nwmbam mu-id their eventual transfer were in lmmml '0 treat me -x-Chou! Ch”- ' t ' Kilt?!) The next meeting will be 7r;d"e55' . H lheld at the home of Mrs. Regin- I ea"wh”P' "Uh" lids d"”'g "rel aid Palmer, Meeting closed with hmmar-V llmk ll" H" ")l'””l”l" Mithc Quccn. Luni-li has served h)' The llionienls liisiiiiitc mt-I at the home of Mrs. it an Hardy on 4” ""105 of ' "l l””" 3"” 3” miles thc liostess and llltl('ll coimiiillcc of highway ili;-t will tic tiiownedg Wt ' Mrs. Wiliam Stenberg. Brooklyn. . . has returned to her home after ACTWWY Ih ("Si spending a lengthy holiday at the 0'3 "W V 5 W19 "W 33"" Y'"'k home of her nephew. Edgar Hardy. 513" P'”'l”" l"'h”"l'.l' "do ”-3' Canc Traverse and visitintz her 838901 in 7h” lt"v"”" '5-Ell M -”"'T""' lhroth'er and tl1Pll' families in mg 225 form finmlies and Wt rot,-1;-r,,,,i,md lags miners in its sparsely-settled Iection of seawav valley. LAC Lorne Maclman. Vlho has Between the two power partners. been stationed at Calgary. Alta., mntracls for more than S2il0.000.-lwith the RCAF has been trans- l00 had been lrt out by thc year-iferrcd to England and left on Dec. 2nd. providing Elll ccnnoniic shottioih for overseas He and Mrs, hi the arm for the area. lfvlat-Lean visited with their par- On the nai-iszition phase. Can- ants during his leave. and Mrs. v1da's St Lawrence Seaway Aiithor-iMacl.ean plans to spend the next 's2.v-c,w-Beiieveiioriiigti ,. dllWtA(l04Ellf.DAl.MSnioA W www Inuit LLEVIEL Ami. Auburi1.Na. bro! Klllci cum rsIoF sown was to PULL lt4C NEW woou) WA? oww THE on: or PRESIDENT! ' u . - . rmmlw citoittor THE . ancoeestgcgrciiantnn isn FT. HIGH no so FT.WIDE l73C'w'r'uB5uSOW.Y the M M." . We Bmrsr -Aiimous ailcllolw iiumows nae OFTEN 3 Ft zltiouo g AND wngggoo Ls. no .. 73?? R. lllilliiariisi Out Our Way HAVE A SMOKE BEFOQE l CAME AND FLJ2" DON'T TURN THE? WATER OFF, FT!- - tiny navigation tolls will be ap his Year ancc, and construction of a not bridge across the river from Mont- real to the south shore are other projects for this area still on the drawing boards. Of the 350,000,000 la Seaway Actliority contracts let to date. 86.- 500.000 is for construction of I canal at Iroquois at the upper end of the International Power Fool. It will enable Canada to share con- trol over shipping going through the system. A major question still to be settled by the year-end was the plied. They are to be designed to wipe out the investment over I period of years. but the U.S. and Canada have differing ideas on what the period should be. The method of dividing up the tolls also calls for further negotia- tion and is to be discussed again early in the new year. I l by the two groups at Washington LINKLETTER SCHOOL NOVEMBER REPORT 0, 5-Ll Grade lX' l. Wyman Moore. 2,l Carol Clark letter. I Grade Vll' l. Gladys Linkletter. ll. Marjorie Link-I Grade Vli 1. Donald Linkletter; . Helen Linkletter; 3, Arlene Wood. Grade V: l. Allan Rogers; 2. Eldon Hardy. Grade IV: l, 2. Patrick Coulson: 3. Merrill liar-1 dy. Grade ill; 1, Olive Rogers. Grade 11 tSt' 1. 1. Ralph Mac- lean; 2. Lavenne Machean. : Grade 11 t.lr.l: 1. Wayne Clark; 2. Shirley Linkletter, Alvena Wood tequnlt. Grade I 1. Earl Rogers. Teacher: Kay Murphy. few months at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John N Palmer I Mr. and Mrs ltolaiid Williams. Summerside. wcre Sunday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrsi Alvin Hardy. Mr. Edgar Hardy. (Tape Trav- erse. and two little sons. Stanley and Stephen. were guests for A few days recently at the home of Mr. Hardyls sister and brother- ln-law. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Phil- lips. PIea:l:GTii-illy- To Charge Of Public Mischief NORTH BAY, Ont. (Cm-Albert Lalonde. 21 - year-old Timiigami, 0nt., youth charged with publict mischief in connection with the Oct. 18 death of Grace lcaucage. is. also at Tlmagaml pleaded guilty Thursday. Lalonde was placed on suspended sentence for two years. The girl had been missing 10 days before her body was found. Police testified Lalonde told tthc Oct. 19 he and Miss Beaucage had gone to Rouyn, Que, after a dance in Tlmagnml. He said she enteredj a washroom and didn't return. i Accompanied by police Oct. I'll Lalonde travelled to Rouyn and a? short time later told them the girl i was dead. Finally. police said, La-T londe led them to the body nearl Englehart, 70 miles north of Tlm- ; agami. He said Miss Beaucage fell i from his light truck in Tlmagmll and struck her head on the pave gment. Terror-stricken, altar plac-l log the girl back in the truck, hel drove north to Englehart. I An autopsy showed no criminal attack or blows other than that isuffered from falling out of the itruck, police said. TFIRIVING NATWE8 .The native Maori population of Now Zealand was 127.000 in Chartered Accountants 1'. Earle Hickey . Canadian Baiili of Cmmnevn Ins Bummeraldc. P.I':.l Phone X R. '7 Ellis & Son limited Flra - Auto .. cuuny I Iiimmer It. Optometrist REGENT 'l'llA'l'llE ILX. Illmmet 84. Sumggu n. F. nunizarfmo. hmmarllde. P.l.l. - Pig. nm ' BUILDING Photographers 'DIO I. W. IIAII 1954, I compared with (5.000 in 1901 iProlessional Cards ' INSURANCE Little Delores BlacDougall who David Ljnklgugr; lis one of the TB patients at the Old Santa's knee. At Provincial Sanatni-ium is the envy of many a child hccause she has SANTA f N of sitting on dear the right of the picture is Mrs. Ross Getson and her five dear old daughter the piivllege Santa's visit to the San. Photo by Margaret Mallett;the downstream side scoops up fish 7 Fisheries Inventors Have Come Up With The Wheel former hit-or-mlsl method of I17- lng to catch fish with a dip net. The story of the fish wheels ll fold in the October edition of the federal fisheries department's pub- llcatton "Trade News" which an!!! it actually is an improved version of a device used by the Indians in catching fish in the Yukon. SAW CRUDE DEVICE It was a crude Indian flsli wheel which fisheries biologist Mr. Mc- Laren and engineer K. Lucas saw that gave them the idea. The wheel was their adapted by fisheries en- gineer L. Edgeworth from a design submitted by the Alaska depart- ment of fisheries. The rig consists of two basket- type nets made of seine mesh stretched over a series of J-shaped; pipes. Tlte baskets, each 10 feet deep and 10 feet long. are mountedj opposite each other on a centraly steel shaft fastened to the centre of the floating pontooiis. The rig is made fast to the river iballk by steel cablcs attached to iwlnclics which provide some man- lneuvrability. l The fish wheel is turned on upstream side of the rig. had scooped up its first GRAND l In operation the basket net oni - ooannt. -4.. (tin .. 3... io'r'rAwA tcpi--wen cont iuti- swimming anti-an auiiiat the Fall Stavcuoa. 19-you-old .0. at-lu scientists have come up with current and retain ion within of pi-utdaadal candidate , Adm a new device for catching flab--I the not. As It baht rho above ..."u”' ,,u h iiu.,.cm.y.. uollltnwhalta nmpM ; tahaloptng kuhwwm & ”'dm"' u"'o'V ""3 ' M35 ii: ' lit; gums. aim gently Into - ncnueovnd W" l-""0 "W W04 No of his The rig, mounted on at-foot-long "live" flab but. i . mrvaid classmates. ioons. is being used by fisher General Eoaplal run :1. l,e.cndefi:hrtnient biologist; in um” 0" lmllgllmmul as yang pro-law Iophoili:-2 spent : rt . -ta ra ons. .. .. prllsed moi:-gmgfllgaiit than the scientists remove the fish kom the "u" ””'”""N" ”u"" ,The device was first used In September in Fraser river salmon tagging operation near Hope. B.C. Within 10 minutes the fish wheel salmon, dispelling doubts as to its efficiency. The rig requires fewer men than the old dip-net method of SUMMERSIDE civic STADIUM ' SKATE , MONDAY, DECEMBER 26th ital 3:00 P. M. Eleanor from Albertoii. Mothcrlaxls by the action 0i the Win and daughter were among theirlver current on the nets and on Sponsored by the Summerside Athletic Association t many TB patients who enjnyedlpaddles attached to their sides. Summerside Sea Cadet Band in Attendance. moiicfkdd Stevenson Hurt: l catching flab and the 10-foot sweep of its baskets samples a larger l ' of water. Since its installation. the rig ha caught hundredscf salmon of vm ous types which are being tagged in connection with scientific studies of the migration of the fish up- stream to their spawning are”. OPENING By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian shuppi-rs have been. storming the stores with bulging wallets. and lll(ilt'iIll()HS are that it will be a gold plated (Jlirislmasi for both buyers Hllfl sellers - A Canadian PI't'5S survey shows: retailers throughout the country anticipate their total business this yule season will he 10 per cent above any year since the Second World War And most shoppers. they say. are operating tin the lux- ury level Teleiision set sales are brisk from St. John's. Nfld. where sta- tion CJON-TV recently took to the air. to Victoria whcre it is reported one dealer ordered "all the 52.000 color TV sets tic i-an got” K EXPENSIVE PURCHASES An exclusive Toronto shop sold four mink coats hefore 10 am. one day recently and a Vancouverl store owner says tic can't keep up- wlth the demand for elcclric or- gans-priced about 31.200. You can buy an nld-fashioned street organ that plays 12 tunes. for 3395 in Toronto, or I 3129 dollj in Montreal. Perhaps the most startling sales are being rung tip in Santa-thronedlhave and what they need. Our toy departments. West coast mer-1. chants are offering 346 ”klddlllacs"l and S32 toy dlesl engines while .. 4...--. T l Shoppers StormingStores lWith Bulging Wallets ll.llllllTlllllS SQIMWVH Greetinl! 8115 . Prince Edward Island Mutual Fire Insurance Co. I. LEAN!) LINKLIPITIII, MANAGER HUMMEIIGIDI i i an Ottawa store displays S14 doll carriages. REAl,lSTl(.' TOYS Retailers report the trend in toys is toward working miniatures of lll(' real thing. and away from Dan y Crockett or outer space equipment. Said a Montreal merchant: ”Each Christmas. toys get more and more realistic, if they w'on't do something. the kids don't want them ”Diiinp triitrlts hate ant to dump.J Saxophones have got to play real tunes Dolls have to be as much like baby sister as possible. Kitchen sets must be able to cook real food. ”Yiiu cant palm off a static replica of an adult object on a child. and get any reaction.” EMPTYING PIGGY BANKS But the children are not only on the receiving end when it comes to gifts. One large Montreal depart- ment store opened a "piggy bank shop." catering exclusively to the small fry. Said sales girl Ann Cadman: ”Children are very practical. They know just what their parents casliicr is-getting used to handling mountains of copper: from piggy banks." 14 Til ALL! We extend the uuim-as Wished..- appreciation ol the bonds 0! friendship that have been forged by our pleaauu business associations. at can-iiuuuouuu. we would um no any than you .54 noon you have a very CIRISTMASL MANAGEMENT and STAFF MALLMAN'S LTD. 1 SUMMERSIDET b With each passing year me some to a fuller