3auerxTl1.inks Russians I .' Will Be Toug l,lfl.”3”t.'i:”v'i'.h”&”lw'v ONTO, (CP) - Bobby Balltgrrf coach of Canada's Olym- ic hockey team. refuses to panic Eve, reports of Russian hockey away, But he readily admits the gwsslans will be "tout 30 5989' in the winter OWNPIC Slim” ll - Italy, next month. ill be I big factor in me Jan. at-Feb. 5 games and both Canada. rePl'"9Med by Kitchener - Waterloo Dutchmen. gull Russia. I18.” ll- gauer, who has his own espion- gge. system to scout the Rus- gians. said in a telephone inter- ;-iew Tuesday from his Kitchener. out. home that the Russians are '-pretty good." I-)'."BOPE'S BEST "IS a matter of fact I hear- mill 1 donlt doubt.-that they are we number one club in Europe. Tmy are fast. big and well-con diiioned and these are the tlungs that will be hard to best." "Ive heard all about the Rus-l slalts' victories over Englishl l("lllVs' made up mostly of Carla-3 dtztns. They were only exhibition games but we can't overlook the lllL'l that these English league learns took some bad beatings. lI1t- Russlalts simply morn,” said Bobby. Inttiotlitc with Boston Briuns of tho Natlntiai Hockey League a dccatle ago. Russians will have a stronger club than last spring when they d . HEADS IOMIERS James T. Russell. H, has been elected president of the Winnipeg Rugby Football Club for 1956. He stlceeds Ralph Misenar as head of the Blue Bombers of the West- ern Interprovincial Football Union. lluslellhl clubvlos-president in 1955. is president and general-mam ruler of s vitnnlpeg motor agency. hzm- Plans Overhaul Of Ldaor Party CLECKHEATON. Eng. (Reu- ters)-Hugh Gnitskeii. it his first public speech as Labor party leader. said Saturday the party will overhaul in entire organiza- tion in planning to win the next general election. He declared Labor needs to improve its financial position and review its long-term policies. CHRISTMAS IVERYWIIEIIE Christmas. Christmas, everywhere! on land and sea and in t air; The very cloudlets drifting by seem sending Christmas from the sky. The little snowflakes falling down Bring Christmas Joys to every town. Where in each window in the night A cheery sndle sheds its light. in country lane and city street. The little Christmas elflns meet Tn chase the and thoughts of the .I'PBl'. And fill each heart with Christ; mas cheer. . Ftom South in North; from West to East We hear it sung. - Ito Christmas . feast' Ami angel songs are on the air. Christmas, Christmas. everywhere. -Daniel A. Msccormnck. Geo:-geto I WII, . .. were beaten H by Pontlcton Vs for the world title." Bauer said. WILL PLAY IT CLEAN opean Canada's chances. Bauer replied: The players know that a clean . bodycbeck in legal and that charging or board- ing will he called immediately. I had heard that those European - referees make a strict lnterpreta- ' by some officials of the Pentic- ton team that the refereelng was very fair last Stan outskated Dumlr-. an oldijrs members of l(arman's team in a ”Ft'nm what I've been told the goodwill tournament which ended here Saturday. member. I! .Snetsinger. was ill and unable to play be substituted R. Hardy who had the same han- dicap. However, not expecting his team to make much of a show- ins. May Keep "Magnificent" As Helicopter Carrier cruiser Quebec probably will be put into reserve. Magnificent as a helicopter carrier 33-ntggn sunny I and training ship. it was learned Monday, but no de- cision has yet been taken or is -likely, to be reached for some I1 T.o Bear Asked whether the Ittict Eur- refereetng would hurt 1 ”I don't think it will bother us. your own end is Iion of the rules but I was told spring in Ger- many. our club intends to play It clean all the vay through the , tournament. ” The Dutchmen. who hold 3 . Liverpool 5 Nottingham F 1 Ballymeana u 1 Derry c 1 third 111111 followed by basket- slzenble lead to the Semor ”A' Notts C 5 Middlesborough 0 Culcraine 1 Linfield 1 ballet" Bob Pettit. St. Louis 12, 1, Jean Beliveau. Montreal Canadl- Ontario Hockey Association. have '5 players on the roster. The list must be chopped to 17 to meet llympic regulations. Can. Golf Pro Taual-it Lessor HAMILTON. Bermuda. (AP) - Karman. golf pro from ()nl .. has learned that not wise to underestimate - --i! ty of a group of golfers. The golfers in this case were When he found that a team Karman didn't bother in- UFTAWA (CP)-The navy may keep the 18.0w-ton aircraft carrier The matter is under discussion. time. Originally. the Magnificent. on loan from the Royal Navy since 1940 when it was commissioned, was to have been returned to Brit- sin after commissioning of the flsttop Bonaventure. now under construction at Belfast, Northern Ireland. The Bonaventure is sched- uled to be delivered to the Cana- dian Nsvy next October. One view is that the Magnificent would bs,fas- more useful to the navy in event of war than I cruiser. The Canadian Navy's tra- ditional rolc is protection of ship- ping and a cruiser now is con- sidered of little use for such a job. If the Magnificent is retained. the forming officials of the substitu- won the first leg of the tourna- ment with a 13-under-par 55 Kan. man substitution to the officials had no alternative qualify the team. crults and junior Magnificent might prove better than the 9,000 on. When. to his surprise. the team immediately reported the: who but to dis- As a training ship for naval re- officers. the - ton Quebec. It carries a crew of some 1.200 com- pared with 800 for the Quebec. The navy's other training vessel is the cruiser Ontario. The navy has formed an experi- mental 'antl-submarlne helicopter squadron at Halifax.. Helicopters used in this role carry sonar-a form of underwater radar-which they can lower into the water and then move on to another area to listen for submarines. Sea training could be given this squadron from the Magnificent without interfering with basic sea- manship training among the rest of the crew. No elaborate arrange- ments have to be made for heli- copters-for instance. three are carried by the navy's Arctic patrol vessel Labrador. TORONTO. By the end of 1955. nearly (W: million Canadians-48 per cent of the population not covered by compulsory government hospit- al plans-wlll have acquired volun- tary insurance against hospital ex- penses. Close to 556 million Canad- ians will have insurance against surgical expenses and about till million persons will have medical expense insurance (against doctor's bills). These lmates are based on projections of 1950-1964 survey figures I leased today by the Joint Committee on Health Insurance. I body representing most insur- ance companies and fraternal bene- fit societies providing medical, sur- gical and hospital insurance in Canada. Rapid ltrldes have been made since the early 19401. At that time. the number of persons throughout Canada with hospital insurance numbe i only about half a mil- lion. while less than half this num- ber wers covered for surgical and medical expense. ' Highlighting subsequent progress. the report issued today reveals that in the four-year period from W IITTLII When you're really thirsty, you may as well buy the best...IVANOll.lNI. ' for 390 Voluntary Hospital Plans Now Insurer 6V: Million the end of 1950 to the end of 1954. the number of Canadians with vol- untary insurance against hospital costs increased by close in two million. while in the same period over 2'xi million more people ac- quired insurance against the ex- pense of surgery. and 2134 million more took out insurance to offset doctors' bills. Voluntary insttrance is provided in Canada by over sixty insurance companies. by Blue Cross hospital plans operating in eight provinces, by eight medical-care plans spon- sored by the medical profession, as well as by insurance co-operat- lves. fraternal benefit snricticst, union and other employee benefit associations. Organized tn Itl.'i:i. the Joint Com- mltteg on Health Insurance was sat up by the All Canada Insur- .nnce Federation (fire and casualty companlesl and The Canadian Life Insurance Officers Association (life insurance cnmnanwst to make con- tinuing sttt-veys and to further the interests of lnsttrant-e companies and fralcrnal ht-nt-fit societies in .....'... I I ) . I LUM S LABOR NOT Goalie Harry Lumlcy of Town kn (control (luring National Hock- to Maple Leafs deflects puck shot key League game by Boston Bruins' Eddie Panagab-lLeafs' Hugh Bolton (4) sprawls onl&1. in Toronto. l Migay. Toronto S S A C Santa Will Have Solid Ice To Land In Labrador ST. JOHN'S. Nfld. (CF) - It's and no ships can get in. Steamers either a white Christmas. or per-iget to south coast ouiports all year haps none at all for the youngsters round. of northern Labrador. Santa Claus An air service was inaugurated there has to have good solid icein 1947, but will reach peak effi- to land on. , iciency only this year when EPA In communities such as Nain and.adds 'helicopters to serve Notre Rigolet people can't dash out to;Damc and Bonavista bars in a 50- buy last-minute presents. They or-lmile radius from Gander. the main der from Newfoundland or therhase. 3.1313? lgeftligy thleirthgeifglln tillmbee. 3 "ELICOPTERS "EL? The last boat to northern Labra-y Mr Clarke gays '(-nutppg dor sailed early in November. fused nnty Wm... an-planes After the last boat. they depend land because ,1,-in ice has rp. on Eastern Provincial Airways. lhe'p13ce(t the 5n,,,0gh1....(.-Men guf. COITIPHHY Cl'lIiPlel'ed by the postffaces they need. Helicopters are of Umce I0 881 mail to them on llm9- tchief value in the early and late winter seasons. AERIAL REINDEER Mail is flown to titsirlbtttiou And if the bays and inlets don't. centres, then carried in outlying freeze solid before Christmas. EPA communities by horse and slidee can't do a thing about it. In mid-ythe Newfoundland tcrmvor snow- December ice was forming tootmobilcs. Mr. Clarke says he knows quickly for float planes to land. Butlnf no dog teams in use by couriers nobody could forecast whether it in Newfoundland. They are still would form quickly enough into used in Labrador. howm-er. solid ice for ski-wheeled planes fol Before the air service one horse- land with the mail in time for and-doll I'0UlE began at Deer lake Christmas. near the west coast and made a The post office in these parts 300-mile 100i? "I the great north- doesn't play Santa Claus-it playslern lleninstlla. the part of his reindeer, Last winter mail flown in and "We just have to pray for ice in out of Gander totalled nearly 350. northern Labrador to fly in before 000 pounds. Distribution cost about are can't Queens p R 2 Brighton 1 (1.8. All Creams G B .V'iaraschi11o.Cherr1es tswmdon T 1 suuthampmn 1 All Hard Centers (LB (.offee.Cordials -I-omuay U 2 Ipswich T 2 (1.3 Alnmntinos G B Nougattnes . G.B. Burnt Almond G.B. Pineapple Cubes ' ' - I Division III (Northern) G.B. Butterscotch Creams G.B. Maple Walnuts too. At right 15 Toronto: Rudy Bradford C 0 mdham A 0 (13, caramel, delealed 3&0" Chesterfield 2 Carlisle U 1 Darlington 0 Hartlepools U 0 MAKE YOUR OWN SELECTION . - gatefsheald ; raftttxgtop S3 at ax or in Au55'e Mm(m5n Mansfield T 1 Derbyg lm 'EMpLE-5 pHARMAcy Rochdale 2 Grimsby T 0 5 . Scunthorpc U 4 Bradford 2 Southport 2 Ba,.,..,.,,, 1 Queen St. Charlottetown. P. E. 1. Record Holders MELBOURNE, (Routers) - A 23-year-old Australian mllkman, whose auhletic training ' "1 of sprints from house to house during his early morning delivery rounds Saturday beat two Hun- garian world record holders in a 5.000-metre race here. Milkman Dave Stephens boat Laszlo Taborl. joint holder of the world 1.500-metre record. and Sandor lharos. fastest man in the world over 5.000 metres. Stephens won by 30 yards from Tabot-1. with lharos an ad- ditional 25 yards away in third spot. The time of i4 minutes. 7.2. seconds was an Australian rel cord. but it was well outside the world mark-l3 minutes 40.6 sec- onds-set by Iharos in October. T in couriers. "Revenue from post-l age is considerably less than thel expenditure involved." says Mr. Clarke. Winter mall distribution to the. north is still staggering from the impact of Confederation. When c.o.d. orders from Canada became legal, Mr. Clarke says. mails swelled 400 per cent. Kitchen post offices that once carried two bags of mail per de- livery now are jammed with any- Christmas," says Kerry Clarke. 3190.000. m05”y to EPA. the rest superintendent of post office trans- portatinn services in Newfound- land. He says ships will serve the northern ouiports of Newfoundland island probably until sometime in i January. Then ice drifting south- ward is scooped up in the bays. CHRISTMAS RUSH ST. JOHN'S. Nfld (CPI --A post office official says this yenr' Christmas rush promises to be the biggest in Newfoundland history. The department allocated 330.000 for extra help and space to cope with the heavy volume.t where between eight and 16. soccer games Saturday Arsenal 4 Blackpool I Aston V 0 Manchester C I Bolton W 4 Chelsea 0 Burnley 2 Tottenham H 0 Luton T 2 Charlton A 1 Manchester U 2 Birmingham C 1 Portsmouth 5 Huddersfield T 2 Preston N E 0 Everton 1 Sheffield U 2 Newcastle U I I Sunderland 1 Cardiff C l v Wolverhampton W 5 West Bram Bristol R 1 Port Vale 1 Fulham 3 Bury 1 Leeds U 3 Barnslcy l Leicester C 1 Hull City 2 Lincoln C 3 Blackburn fl 0 Plymouth A 1 Sheffield W l Rntherham'U 3 West Ham l.' 2' Bournemouth 0 Coventry C 1 Gillingham I Seyton 0 4 Walsall 0 Milwall l Watford 1 Newport C l Shrewsbury T 2 N Norwich C 7 Southcnd U 2 Stockport C 2 Crewe Alex 1 'TI!ursdsy,Dee.22, 1955 The Guardian Page 7 ' Carmen Basilio 2 Wins Award 3? NEW YORK IAP)-For 1m surf ring. come-fr -behind victory) over Tony DcMarco.welterwelghI champion Carmen Basilio Tues- day was named winner of the November award in the pro atll-I lete of the year poll. ' Thus the able. I47-pound titlllt from Chittenango, N. Y.. became the llth monthly prize winner to qualify for the grand annual trophy. the stoma diamond stud- Saeeor Results LONDON (Reuters)-Rants Wrexilsm 4 York city 4 SCOTTISH LEAGUI - DiVision A Aixdrieonians 3 Queen of I 1 Celtic 5 Partick T 1 Dundee 5 St. Mirren 1 Dunfermline A l Fslkirk I Hearts 7 otherwell l Kilmarnoc I Aberdeen 0 Raith R 1 Clyde 5 Rangers 4 Hibernian I Stirling A 2 East Fife I Division B Arbroath 1 Third Lanark 0 Berwick R 3 Dundee U 2 E Stirling 2 Alloa A l H United Kingdom: INGLIOII LRAGUI Division I . W” A 2 Mmlirlollz ls1la1:1l"nU 22 g,”d,heg”':;'b:f,flft': :f':95gl'” 5”” Division III Queen's P 3 Forfar A 2 Basing received 54 msbplac. St. Johnstone 4 Cowdenbeath 2 Stenhousemuir 2 Dumbarton 3 Siranraer I Brechin C 2 IRISH LEAGUE Ards 1 Glenavon 0 votes and 226 points on a 3-2-1 1 basis to beat out jockey Willis ,t:v Hartack's 27 first-placers and 177 I V points. Quarterback Otto Graham I of the Cleveland Browns was ' Crusaders 1 Bangor I Glentoran 0 Distillery 0 Portadown 6 Cliftonville 2 tn ONCE AGAIN AVAILABLE GANONG'S GB, CHOCOLATES by the 14-lb., 1,3-lb. or 1-lb. ens hockey player '10! and Doak Walker. Detroit Lions back (ill. take C 5 Doncastcr R 2 wansea T 2 Bristol C I Division III (Southern) ldershut 4 Reading 4 olchester U 5 Excter C l Brcntford 2 orthampton T I Crystal P 1 ranmcrc R 4 Chester 0 WE KNOW IT'S COLD OUTSIDE - - - SO - - - DIAL 4748 FOR LAST MINUTE SHOPPING NEEDS. 1,. and Friday. and until 5 pm. Saturday, --- Prompt Free Delivery --- Gifr items available include Nylon Over-shoes and Hosiery: Slippers and Shoes for all the family. - GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE - ' l LePAGE SHOE CO. LTD. -- Did C. O. D. Orders accepted from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday, I 4748 OPEN: OPEN 8 am. to 9:30 pm. Thursday and Friday Saturday until 5:30 p.m. - MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL - TO ALL CITIZENS OF RAG health insurance field. No Beter Qualit AT ANY PRIWCE! without mishap. drive. nlv Province of Prince Edward Island DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND I feel. at this time. that I should request the ai'te.ni'ion and co-operation of all con- cerned in so far as the practice of good driving habits on our highways are concerned during the holiday period immediately ahead. All our roads now have or covering of snow and ice. This condition itself requires a driver's utmost care and caution to continue For the many who do partake of alco- IIOII3 beverages. as well as the many who do not. I suggest that in so far as possible. al- ways. one who has not been-drinking should Christmas is a ioyful occasion and is me Q6 Ursa-yofallrth. Lei us.lni'he days not mu this Glorious Event. through unless driving on our highways. with a Death. I extend my best wishes to everybody. J. GEORGE Ma:KAY.l Minister of Highways. dread. EIEIEISEEIE I SCHURMAN'S SCHOOL PARADE Presents The Folowing Special Program On CHRISTMAS EVE OVER RADIO STATION CJRW AT 7:30 P. M. YOU WILL HEAR The Summerside Elementary and Junior High Sc-linnl ttlwt-stl (;rot1ps singing seven special (Thristrnas numhcrs. Myrna i-l:1'1:-Mr till luv the feature soloist and will sing ('0 Holy Ix'lgl1t". This ;;l'titIp is .l1:' l('l('fl by Mr. Gabriel Chiasson. l l , AND .-I The St. Mary's Academy All Girls' Choir will present songs and stories of Christmas. The Reader for this group will be Phillipa McNally and the feature soloist will be Betty Blaoquiere. This group is directed by Sister St. Anthony. Both groups will be accompanied at the Hammond organ by Mr. Gabriel Chiasson. THIS WILL BE A PROGRAM YOU WILL LONG RE- MIIHR. SO Sill HI WHOLI FAWN K LIS- ..i.....a.a - -?llHUli'MAN