Maxims of a Mere Mon Present company always expected. 12 PAGES 77:9 Guardian CANADA, MONDA Y, DECEMBER 12. 1955 si'l)MIY. Australia (Reuters)- Prime Minister Robert Menzies' Liherai-country coalition. already assured of re - election with a greatly increased majority in the Australian House of Representa- lives, today appeared headed for renewed control of the Senate. The coalition Victory was seen A5 A mandate for Menzies to go ahead with economic plans for the ilPll)l'll'l. wlmi counting on Saturday's record of 5.171.000 general election liallols closed Sunday night, the Liberal-country coalition was as- sured of 75 seats. compared with 41 for Labor and one Iudcpend in the last House. the government had tit seats. Labor had 50 and the anti-Communist labor group seven. Five seats in the House of Repre- sentatives, incl ” that contested by l.abor party zleader Herbert Evaii, were still in doubt. N0 ACTION vurains The gov merit also appeared in be assur of regaining control of the 60-seat Senate where it prev- iously had only a two-sent major- ity. l-'ull results of this counting will not be known for some days. Thirty six-year Senate seats were up for election. The coalition parties won their majority in the House of Repre- MONTREAL (CF)-The last of some 60 ships squeezed through the Ice-rimmed Lachine canal Sat- arday- beating winter's deadline by a scant matter of hours. t The lakcshlp Fawcett was the last skip through the canal into Montreal harbor. The transport de- partmcni had set midni ht Satur- day as the deadline w en locks would be closed for the winter. About it ships a day struggled through to Montreal since the win- ter freaze began. A snail's - pace race to get through Montreal's 22 - mils up- stream canal system started Nov. 30 when freezing temperatures- colder than the average of other years-threatened to freeze solid the still canal waters and trap many vcssels for the winter. DEEP-SEA SHIPS CLEARED some I) deep-Bel lhlps were among those in the Queue heading C oming Events DeScPl'l;I!(.ll!ld Concert and Films. Carleton Christmas concert. December md. 3- MI1'y'a school Christmas concert. December 11st. at 8 p.m. Oiristln D mogncct Ebenezer Shut Gain show. Enter River. Wadhesdly. December 14. Blhlo and cards. Vernon River "'"- Tuesday. December is. Chrl tm C but DIeleemtl2,I;cIerltmh'forell East Plrk Corner school concert in frgllbil; lzlzlzs-r Hall Thursday. De- See Christmas .0.” l Augustus Hall. S'Qc...,i,,.l' 52;? Oua-iiiin ii p.m. Card party, Spain; tonight. s:so p.m, iiament. Prizes. Credit Union men H, 3," liver Credit Union Hal special 1. Walter. Tue . lath See "The l ”A 1" racadle Hal . ionday. lzth at 0:00 p.m. Smiling Blli McCormick. um. alley Hall. Monday Dec. 12th. ant-e after. weather permlmu, Annual meeting King W -0.1.. will meet Dec 13th It -m. sharp. All in rs drug 0 attend. - Hlilsboro Fire Brigade in mi filsna. tonight. Cross - hnol. I o'clock sharp. E elt-ome. especially ladies. Phone 7570 for special off eh! Oil grower and Dairy Ration. ntrsct or delivery arranged. "Wm krimping and mixing nrih River Feed Service. Hockey meeting in Crapaud ink. Al clubs interested in B. flit-.V planes attend meeting in humid rink Tuesday omit st D.m. Tho school concert given by - Alll'IlltltlQ'I Coiwent will he - Dec. tilt at 0 p.m. in St. Hall C our- .5 sentatives on a minority of the Poilular vote compared with the defeated Labor party. Menzies got his mandate without having to give details on his policy of economic action. At no time has he given more than the broadest hint what he has in mind beyond current cuts in imports. tightening of bank credits and curbs on time- payment financing. -SAFE SEAT FOR EVATT But his ampaign appeal for threc years of government uninter- rupted by alternating elections of the Senate and House of Repre- sentatives suggests he is not plan- 7 "U18 any startling new measures. Evatt's chances of losing his seat in the middle-class Sydney con- stituency of Barton appeared go Brent today that some of his sup- porters were discussing the pog. sibility of finding him a safe seat elsewhere where he could win a by-election. With 2.000 votes to be counted. Evatt had 19.577. W. T. Arthur. a Liberal. had 13,413, and ma. Trembath, an Independent.had 1.525. Under the preferential system of counting. Evatt will need to win half of the uncounted Vile! and about one-third of the second pre- ferences on the independent can- didate's ballots.. Lasl Ship Beats Winter To Clear Lachine Canal downstream from the Great Lakes for Monti-eal.. Their owners were threatened with particularly heavy loss if they were forced to winter inland. The Fawcett cleared the final lock at 5:30 p. m.. 6'6 hours be- fore the deadline. canal authorities reported. Two ocean ships-the lLA and 10 ships to arrive in Montreal port Saturday. I The canals had been ite open by tugs, by men ' ' ' ice with steel-tipped poles. by Giant cranes which heaved away chunks of ice. and by air-pressure forced into the cnngeallng stream. It was a back-breaking task for the augmented canal staff. The Saturday deadline meant the end of navigation upstream from Montreal. Navigation also will close shortly downstream along the St Lawrence river. past Quebec City and other ;iver ports. Traditionally, r i v e r navigation closes from here early in Decem- ber. as winter places an icy hand over the mighty stream that stretches more than 1.000 miles. WINNIPEG (CP)-The federal government should "get out of the bread and butter business." says W. Earl Rowe.Progresslve Con- servative member of Parliament for Dufferln-Simcoe. Mr. Rowe says Canada is facing a real crisis. with the largest unsold surplus of the Ascot-were among the some ' The Australian press heralded the coalition victory as a triumph over a divided Labor party. PRICE FOR SPLIT The Adelaide Advertiser's Mon- day, edition says the Labor party "paid the inevitable price of a calamitous feud which split it in two and equally of the absence of I imllcy worthy of the name. Dr. Evattp bears the inescapable re- sponsibility of both." The conservative Sydney Mum. ing Herald says: "Labor is not only beaten but confused. disheart- ened and may even be temporarily leaderless if Dr. Evatt loses." The Sydney Daily Telegraph says many Australians of his own and other parties would regret it if Evatt were beaten. "as by any iecklgrnins. he is a great Austral- an. In conceding defeat Saturday. Evatt charged the government's success had been due in large part to the changing of electoral bound- ::l'ies after last year's federal can. s. Labor received a greater share of the popular vote than the coalit. ion candidates despite the split in its ranks- Evatt said the government's suc- cess was due to its "unholy al- liance" with the anti-Communist Labor group. Ruining Sunday Al Goose Airport GOOSE AIRPORT Nfld. (CP) The weather was upside down in the Atlantic provinces Sun- day. In this Labrador commu- nity near the 53rd parallel of latitude the temperature was 35 and it was raining. Seven hundred miles to the south Nova Scotinns were shovclling away at the drifts left by a weekend blizzard. BIG Flsl! Halibut" fisiied..on all the At- lantic coasts, may run seven o :l;W0 VESSELS DI Menzies' Gov'i Returned Wll'l'i Increased Maioriiy FOUR NEW CANADIANS were granted citizenship on Saturday by Judge St. C. Trainor at a special sitting of Queen's County Court at End of Long Tow In Sight VANCOUVER (CP)-The end of a long. long voyage and a 3800.000 salvage prize was in sight Sunday for 19 audacious crew members of the Victoria- based tug Sudbury. The 200-foot tug. with as crip- pled million-dollar freighter in tow. was expected here Sunday after-a hazardous 8.200-mile voy- age through mountainous North Pacific seas. If the salvage job ends success- fully. the Sudbury prize will be a rich one-estimated unofficially as high as 3300.000. The tow, one of the longest in the ocean's history. started Nov. 12 when the Sudbury first put a line aboard the drifting Make- donia. an 8.000-ion Greek freight- er with 33 men aboard. The Sudbury was buffeted and battered nearly every mile of the way. : Danger followed the tug ind her charge until 12 hours from eight feet in' length. - Vancouver. Security Council .Fails To Decide On New Members UNITED .'ATl0NS. N,y'. (CPI- Torn by distrust and the Soviet. threat of a veto. the sccuidty roun- cil adjourned Saturday without reaching a decision on Can:itia's plan for widening UN mcmhcrship. After a full day of tense discus- sion. the ll-mcmbcr council was still deadlocked nvcr rival proced- ural mcasurcs proposcd by New Zcaland and Brazil on the one lllilld and Russia on the other. Sir Lcslic lllunro of New Zia- land. the December prcsiilcni. ad- journed the cnuncil until Tuesday. The security council has lwfni-e it a commiticc-npproi'cti rcsnluiioil sponsored by Canntla and Zil other agricultural products in tlia coun- try's history. mt aeenabovaustlnaswboae. llilllllcttlinvl Pu”! "mi snum tended the Voeatihll Ishool. Ill- bury. Mrs. Malcolm Mncnonnld. ' . anal CHHIIIIIQ hanquc an gig... neg, my Sudsbury; Second row: Attenung rug;-.1 myth; poul- song. held laHilU' 1 Lambourn. Mrs. Gloria Wil- TItestlayldWebeatlayofeach the Psrkifale &ll.. A son Isabel Alien Mrs. David Mac- -P aigsunnu-sot prices front row: - I s.'. Loin an-n. sun's Gosbee. Mn. C- 'IIaI collect w. Shaw. I. . t'nr 3 uiaim Mrs Peter MacMlllIh- W'WDIl'.Vlc'a.UrlIau)lcQuaid L. W. Shaw. lira. 0. ac: E. W. Houston. Mrs. Wil- ” , rasii. Malcolm not large. an. i.. a. Tait; Third countries calling for the packaile admission of ill new members to gate. g willing to acept all 18 applicants the international organization. Nationalist China, which has threatened outside the council to veto Outer Mongolia's application. stood aside for the most part as Russia argued with the West over procedure. The Russians have .-aid a veto of Outer Mongolia would kill the deal. Reports from Taipei. For-iiirisa. Sunday indicated that China is still determined to carry out its threat. A veto could be avoided only Outer Mongolia is removed from the list of candidates. Nationalist officials were quoted as saying. if Arkady A. Sobolev. Soviet dele- told the council Russia is iw-lthout exception." and would ac- cept no other arrangement. . 923 L g p I H , Charlottetown Pictured above left: Neil A. Matheson. M.P.. Judge Trainor. and the new citizens Mrs. Hilletje Wolvers. Union Road. P.E. Three former natives of Lebanon and a former resident of Holland became citizens of Canada on Sat- urday at a special sitting of the county court Charlottetown called for that purpose. The ceremony was presided over by Judge C. St. Clair Trainer and history was made when a photograph of Judge Trainor and the principals in the ceremony was taken at its conclus- ion. It is believed that it was the first ocasion on which a photo- graph has ever been taken at a sitting of a Prince Edward Island court. Mr. Frederick Large. Q. C.. who was present. made the request that the photographer. Mr. Barter. be allowed to obtain a picture. Grant- ing permission. Judge Trainor re- called the precedent established at the Supreme Court of Canada in l9t7, when. during the first citizen- slup ceremony held after the pass- big: of the Oitisanshlp Act photot graphers were allowed in the court to take pictures. On that oc- casion, said His Honour. Chief Tweel. Miss Solomon Tweel.all Citizenship Ceremony. At Court House Saturday sented each of the new citizens with I.O.D.E. Naturalization Greeting I. (formerly Holland). Mrs. Saidl Tweel, Mr. of Charlotte-f Sue Cards. Greeting cards were also yaeSEl'ltEd to the four new citizens by Mrs. Matt Lee. President of the Basilica Sub-Division C.W.L., and Mrs. Fred J. Steele president of the Holy Redeemer Parish C.W L. and Miss Marjorie Stewart of the Earl of Hillshoro Chapter of the I.O.D.E. Among those present from the C.W.L. were Mrs. W. J. P. Mac- tovvn. (formerly Lebanon). Seated front, Mr. Albert Dennis. Clerk of the Court. Barter”; Film Lab. DRAGGER HELPLESS . . The dragger Blue Haze de- veloped I list after the seas u 1 . :::i'"i..:”.:.i..”::. 3.-.?;:;::. I" s n land'south coast. JERUSALEM, (AP) gg Israeli Capt. Ben Scott of Fortune Bay. Army units Sunday night attack- ed Syrian positions on the north- east shore of iibe Sea of Galilee, an Israeli Army spokesman an- nounccd. The spokesman said the action was launched after Syrian gun- ners fired on an Israeli police launch protecting fishing vessels in the Sea of Galilee. The fight- ing was reported continuing in the rlarlcness. On the other side of the fron- Millian. Provincial C.W.L. conven- er of immigration, Mrs. Lorne Noonan. Mrs. Fred Coyle, Mrs. P. J. Nealis, Mrs. James Mullins and from the I.O.D.E. Mrs. B. Earle MacDonald Regent of the Royal Edward Chapter and Miss Joan MacLean. Rcgcnt of the Earl of Hillsboro Chapter. - Short speeches of congratulations were made hy Mr. Neil Mathicson M.P. and Mr. Fred Large. Q.C. m........m...-..,.. ANCIENT CUSTOM Justice Renfret presided and the late Premier MacKenzie King wasl in nttendan . At the Charlottetown ccremony on Saturday Neil A. Matheson. M.l P.. of Queens was present and wasl invited by Judge Trainnr to occupy: a seat on the bench. Receiving their Canadian Citizen- ship Certificates were Mr. Said Tiveel. Mr. Solomon Tweel. Miss Sue Tweel. all of Charlottetown, and formerly of Lebanon. and Mrs.l lillletjc Waivers of Union Road. formerly of Holland. In a brief address at the conclus- ion of the procecdinqs. .lud;.'e Train- or told the new citizcns, that they not only were attaining great pri- vileges. but assuming izrcat res- ponsibilities These responsibilities. he said. involved obcyini; the law and assisting in the growth and development of Canada. The Catholic women's Lcauue and the I.O.D.E. were vicll repres- ented at the ceremony and Mrs. fv CATIOAI. scHO0I- row: Mrs. Percy Cameron. Percy Cameron Mrs. Absn Macbaod. Aben MacLeod Mrs. Arthur Af- fleck. Mrs. Wiiilam Percy Proud. Mrs. Iltt LOO. Mil. 1:. V- Pineau. Mary MacDonald; Fourth row: Art Le8lanc.Cyril Lambourn. Ernie Bradley. C. I. llamas. Ralph Inaw. nsvld Ilse gross. made man). Doris Anderson. Ray Sud!- I AN llacbaan, Mrs. and E. V. Pineau. .9 . . Z .. -, . -. Al. BANQUET ENJOYED beau. Frank Gosbee. Matt Lee School in its ten years of existence. due almost entirely to the unself- hh efforts of the teaching staff. The guest speaker Dr. L. W. liiaw. Deputy Minister of lanes- tton. was man. in his remarks Dr. Shaw paid tribute to the remarkable pro- troidnced by the chair- lw the Vocational J. B. Murlcy of the i.0.i).E. tire- thus the sing-song. Pianist for the evening was Mrs. E. V. Pineau. The custom of presenting gifts at Christmas dates back to the time of the ancient Romans. - vecsek in the Sea of Galilee. P0- ider. a Syrian spokesman said two armored Israeli boats had fired on two border villages for is minutes Saturday and then were forced to withdraw by re- turn Syrian tire. No casualtitles were reported. An Israell Army spokesman gave a different account. He said Syrian posltlotns opened machine- gun and aritlllery fire on an Ia- raol police laimdl Pfoliectil-is lice returned the fire in a skir- midh lasting 15 minutes. the spokesman said. addin-Si that the Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew foundland coast. ed pilot house windows. The Newfoundland motor vessel Lillian M. Gill was abandoned by her crew when the gale threatened to drive her on the rocks. Highway traffic got back to nor- mal Sunday on Nova Scoiia's south and eastern shores. Some main roads were blocked Saturday when a snowfall of more than a foot piled up in drifts. The blizzard hit southern Nova Scotia late Friday night. moving gradually along the Atlantic coast Saturday into Newfoundland. Nf1d., and his 17-man crew drifted helplessly Saturday night. Other fishing craft stood by hoping to put a line aboard. A spokes for her owners. Job Brothers of St. John's. said Sunday night a sister ship, the Blue Foam. wuold take the dis- abled clragger into was soon as wind and sea diminished. He said the men were in no immediate danger. Russians Release American Soldiers BERLIN (Reuters) - Rulllhll authorities Saturday night releas- ed two American soldiers held since their arrest in East Berlin last Wednesday for allegedly as- saulting a cabaret singer. The move was widely interlin- tad here u an indication Russia in ill to leave unchan- ed Berlin foin'-power 3' ” The soldiers were handed We? to U. S. authorities despite de- mands of the singer that they be launch was hit but there were no "ins on the Israeli side. tried in an East Berlin court. Eisenhowe lHim To Ease Up WASHINGTON (AP) closed Saturday night that he has urged the president to lighten his work burden and "slow down" while recovering from his heart at- tack. The doctor. Maj. Gen. Howard M. Snyder. also said that if he were in Eisenhower's position he wouldn't feel that he would be able to make "a satisfactory decision" until mid-February on whether to run again. A medical bulletin issued after The banquet was followed by the of Christmas gifts. and - Pres- ident Eisenhowcr's physician dis- the president bad a complete checkup pronounced his condition good and declared ihe Continue! to look well and feel well." But it said his work load has put a ”heavier tax" on him than could ideally be desired. And Sny- der added at a press conference that the president had experiencd ”fatigue" on many ocasions after long conferences, although his re- covery is continuing normally from the "acute" hcart attack he suf- fcred in Denver Sept. 24. This news from the White House was laden with implications of pos- siblc major import for the 1956 presidential campaign. thing the "slowdown" advice cast frcsh doubt on whether he will run for it second term next November. it did not, however. rule out the ptissiliiiity that he might be a can- (lidnic. Those Republicans ferv- cnlly desiring him to head the iickct t-oiilii find comfort in the doctnrs' emphasis that the pres- ltlcnlls progress toward recovery has bccn gooil. , Slly(lt'l”S stand that the president r's Docior Asks On Work two months was taken as a reply to some Republicans urging that PRlCE5o NFLD. Blizzard Heads lnio Ailaniic HALIFAX. (CP)--A blizzard whipped up by 75- mile-an-hour winds headed into the Atlantic east of New- foundland Sunday nlght after snarling road and air traf- fic in Nova Scotia. and disabling two vessels off the New- The 125-foot fishing dragger Blue Haze out of St. John's, Nfld., was almost swamped by a heavy sea that knocked her steering gear out of commission and smash- The four-men crew of the motor vessel Lillian M. Gill abandoned her in the teeth of the storm Sat- urday night when she threatened to run aground in rocky Bay do Verde. on the Newfoundland north: east coast. They left her anchored, however. and she was still riding out the gale Sunday night. The men reached shore safely. All along the Atlantic coast ves- sels scurried for safety. Even the Canadian cruiser Quebec, return- ing bome from a Caribbean cruise. raced into Halifax as the storm struck Friday night. FLIGHTS CANCELLED Many airline flights out of Hall- fax and Sydney were cancelled Saturday. Gander and St. John's, Nfld.. were storm-bound Sunday. A TCA Super Constellation with 65 passengers from Montreal for Great Britain put down at Halifax for fuel Sunday when Newfound- land airports were cloaed- . Nova Scotia'a Annapolis valley was cut. off from Halifax by high- way for a time Saturday when deep drifts blocked route 1 on the south mountain. All math route! out of Sydney also were blocked temporarily. on Newfoundland's Avalon pm- insula roads to the emails and northeast coast of that province were impassable Sunday night. SNOW REMOVAL ITABTI Railroad traffic and wire can municatioua were less affected U sued a call for 200 men to shovd out tracks and switches in the 310,000. snow removal bill at Halifax division alone. The Novrscoiia south coast gel the heaviest snowfall-14 inches I Liverpool and about is at Ealifg and Sydney. Inland some parts the Annapolis valley got only two inches. St. John's, Nt'id.. reported eight inches. Southern Cape Breton and Newfoundland got some rain as well. New Brunswick and Prince IO the decision be announced in Jan Unily. D. Heston. ing officer. agreed on a medic bulletin asserting: WEATHER DIDN'T HELP "Then. too. the weather (a activities as been carefully super vised so that no harm has re sulted. examined today, was good.' Reed Hospital lasting a little more than an hour and a half. The pres- ident came to Washington earlier probably won't be able to make a satisfactory decision for another Expect Differ OTTAWA (CP) - Initial shots in a long and bitter Commons dc- batc on agricultural conditions are expected to he fired almost sim- ultaneously with the opening of Parliament next month. But the vigor of the disciissions may be: tempered by regional dif- ferences appearing ammig th e provinces. Regional battic lines were clearly drawn last WP9l(.dllflllE the fed- eral-provincial agricultural confer- ence. A number of measures aimed at helping rid Canada of its current food surpluses were psOPOKCd. But the conference ended with the problcm of disposing of surplus wheat, butter, apples and potatoes largely unsolved. Parties in political oppositio to the Liberal government are ex- pected to direct plenty of criticism at federal agricultural policies. But they may have to aim their volleys with care. for what pleases one province might dlsplease an- other. The conference showed that provincial producers are concerned not only about products from other countries but also from other prov- inces. I)lI'l'RUll' MUTUAL in the day from his Gettysburg. Pa.. Farm. Debate On Agricultural Conditions more feed grain than can be sold. will swing heavily into production of livestock and cut in on the central provincels markets. Prairie d el c it a t e is. especially from Manitoba. replied that their farmers are expected to raise more cattle. If Ontario livestock feeders wanted to keep western-produced cattle from encroaching on their markets. they should buy more Prairie feed grain. Another regional difference ap- peared between two apple-prndiitv ing provinces. Nova Smile and On- tario. Thc Mariiimes province ac- cused Oniario growers of success- fully opposing a federal subsidy sought by Atlantic coast apple farmers. Ontario replied that many apples being raised in Nova Scotia no longer can find a market. and their production should not be maintained by government subsi- dies. aald apples from Ontario have ap- peared in Calgary recently. a mar- ket once.consid ad the west-coast province's own preserve Vege- tables grown on newly - irrigated land in southern Alberta also were Ontario delegates expressed con- lartsr's Film Lab- aas-aiat M133,-nu, Col. Thomas W. Mat- Walter Reed Hospital heart specialist; and Mai--Gen. 1480118111 the hospital's commandi as "Executive responsibilities have imposed a heavier tax upon the president than an ideal convales- cence program would incorporate. Gettysburg) has not always been For one tl! e best. "Partial stion in office and farm 'The president's conditionnwhen The press conference came after the president underwent a com- plete medical checkup at Walter A British Columbia spokesman " cutting into markets in that prov- vith ince once served by 3.6. farmers. ward Island escaped the storm. t TORONTO (CF) -Temperature! issued by the Toronto public weather office: Dawson .. Vancouver Victoria Edmonton Calgary .. Regina Winnipeg .. .. Toronto Ottawa Montreal .. Quebec . . Fredericton .. Saint John Mnncton Halifax ... Charlottetown Sydney Yarmoutii .. .. ... St. John's . HALIFAX, (CP)-The weather office says skies are variable over the inland regions and in some localities there are a few snowflurries. No real. change in weather is indicated for Monday or Tuesday. Regional forecasts: Northern Nova seals. Pace ltlwas-si lslnd. ea&ra N. 3. counties. lower st. John river valley: Variable eleulbas wlh widely seattaa-ad as-wnuralsa: l G3Bl..:B2S!7l;!2.':'83;'52 High tide today at Charlottetown at 9.56 a. m. and 9.01 p. In. sum- merslde tide eighteen mlrmtas llfr er than Charlottetown. Sun rises at 7.41 I. I. Old 1 at w 9. in. the storm. However, the CNR lD'