IE Frank Walker. Idltar Isabel Lahantlurlvitly 3';-wwaou Pollkmuo Arms '---' " r.""1t':."r... Icahn Audit on e Irena attire u. 5llIDIfIdl.HClA( sndluboui umoruoousoeomcu-lull Iv In P-I WW Depannonl. Ottawa. 31 Came: lxariouewwa Sumlleruda Claus at an an llsowasn ta P.l:.i 53.00 om: Provides: an" U-I Ill.” 99' -IIIID wanNEsoAY.oc'r. xi. 1056 Results In Nova Scotla At the time of writing, unofficial reports give victory to the Conserva- uws in yesterday's Nora bcolla elections, though by 3 V”-V H059 margin. If this be the case, it spells , the end of twenty-file years of Lib- eral rule in our sister Province and prmitlcs an olncct lesson to Oppo- sition parties in other Proxinces who may feel discouraged at the seeming impossibility of making headway against gmct-inncnts long entrench- ed in power. t”rr1a1nly it is more difficult now than in former years to upset zuiy ldtllllllllS1l"dllOll,- and Mr. Stanfield's rccorti shows that it is not an easy matter. He became head of his party in 1948 when the Conservatives were without a seat in the House, They. had been wiped out in a 1947) Liberal landslide. In 1949 Mr. Stanfield and six supporters be- came the official Opposition again. In 1953, in the last fight against the late Premier Angus L. Macdonald they increased their number to 12. The next year they won a by-9180' tion to make it 13 out of 37 seats. It was uphill fighting all the way, and certainly yesterday's contest was no exception. Leadership is what counts, how- ever, and evidently Mr. Stanfield has what it takes to bring his party into combat trim. Whether or not the indications of the defeat of the Hicks Government are verified, the result places the Conservatives in the strongest position they have en- joyed for many years. Threat To World Peace Israel's misguided invasion of Egypt has brought worldwide reper- cussions, fully justified by the dan- ger which may result from this ex- plosive incident. Whatever provoca- tions Israel may have had, her act on this occasion was irresponsible in the extreme, and the prdmpt re- action of her best friends among the nations-Britain. France and the United States--indicates that this new threat to peace in the Middle East will not be tolerated. The Unit- ed States may suggest action by the United Nations in the form of econ- omic and diplomatic roprlsals. To aid the Egyptians, if necessary, Britain has available the air, land and sea forces she rushed to the eastern Mediterranean when their own President Nasser seized the Suez Canal. It would be an ironic turn of rate should this force now have to be used in defence of Egypt- ian sovereignty. Egypt, however, does not welcome intervention in the Canal Zone and has ordered general mobilization on her own account. Both Israel and Egypt have rejected an Anglo-French ultimatum to stop fighting within twelve hours, and the situation is now very critical. The Israeli leaders have done ir- rcparable harm to their own cause in this instance. They insisted, be- fore the United Nations Security Council recently, in reserving the "right" of retaliation, thus flouting the basic principle of the organiza- tion on which they are most depend- ent for existence. It was Jordan which instituted the present investi- gatim of events in the Middle East by asking that the Security Council be omvensd. The Jordanian repres- otftahve outlined charge: of Israeli s rlallowe'en Hallowelen festivities are almost universal at this season, and stem from beliefs and customs of very ancient times. Nowadays, however, even the children are too sophistic- ated to credit the supernatural stor- ies which once made our ancestors tremble. Only the festive associa- tions have been retained, and so long as these are confined to fun and frolic there can be no objection. I-Ialloweten is a children's night and the young should have every scope for good-natured entertainment. The limit is easily definable as being any kind of fun that is harmless to them- selves and others. What cannot be tolerated in roudyism, which on some past occa- sion-' has been indulged in by youths with a bent for boisterous rampag- lng and causing damage to property not their own. For demonstrations of this kind there is no room in any community which prides itself on living law-abiding, and it is to be liopwi that tonight's celebration will he kept within reasonable bounds. l in recent years a quite noticeable I improvement has been effected in ' this regard, largely by the holding of children's entertainments on a wide scale by service organizations. Parents are expected to cooperate by cautioning their children as to their responsibilities, and the Police will be on hand to see that law and order is maintained. Mr. Duncan's Views In an address before the Canadian Council of the Intemational Cham- ber of Commerce Mr. James S. Duncan, retired chairman of Massey- Harris - Ferguson Ltd.' had some things to say which should be taken to heart by all Canadians. Referring to his experience on his trip to Rus- sia last summer Mr. Duncan re- marked: ”Here we have the fruits of civilization while the Russian people have nothing. But they are the ones who are willing to go out in a spirit of self-sacrifice andalso are willing to inject other peoples with the same spirit. It seems to me we ought to be the ones". And, of course, he is quite right. The Free World has much more to offer the countries just coming into national responsi- bilities than Soviet Communism has -a thousand times more; but until more energy and zeal is put into its dissemination the democratic idea will be at a disadvantage. Still more pertinent was Mr. Dun- can't observation on the danger of the West's losing the cold war through "lndolence". "We are too prosperous", he said, "We've become soft, we've lost some of that rugged- ness of temperament which built Canada into a powerful country". Certainly, history is replete with in- stances where too much prosperity brought about a gradual lessening of moral strength and unity of pur- pose. Certainly, too, this country was not set on the road to economic greatness by men whose chief desire was for security and the easy way but by men who took the rough with the smooth, who put adventure be- fore security and who coveted the stimulating effect of risky undertak- ings. I EDITORIAL NOTES A petition signed by a large num- ber of Poles has asked the new head of the Communist Party in that country to reinstate Cardinal Wy- szynski who was removed from his office in 1953. The petition states that such action would be a con- vincing proof of the new leaders "faith in tolerance and liberty". O O O Bela Varga, speaker of the Hun- garian Parliament before the Com- PER'PETl.lAL HKIILOWEEN Poland And Hungary By Ernest Marsh Reuters Service. London . Hungary and Poland, now in ferment. after moves aimed at turning from Moscow-dominated to national communism became Communist -.tatcs in the im- poverished years immediately af- ter the Second World War. With the Red Army, which swept the Germans from Eastern 1 Europe in the closing stages. of the war, oc. pying Hungary and l Poland from 1945 on, the Com- , munists there worked relentlessly to gain power. And, as in all East European states, the pattern that brought success wasg roughly the same. though the timing differed The infiltration of trade unions, Ferenc Nagy was virtually power- less. The Communists held all the vital ministries. In the national electiops of Aug- ust, 1917. the Communists emerged as the strongest single party. The Communilts' drive for power culminated in the 1949 mer- ger of all the main political par- ties into the Hungarian Peoplels independence Front. ; Poland After the Nazi attack on Poland, 1 ' two Polish governments-in-exilel key organizations and vital gov- l ernment posts, the formation of coalitions with democratic parties followed by the disappearance of opposition grou,s and elections with a single list of candidates. HELD VITAL POSTS V The two principal personalities in the present upheavals-lmre Nagy in Hungary and Wladyalaw Gomulka in Poland - held vital posts as their parties climbed to power. Nagy became interior min- ister in the post-war Hungarian coalition government: Gomulka was the Polish Comnumist party secretary. Here, in outline, was how the Communists rose to power in Hungary, with its population of .i0.000.000, and in Poland, with 27,000,000. Hungary Westem-style free elections in November. I945-J-six months after Russian troops had cleared the country of all German forces- hrought I clear victory for the Conservative smallholder: party, which gained 246 seats against only 70 for the Communists. But the Smsllholders had agreed I with the Communists that after the election all the main parties should be represented in the gov- ernment. This was the Communist toehold. A struggle developed for the post of minister of the interior. Eventually the Smallholdcrs con- ceded it to the Communists-and , into the post went lmre Nagy. A Communist also got the defence ministry, GAVE IN TO REDS The weak and inexperienced Smallholders repeatedly gave wgy to-Communist demands for control of important government posts. To bflllll pressure on the premier. the Communists organized u-mu. fhg government a left-wing hloc from which came workers' strikes and demonstration-, By the fall of I946, Premier . rotary, emerged. I One, backed by the United ; States and Britain. worked from 0 London; the other, recognized by 4 Russia in 1944, operated from ' Moscow as the Polish Committee of National Liberation. Later, the Russian-backed gov- ernment moved to Lublin. Poland, and became known as the Dublin Committee. Red Army formations. led by Marshal Konstantin Rokossovsky -now Polish defence minister, but recently dropped from the Polls h Communist Politburo- surged across Poland in 1944, IIALTED FOR WEEKS But they halted across the Via- tula River from Warsaw for weeks before entering the capita' The Polish underground, many of them anti - Cuumunlst leaders, rose against the Gemuns, expecting ' the Russians to arrive momentar- l lly. But as the Germans crushed 1 the August uprising, killing many thousands of Poles. the Russians stayed across the river. When the Russian-backed Luir lln Committee entered Warsaw later. it proclaimed itself the pro- vlsional government of Poland. lollowlns US. and British insist- ence, it agreed to admit members of the London-based gonmmgm. in-exile, headed by pouau pgrty loader Stanislaw Mllmlajczyk. TOOK KEY POSITIONS But the Polish Workers (Corn. lmmlsll party made certain that it was the most important (utm- "' "'0 Rovernment. holding the I KEY administrative and economic mats. Foreign policy wgg gmgny allilned to Russian wishes. At that time, Gomulka was party ..c. It was not until 1061 that the , ms!-war Pollnh soverament first held slectlons. They plodggd hy the Yslta agreements to "In. and unfettered” bglloung, the you"! was on Communls lines. As I result. the cmmnun. istdomtnated '”democrstic bloc” ulna! 304 seats in the 444-rnam- her Seym (Parliament). The Peas. ant Ind other parties virtually disappeared and Mikolslcsyk fled retary. Conflict In Palestine .- 'I'hoAssoeIatedPnss Israel has had nearly a decade Ilgindent state In PM a war that began who armis- the patina of the Irltlshrfo Juv- lll. there Ind been violent kl PUBLIC FORUM Ills column is span a. Q. 41.... III 5! lorresllilllhnll of questions It Interest. The Guardian dses not Iosusartly undone in "sun. 1 oasnspoadaals. VACANT HOMES Sll'.eAs one whose work lug taken me several thousand miles over the country roads and high- Wllya this summer I have noted the scores and scores of vacant homes, some ready to tumblg down. others never ti ' L 4 gnd . still others in very good condition. One we noticed even had last ses- 50ll'l Potatoes and turnips still in rotting bags at the door. When we asked about the form. or occupants of these vacant and boarded-up homes, the answer was they have gone to Ontario or somo other places; the beckoning shore: of brlsht cities calling'in the em of youth. the dazzling Kreenbacks floating before their eyes. lure them away. Even may , of the older folks who think they l are as young as ever follow the line into the bright white way, many times to find thrblg In job that was waiting for them is digging ditches and trenches at night work that others refused. Some no doubt strike it different and do all right. but for those who leave the farm home to follow an lure of fast living and fiddle-bow dancing, often too late find it dif- feront. As we look back at many of thou neglected homes in the coun- try, some with the axe still -at the chopping block. we notice ano- ther place with grass a foot long being cut from around the door and people startlns to make it look like a home again. oftentimes those strangers are the people we are seeklns: yes, they have grown older. too old for the swift rush- ing city way of life, so they come back to start out again miles bo- hlnd the neighbour who stayed ilith Dadontheoldfsrm.'l1ieroisip city when life is as IIIPPY as the farm home but the fire of youth burns eternally and one must no -to the fountain to cure the thirst. There are many lovely farm homes on this Island. happy bonus when happy children hsvb scores of playgrounds; there are scores of city workers who also wish they knew the art of farm- ing to go into that line of work: still those who have the homo and leave everything for the city. The hot blooded youth and oftentimes the second childhood of older folks cry for adventure. for the guess they soo-ll pictures and 'l'.V., where out on the great whtlolwsy dancln and pleasure never sods. For many. fspwlally from fans homes. hav found out too late they have forsaken a fine place on the farm. Too late tberturn back to an old forgotten farm and slave an to the end to bring back what they once threw away. I am. Sir. etc. WALTIR A. 0'lBIlN l mdlsaarlylohostholdosf 00. Since ea... noun has has bsllng with border clung, cani- ndo raids. 1 Illuost you have an eye examination. to follow from your eyes. lt you wear blfocals. hero's sa- 0l-'lGl' l-llli Don't tilt your head forward when reading. Instead, lower your eyes. And when reading 3 HCWSPIPGP told I! in half and hold it low. QUESTION AND ANIWII A.G.: Ihldlhiwwoyun ago "and breast-fed her for eight monp H0w:,v;:. gzdbuuu will not up. t d . lest that I do? y" In Angvei: It wouldplbs well for NI an a coin bysical examination to datormnfnsp wheth- er than is some hormone diffi- culty causing the breasts to dis. charge. In such uses. the cause often is not found and the discharge actually stops by itself Hun. mi... The Age Old Story OUR YESTERDAYS From The lhardisa Ilos I'll Y'”All A00 (October II, III) In the , sauce of sharing of nllway employees. a'n.d their wives which wcflowoa, the gum dining room of the Canadian Nat-. tonal loulflut sight. than none service with the Island I” ' ' PE .,.j E aiiiit TkoulssdogIa'l'orontowIlch waits for, the postman at a com- er. and accompanies him on his daily rounds. What a sissy this can- I A new York weekly describes Quebec.-'s Mr. Duplossis ss "prom- ler of Canada". Reminds us of a. "quiz" program on an American television station in which a con- . tgunt missed a rich prize by naming New zaslsnd as one of Canada's Maritime Provinces. - Ottawa Journal A snail, we read, travels about 15 feet in an hour. With our well- known mathematical wizardry we deduce from this that if a snail were I six-fool man he would travel about one-fifth of a mile in an hour. so now you know what a snsli's pace is. If a snail were I telegraph boy it would move a little slower. - Pstsrborougls Ix- similar In alt Newfoundland In IOI than were not many more than a thousand motor vehicles. The total for the island today is near- 1! (AM) and St. John's alone has 12.08 ears Ind l,Il3 trucks and van. And since In roads have been widened in the intervening period, it is small wonder we bye congestion on the city-streets and the main highways of Avalon. - St. ,lohn's News Ihoolrsoolthotismmusls 1110 llnroar created by the dub . top lids members can hang. member whose angry voice more formidable than that courting dove can make himself a veritable North Itar with nrsrnvr TUESDAY, Novnviaan isrh HALIFAX SYMPHONY coucsar .l5es. Pflltxymllvos thenri . Wow. and l Irilod Outlook. they Will: have achieved stature if they have destmytai or broken some. -- North Bay Nugget II. as predicted. we are headed for a founday work week, then-'5 ..Y . Myer set me up in one of tlilfi 911538!" - Fort William Times. Journal the Canadian National Railway. Elaanors yesterday morning. 'I'WlN'I'Y-FIVI YIAIS MIG roman Ii, III) In addition to the work alnsm belIIl.doao on the btosstwork at so I is f. I E lE:.lt;Ei. .il-:- rtit 3: ti: 5.- .p.i and School Anociatlons. es” 3 A QUEEN CHAILOTTI I-lIVGH..SCHOOl.: AUDITORIIIM ' Tickets obtainable from.-Moore oz McLeod Ltd., Hughes Drug Store. HolI.'nsn's and members Home - . ..d?”t'!"hM!wMM3awuuy S