1,126 Atiiioito By DAVE MCINTOSH ( -lian Press Staff Writer (lil.l iA 'CPi - Behind Can- 8... . international activities that m....i- lit-tutlines is a growing ex- lIilt.I aftziirs dt-par.ment staff illili tug quietly in more and more ... IIlt' iro id's vital areas. um-n Canadians think of ex- ,.-.v..i affairs these days. the unit; most likely to come to mind ,. no part Canada played in the uititilc East crisis. Or the 51.000.- 1.... ill relief and free transporta- i".lll to this country provided by iulililil for tragedy - stricken External Af- i .. Minister Pearson who first ;....,..--ed the United Nations Mid- gw ijast Einergenly Force. An- Vanada. lilaj.-Gen. 13, L. M. Iinillx of Ottawa. is commanding w.- iurce And Canada has of- .,..-.I tip to 2,500 military person- mu for the force. with several l..:iu't-d accepted in the early .-.i.s nf'this unique international um izilion. nit-tiit1'A.V'r FUNCTION '. l. i' cciici-ally overlooked is the t.: .i day-to-day work of the ex- It'llliI affairs department: The re- pii,.illE to Ottawa and the inter- piihiililn of political events all - ' ltt l, . iil:l9 Canada had eight mis- ;. in and 33 foreign service offl- U. Submarine Fleet is Active il'ASlIINTON, (AP) - The U9. submarine fleet is doing more business this year than at any time since the Second World tiar. By the year's end. the approx- imate 130 submarines in opera- tl.-iv. will have accumulated a total uh-ing distance of about 2.300.- (lilw miles. '-it-rts resulting from recurrent llllt'ill3IIOIIBI crisis like the Mid- tl1.- I-Just trouble-plus the need to 5.. !l pen the watch against any sur- i”l t' moves by Russia-account tor the increase in considerable at-:11-e. - Navy officials are reluctant to tit-ililss iii any detail the areas in llilitll some of their submarines tiptlliilfl or the types of their mis-- nulls ix IHRENTS SEA limit-vcr, occasional develop- niillls sometimes give clues. A lf'.t )f&Il'5 ago an American sub- lH.illIlt' was sunk alter a series of ntI'ltli'lliHI explosions aboard. The tntiiiiziriiic. it was revealed, was ...iii.ing in the Barents Sea. north tv liit-sia Iii1"lll'.: the last two years radar tw mi submarines have been Id- mi in the fleet. The function of -- .- riot-tronlc watchers is to post .. tisl.IIlI guard. far away from i .: ll iiiircican shores. for the ap- ,. .....ii of enemy aircraft. x .4. into the operating fleet are JitllL' the "killer subs." whose job l- in u.'ii('Il tor and destroy hostile HlI1llliIilllPS. I6 Year-Old Math Wizard s ti if T if VANCOUVER. BC. -tiw Allan Trojan. I6-yell!"-(lI(I i.'lJiil' 12 student. amazes his I('fl0Ilt'l'- by his knowledge of in- iIiIif'tI iiitithcmatics and science. The boy amuses himself by tuiiluiic nut involved problems the ii'H('Il0fS cannot understand. .-lillltitinh he mastered an advan- red type of slide-rule at it, the miviu of his talent was not dis- itItill't'fI tintil two years ago when he suited as problctn which had "'”"Iwti his teachers. "I'imi trick question solved it- wlf ritlcr I iooitcd up a few astro- "Illllll't'II and gravitational fig- uir-vf Allan said. Later he came mutt Ill the lilatiiematical Contest of .iiiiri'ica. llr now is studying radio and viit-loss theory and getting iirst tliiss tumors in his university en- trant-o course. Ills high school principal, W. R. lit-liuticnl said Allan ”aet-ms to Il.'Iit' fl great future." The young student said the l'l.'t'il interference with his work .x hi. t'lIl'l()Sliy about astronomy. lii- i.unrilc science. it hope to attend university. tit.t- s('!Pfl('0, and then decide on lllli wirccr.” Ontario Man Gets HisiMothor Out Of Hungary iiti.Viiftla'AL ICPI--A 77-year- --id t-mmin and five relatives who Wvtlit-rl from revolt-torn llungary nrrit-ml l1Cl'(' by plane Friday ac- ”'"'i:iiiicd by her son. who went iii the Austro-l-fungarian border to l'lNlI them. John tiyurki, 53-yearold Hun- t'lrl.'ill-I)0ln man who has lived in Wt-od-ztrick. 0nt.. for 10 years. re- turned with his aged mother and h. other relatives. iiwirlu waited near the border 3' 3 Dtiint where the party crossed Into Austria under cover of nlshtv gln the party were Mrs. Agnes VI,-l'tll'Kl. the 17-year-old mother; A-rttrkiis sister and brother-in-lav. lit: and Mrs. Josef ltorvatli. and their itmwn daughter. and another ll-IPT and brother-in-law. Ilr. llr.-, Julius Hot-vath. -lose Hnrvath has two sons liv- MI in Canada-Gerald at Gait. "M. and .itm at West Lorne. Ont. Vffhite-haired Josef. who is 63. said he spent three years in a "lion camp to Hungary. When its was arrested Communist told him one of the noon: Wu it- zlhttse Ila sum ball loan to COI- Hesatdhhsonhowhoco "amt tron ltiiuaryand would lrromiuiocuindo. I W. Gwniri said this is the tint utaur II can abroad. Today this country maintains 59 posts in 45 different countries and they are staffed by 356 foreign service officers. In the 1940-41 fiscal year, total expenditures of the external af- fairs department amounted to 5958.367. The 1956-57 budget is 856.078. Canada now is a mem- ber of almost 70 intergovern- mental organizations and Cana- dian representatives attended more than 30 international confer- ences or meetings during 1955. Canada now maintains abroad I staff of 1.726. including Cana- dian administrative personnel and local staff. compared with :74 in l939. Besides this. there are some 30 Canadian civilians serving on the international truce supervisory commissions in Indochina. EXTERNAL Of the 59 posts abroad, 83 are embassies. seven offices of high commissioners. four Iegations. ll consulates, two delegations to the United Nations (one at Geneva. the other at New Yorki. one dele- gation to NATO in Paris and one mission in Berlin. ANALYSE EVENTS The key man is service officer who reports and analyzes political events in the country where he is stationed. The external affairs depart- ment has no trouble finding men to do this job. They must be uni- versity graduates and are paid between 83,900 and 313.000 a year depending on experience and cap- abilities. ' But the department has I con- tinuing problem in obtalnl the administrative personnel t staff posts abroad. It has a hard time finding suitable clerks and stenc- graphers willing to serve in trop- ical or out-of-the-way capitals as well as in London. Paris, Home or Washington. These de rtment members. do not require college degrees. This applies only to foreign service officers. The lowest-paid Canadian civil- ian working overseas for external affairs makes 83.300 a year. Liv- lit: and rental allowances are paid besides basic salary and these are based on a world-wide cost-of-living index. VABIED CONDITIONS Caracas, Venezuela. is the most expensive capital. Its c0st-oi-liv- ing is more "than twice as much as Canada's and I Canadian clerk there is paid 55.000 a year. The living allowance is 32.100. Canberra. Australia, welling- ton. New Zealand and Dublin are rated as the cheapest capitals from the point of view of living ASS ETS in transit) . (1954) LIABILITIES Other liabilities Capital paid up Rest Account Undivided profits vision for making trim the foreign c Total quick assets 3 : Other loans and discounts Mortgages and hypothecs insured under N.H.A: Deposits........... Acceptances. guarantees and letters of credit . . . JAMES MUIR. Chairman and Prutdnn 1 External Affairs Held. The 7 Limelig 1t During The Year costs. Posting: to London. Paris and Rome are the most popular in the department. The least attrac- tive include Karachi,, Tel Aviv. and Ankara. mainly because of living conditions. These are only general views. Canberra. for instance. is unpop- ular with singie women because it is a civil service town where women outnumber men. However, it may be enjyable for a mar- ried man with a family. Tropical climate Is hard on Canadians abroad. A Canadian serving in New Delhi said re- cently in a letter home that when his air conditioning unit broke down he felt like a fish thrown up on the beach. LENGTH OF STAY An external affairs department member serves two to 39': years abroad. depending on'the post. The shorter term applies to trop- icnl capitals. the latter to the U.S. or northwest Europe. Numerically speaking. the larg- est Canadian post abroad is in London. it has a total staff of 90 including local help and represen- tatives of other government de- partments. The Paris and Wash- ington embassies each have some 60 personnel. Several posts abroad have only two or three staffers. There are still many countries where Canada is not Icyl Inquisition Moi ntained By Egyptian Bureaucrots ' Editor's note: Donald Gordol. a former Canadian Press staff writer. recently returned from a visit to Egypt. Here In de- scribes Egypt's movie - atmosphere. Written for The Canadian Press By DONALD GORDON CAIRO tCPi-Egypt provides. free of charge. is genuine IPY movie setting for every foreigner visiting the country. It's an im- pressive one compiete with full cut of villains. secret agentl. passwords. smuggled notu. wh15P' ered conversations and even women of mystery. " Basis of the Hollywood thriller approach is the Egyptian l0V9T9' ment's frantic concern lest all!- one see or tell of anything on- pleasant in the country. "we realize you can write I story after you leave." commented Adel Kamal of the ministry of na- tional guidance. "But we won't. have them coming from Egypt it- self " STRICT RULES An intricate apparatus of con- trol has been established. it starts the moment you snake your way through customs and immigration inspection. Each one of the dozens of uniformed officials warns you of the grim punishment awaiting anyone who goes anywhere with- our permission. You must register at I hotel within three days. they say. and be sure to get In contact with the guidance ministry before seeing any of the sights. The hotel is one of the main stages in the melodrama. The men at the desk. a detective inspector at least. casually plies you with -China, for one. Others include Burma. Iran. most of the Arab world, Central America and the Iron Curtain countries of Hon- 8ar.V- hulgaria and Romania. Many member. of the Canadian staff in Moscow. now numbering about 20. ask for repeat postings there. Freedom of movement. there is considerable compared with what it was and a good deal of travel is permitted. The department some time ago considered giving up its missions in Warsaw and Prague. Move- ment was so restricted that it was difficult to do a proper reporting job and living conditions were bad. However, there now is no intention of abandoning these posts. Language is not a major prob- lem in the department. French. English or German serve in most capitals. Foreign service officers proceeding abroad. however. are expected to acquire some know- ledge of the language of the coun- try where they have been posted even before they leave Ottawa. There are tuition allowances for this purpose. Some officer: he- come experts in foreign Ian- guaizcs. 'I'HE ROYAI. BANK OF CANADA Condensed Annual Statement 30th November, 1956 Cash on hand and due from banks (including items Government of Canada and provincial government securities. not exceeding market value . . . . . Other securities, not exceeding market value . . Call loans, fully secured ...................a Bankpremises.................; Liabilities ofcustomers under acceptances. guarantees and letters of credit Otherasscts.................o acne-aonoaull Total liabilities to the public . . uoaooooooooooaoc ooonoaooaaooa STATEMENT OF UNDIVIDED PROFITS Profit! for the vent ended 30th November. 1956, after pro- e reciation and 'incomo taxes and after ra to inner rcurvu out of which fall roviston has been made for diminution in value of invemnenturidloans. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' Dividends at the mo of Il.lo per share . . . 88,199.76! Extra distribution It the rats of 25! per share . Transferred from inner reserves after provision for 'inconI taxes exigible . . . Balance of undivided pronto. 50th November. 1955 . . . . TrInsicrrcdtoIlutActoIIm- . . . . . . . . - . - o : - Balance of undividnd profit. 50th November. 1956 - U I Vroui provision for income tans 013.610.0013 1.160.000 K. It. 8lDGlV1CK. General In-our SUCCESS nth y NVE-ST M i N T. A has paid more dividends (ad is recommended by the most investment r' ' in Canada. IASTIRN SICUIITIIS aounuv iiiium Nil!-h-o-dlt-. ta-i-anus . S 585,749.78? . 715,005.70? a 492,218,188 : 16s.2s9.5 76 s si.9ss.263.6sti 0 I.Z95.093.026 I86.200,-416 30,690,073 . 95,174,580 J 7.877.367 35.371.293.327) . 35,2 78,375,435 5 93,174,380 . 13.0-(6.871 a 93.334.596.687 4 50,298,893 5 135,737,122 . 665.618 03.571.298.520 012457.253 9.559.793 9 2.907.435 3.000.000 9ts.t 33 8 6.025.610 6.160.000 . 8 665.61! T "iv-ehe manu- Inuit ' questtoiis MIMIC going through the T0011"? Check of all your papers and helium: .VUu i'll out the vari- ous Special forms the bureaucracy requires. A few gquesttons and you realize with a JOII that the man has . d055iH' 0" you They're remark- ably accuraie. including a com. pi-ehenstve knowledge of your em. PIONCFS. a fair idea of your activi- tieslduring the last year and gut. prising information on what you intend to do in Egypt, In the lobby are a handful of Eilflngly inconspicuous men in grey suits. busily reading news. Papers When )ou stroll by. one detaches himself from his leather chair and follows. N 0 V W 9 I1 I a n correspond- ent made life miserable for these men by speaking to them in the man i an old friend. Each time t shadow, badly rattled. was quickly replaced. in a seven. day stay the Norwegian corres. pondent worked his way through its got The '57 Chevrolet can give lessons on taking curves and holding the road to just about any car going-no matter how mtich more it costs. Few cars at any price are so beautifully balanced and so smooth. sure and solid in action. 111: '57 Chevyis road sawy isn't surprising once you learn wiiatis underneath it - new developments in steering. springs and suspen- sion. Chcvy plants itself wide and low to the luC.u l'triiii:s HIE l)ti..1(' passes. a daylong eliort catering EVGILV fat-'iIIt.V 0. th ciiiftiriiiatioii apparatus. Each visit you fill out a form. aiisvier variou squc-lions: and are told in cmiic hack in an. hour. Pat for the course is six trips. l POPULAR TRIP l The trip in see conditions nut-. side Cairo has its uun coiiipiica-I tions. The siaiidard junket is to. Abu Suvteir. the UN marshalltng base on an ligyptiaii airfield. To go there. you must have a letter of atitiioiity from the guid- ance niinistry. a grey - suited UN and Egyptian government and perniis.-ion to travel from the Egyptian army. The trip takes three hours and includes stops at 11 check points, each one a bitter argument over credentials. when we did reach Abu Suweir. we were promptly arrested - the local immigration officer refused to believe vte had come from Cairo and insisted we had been smuggled in aboard at UN plane. It took direct UN inter- vention to settle that hassle. Army. ”gui(ie." separate Passes from the - The return drive was a race ll III 5' Only franchised Chevrolet dealers x 64 3 v n o';; I I c”'"b"'"II"9 IRA lCoIIier's, Woman's? IBELFAST fAPi - The Ulster government declared Friday night; that "the kid gloves are off" and moved to invoke war-time security , regulations to counter raids by eunmeii of the Irish Republican Prime Minister Lord Brookebor- ough told his defence chiefs he will introduce a special act of parlia- men: giving police the power to arrest and intern suspects without a warrant or trial. A government spokesman said: ”The kid gloves are off. We are determined to deal with these gangs in the only language they know.” The new get-tough policy. was against the sun The man in the grey suit, with clear terror. told us we would be shot on sight if we didn't get to ('air0 by nightfall. The check points are manned at night by local volunteers who have taken literally their orders to allow only military travel after dsrlg I-' M42777 7: t the experts call road, and with its pounds in the right places. That's why it sticks so surciy and solidly around corners and curves. That's why it seems to follow the road as though on invisible rails. Chevy's new Vii power (up to 245 hp?) springs from what people who know have called the best performing passenger car en- gine ever built. And that makes the going even better! Snappier perfonnance with more pre- cise control! Come in and try it. A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE Idgm of "'9 greyiw" "''”'”f we In 19. TIIB Gllifdllll. P31. 13 Home Companion To Discontinue NEW YORK tAPi-The board of directors of the Crowell-Collier laid down I few hours after 40 raiders crossed the border fro mthc lrish ltcpublic in early morn- ing darkness and attacked two po- lice stations with bombs and ma- chine-gun bullets. it was the second big scale bar- der raid in 48 hours by IRA men pledged to force the British out of the six counties of Northern Ireland and unite the country un- der the Irish Republic govern- merit. Brookchorough also sent ”urgent representations" to the British government about the IRA raids. Ulster members of parliament have accused the 'Irish Republic of "hat-boring" terrorist gangs. The IRA is illegal in the Irish Republic as well as In Ulster. :2 r I! ,;e.;nn Iv! ,4 I M0- to itmliyilv 66 display this famous trademark -:---:-- nowti MOTORS LTD. 203 FITZROY ST; t l ' The Bel Air sport Coupe. Body by Filter, of movie, with oil that means In extra finn- nf eoiutvoction, rnotovioiocnd detoiil. road sense" 3 OR THE MOST MODERN EFFICIENT ENGINES IN THE WORLD 0270-Ii.p. version two nvuaalilz at all! con. Publishing Company voted night to disc iniie publica” l (.'ollier's and Woman's Home Com- passion. The action closed out the long publishing careers of two of Am- erica": ' 4 magazines. Both had been losing money. The. two magazine. I Part of the reading tradition in millions of homes. both date back to the last century. At the time of their death they had a ombined cir- culation of almost a.500.illl. Collier's. a general bi-monthly magazine and one of the so-called ”slicks." was started 68 years ago. The Woman's Home Compan- ion. a homemaking monthly slanted mainly to women readers. was started 81 years ago. Their cessation is a "blow to the entire magazine industry. the ad- vertising industry and the Ameri- can people as well." said Theo- dore White. a senior writer for Collier's. More than 1.400 editorial. adver- tising and business office employ- ees are directly affected by tits decision. I , . , . :14: M-ti';;.44-. . C-t7s1w