Maxims of e Mere Man Self do. Ielf have. -c-ITTT 1755635 OTTAWA tCP) -- Lt.- Gen. gmvard Graham is in hot wetor wllll Defence Minister Campney 1,... than four months after taking nvvr as chief of the general staff. it uas learned authoritatively ,'lloilda.V. Mr C.-unpuey took exception to sl.'llt'lllf'lllS made by Gen. Graham ala llec .3 press conference that the arniy uill recommend to the gm('l'Iilll0l1i within six months a plan for creation of its own air iorzr informants said this is consid- grrtl a mailer of government po- liry and should not have been dis- w,.(-tl publicly. especially when a definite policy had still not been decided. l(HAll'l'0UM. The Sudan (Reut- erst-The Sudanese Chamber of Deputies voted unanimously Mon- day to turn their vast East African land into an independent republic and called on the Sudan's former rulers, Bfllnin and Egypt, to rec- ognize this ” complished fact." Cheering, white-robed crowds surrounded the parliament bulld- iiu: and shouted freedom slogans as the Lower House gave its deci- sion on the Surlanis future. The vote was a rejection of pro- posals for some form of union with Etzynt which had sought to set up links with the sprawling Sudanese territory lying south of Egypt along the Nile river. The Lower House vote for an lnrlcpcnrlcut republic is expected to he -lnlwoved unanimously hy'the Senate next Tliursrlay. Tho flPt'lSlllll then will settle the political status of the Sudan after Coming Events Surieri lleart Home-Chri.stmns.' gilt: for sale. E ll-tllttf (.Ilii':lli:(l til West Royalty Hail, Wrrim-sriny, Dec 21st,, only, (lit iuttims C o n c e rt Brackley S. Iloni. in-dnesriay, Dec. 21. iitstiiiuri-iaild School Concert, llwt-lulu-r 22. Nutty roll, hor- tlrziiivllie School con- 22. frttuv ll:nuk School Concert l-WI: R-ror llali, Dec. 21. l nlicy Christmas con- rst il('('lll"(l. l'-tl'iit1 trl-' lmw" ”'"w- School concert . .i-.tl.-i. nor. 22 at 5 o'clock. l'-til--imp 'S('ll(IDl Concert Thurs- fl-t' Doc. flflttd. Al .lllIlIlir F.'lI'n)el.. G1" "W St-liool tonight. ll 'ltl'ttllo ("I it I New 1). Mil. lloroli School Concert Thurs- llri . 'llcr 39nd. Curtain st ll. Inl'1ilI'l"fIg'liflo Christmas Concert '””-V Vnlley Hell. Dec. 21. i'in'i.siiuu.s Concert Mnrshfleld E" Wivwsday. Dec. am, am I-' .. . .11? .':'.'.'L. ”."'"”l....?""" ""' i ll or g 'l'tir-slim. DP? 1) 515 - . lltl ii”-Hm Chmun” cimcert. M 2' tier Hlll. Wednesday, t'ti.tr llixvr Christmas Concert . p.rn. -lltls Mile Creek Obristna ..., .. ' scon- ml" Won Hell. Dec. net of a ii I ukora Tuedd (';,.h "3531. Ema. .::".r- t c--- -- oi?.'””'..".'f.i'i.:.'l.-.l"t"'o......."'L RA: ystem.' Cgnugg .”'u.. Victoria Concert Dec. 11,. with I s p e c i at ' "Christmas Evedlpunu "mu Reserve Thursday. Doe. I for" Em raid Sch 1 Content dd "H-n. 00 h Imus South Granville School ms concert, Dec. Md. Al gee Welcome. The Christmas con on of Nor- boro school will be eld in Not- born School Friday. Dec. 8rd. Unloading car on cake. all day Tuesds and Wednesday morning, Doc. :1. Wiltshlre Dairying co. Cm!-unlsr line at noun Wed . n . ii- mcgrrz. ...:-..-'..rl:.'.-.. n it-hool Christmas Con- A ONE OFFICER REMOVED Mr. Csmpney is said to object strongly to armed forces officers making public statements on any subject that touches on govern- ment policy. He has removed one senior RCAF officer from his post for such a public statement. Lt.-Gen. Guy Simonds was re- tired as chief of the general staff at the age of 52 to he succeeded last Stpt. 1 by Gen. Graham. nearly five years his senior. The defence department has maintained that Gen. Simonds was retired to give other officers I chance to move up but reports persist he was let out because be publicly advocated national selec- tive service. Sudanese Vote To Turn- Couniryi Into Republic 54 years of foreign rule and two years of uneasy progress in self- government. Sayed Moubarrsk Zarrouk, leader of the Chamber of De uties, triumphantly declared that man- ese independence is "an accom- llshed fact." RIEND 1'0 EGYPT He said the Sudan's future role- tlons with both countries will de- pend on how they reacted at this "crucial moment." To Egypt, in particular. he said that an inde- pendent Sudan would be "I friend to her and add to the strength of the Arab world." The vote for immediate indepen- dence rsn counter to a British- Egyptian agreement last Dec. 3 for s plesblscite to decide the coun- trys future. The two co-rulers re- nounced their control of the Sudan in a 1953 agreement but planned to guide the country on its course either to ' t indepon-' or to union with Egypt in some form. Admiral Pe 's Widow epics"? roaraauu, Malue, (AP) - Mrs. Josephine Dlebitscb Peary. 92. widow of the America val offlcei-who discovered North Pole in 1909. and an Arctic ex- plorer in her own right, died Monday. Mrs. Peary had been confined to her apartment since she suf- fered a broken hip in January. 1954 Admiral Robert W. Peary gave her much credit for the success of his Arctlc explorations. Shc accompanied her husband on sev- enal trips. travelling farther north over the ice flelth then any other white woman. Hm daughter Marie-called the "Suow Baby"-was born less than 18 degree item the North Pole in 1091. ' Above is the s.s. Novspert lav. iii...-1... 7719 Guardian In June. Air Vice-Marshal John Plant was removed as chief of RCA! technical services because he suggested in a speech at Tor- onto that the army be scrapped to make way for a bigger air force. In October, Air Commodore Fred Carpenter. chief of air opera- tions. said in an interview at Hali- fax that "our position is to make the Russians know we can knock hell out of them” and that the Russians militarily are 20 years behind the West. Both the defence and external affairs departments were upset by these statements. particularly the latter because External Affairs Miilister Pearson was on an of- ficial vlsit to Russia at that time. Mother Spends Savings Seeking Son in North PORT ARTHUR, Ont. (CPi -A grieving Port Arthur mothei has spent the last of her savings in air searches for her son, missing since Dec. 8 in the Eaglehesd lake urea, 42 miles north of here. The widowed mother of 31-year- old Arvi Persia. said she spent 375 Wednesday for a nlane and :45 on Saturday. Her son entered the woods last October with C. E. tchuckl Golden. A local trapper. Golden returned to Port Arthur alone lest Tuesday and reported Perala mil!- in g. Jack Rikkanen, nephew of the 58-year-old Mrs. Perala. flew the plane into the area Wednesday but was unable to land because of poor weather. Saturday he followed the trap line snd found Golden's food supplies had been depleted. He found a note left by Golden at one of the food shacks reading: "My psl lost, head of Eaglehead lake. Heading for Port Arthur by way of Dog lake." Leng Cold Wbve On Tile Prairies EDMONTON. (GP)- With the Int olletel day of wtlntar still it hours away, the prairie prov- inces today are to experience their lath straight day of below- laro cold. Not since Nov. I has the tem- perature been above freezing in the Edmonton district. and the weather office says there is no sign of relief at present. Huge Tanker Arriving Today The flagship of the Irving Oil Co.. fleet the tanker lrvingbrook, Captain Otte Ottmann in com- mand is expe ted to arrive in Char- lottetown esry this afternoon. The ship is to rendezvous in Narthum- berlsnd Strait with the tankers Irvinglake from Pictou and See- konk from New Glasgow. The three ships will arrive off Ftizruy Rock during forenoon and enter the harbor with the high tide. The harbor pilot Wallace Mac- Donald flew to New Glasgow yes- terday and will board the Irving- lake in Pictou. At the point of rendezvous Mr. MacDonald will transfer to the lrvingbrook to conn the ships lnto harbor. Mr. K. C. Irving and son Ar- I her were expected to arrive in Charlottetown sometime during the night by air. They. along with Mr. William Connolly will welcome the ships on their arrival at the nail- way Wharf. UNION WITH GERMANY SAARBRUECKEN, Saar tAPl-7 Victorious German leaders in the Bear celled Monday for s "grand coalition" of German parties to negotiate with the big powers for union with the Fatherland. lif FLEE FIRE TORONTO tCP) - Fifteen per- sons fled in their nightclothes from apartments over a tailor shop early Monday when fire raced through the building. No one was lnlured but firemen estimated damage to the building at 310,000. Speed Up Co ST. JOHN'S. Nlld.. (CPl-Pre- mier Smal-lwocd announced Mon- day that. a government represen- tative has been appointed to speed up the handling of New- foundland-bound coal at Sydney and North Sydney. N.S. A severe coal Sllofllige on the south coast tthls winner has been blamed on a shortage of coasting boats and loadllng delays at Syd- ney and North Sydney. In a release llhe prunier said "for some time the position ex- isting at North Sydnoy relative to the supply and delivery of coal to Newfoundland vessels on ww lg, -.5-0on3-l V. LAST SHE OUT OF .SUMMEIlSlDE continent. "'5 3”m'""'"' ” D'”'"b'l' 1' MQWM the Summerslde bar- Attelillol : g the last ship to clear the harbor has is much later is I) cu". mu”, meg: gfucb this year before neviutloe closed. E ...g:”'g..""f.r. year for some will . u C. l The Novspost was one of the V pugs”. up .. or. middle Orr: at s wines. ":Y:gbc.lnA:'souImH of i one instance. A.I.lsIut.IIellco.willIot!oIrto 0 bi" :”Q?'ctlb.;do".up. W the niche and fowl transport of ti I I Mi scheduled u.lNII'. but iii If dressed stoes from Prince lid 3 In csll,nt tllh mart. eluding the .' tovlrttwlllltlltli . "lulllsvsbsssu Nfld.i'iPte"mi(er' Moves To and essnry delays. al Shipments Newfoundland consumers ha.- been a matter of grave concern to (the government." His anhou-nccmeni said that Capt. Uriah Strickland. master of the motor vmsei Thomas V. llolilctt would be "representing Newfoundland interests and ac- celerating shipments," as an authorized representative of the Newfoundland government. Capt. Strickland's services will be llree to coal buyers and mas- ters of vessels. He will super- vise rotstlon of vessel loadings thur accompanied by Captain Mos-i ,.lccIdeIt.lsIve ' elal hurdeniof firm in recent OTTAWA (CPI--Spokesman for Maritime potato growers Monday conferred with federal officials but no definite conclusion were . ached on federal aid to move surplus potatoes into starch fec- tories. Agriculture Minister Sherwood of New Brunswick who led the delegation along with Agriculture Minister Cullen of Prince Edward Island said another meeting will be held today. "The discussions wet. general and we will probably b making n10l'i detailed proposal: tomor- row." he said. "Farmers are al- ways bopeful that something will be done.” TAKE 30-CENT LOSS He said earlier that the Mari- time potato situation was critical. Farmers were getting 40 cents I bushel for potatoes that cost them about 70 cents a bushel to pro- duets. "with federal help we might be able to divert some surplus pota- ;toes into starch factories. That will Seeking Federal Aid For Potato Starch Program . CANADA. TUESDAY. DECEMBER 20. 195: llrolacilcs IN VIET NAM BARED LT-Gen. Graham In Hot Water With Defence Dept. help ease the situation. We also would like to develop is sound stor- age progrlm to provide some po- tstoes for livestock feed." Mr. Sherwood declined to dis- close detefls of the proposed po- tato starch program. but estim- ated the federal cost would be less than 31,000,000. Canada”: potato crop this year is estimated at some 631300.000 bush- els, up 23 per cent from 195-i Fed- eral officials have estimated I956 plantings anti yields will decline because of the general slirlnkzige in the potato market and the drop in prices this year tlluu. Eugclii Culicn. nuiti--icr of Agriculture. accompanied by Deputy Minister S.C. Wright. Wil- liam hIacLennan, chairman and Elric Campbell. manager of the Prince Edward Island Potato Mar- keting Board arrived in Ottawa Monday where they will join with representatives of the New Bruns- wick potato industry to discuss matters with Federal Agricullurz-ii officials regarding the potato sil- uation in the Maritime Provin es.I MR. MENARD RETAINS SEAT ST, JOHNS. Que, tCPi - J Armand Menard Monday retained the constituency of St. Jean- l GEORGETOWN. On t. (CINE Fifteen young orphans have inton- sified an apple-selling campaign to clear a 32,000 debt from their Notre Dame de Beauregard farm near here, about 20 miles west of Toronto. All under 14 years of age. the French-speaking children are try- ing to save the home for orphans founded 21 years ago by Father Beauregard and Therese St. Jean. The home moved here 12 years ago from St. Catharines. In the past 21 years. 165 children have passed tttsroudi it. Apples raised on the II-ncre farm are the only source of in- come. Selling apples is a Saturday nut- lng for the children. They realize the a plea must be sold if press- ing hits are to be paid. An addition to the farmhouse. seven eye operations and a motor in the finan- months. Toronto and Guelph are two of the favorite markets for the young salesmen. The boys also go into smaller communities such as Acton and Brampton" and canvass the whole town door-to-door. However, the plentiful supply of apples in the province has made selling difficult this year. SOME KNIT SOCKS After classes the children. who are nearly all bilingual. help with the housework and farm chores. Many knit their own socks and others help with meals. The farm grows all its own veg:-' tables and fruit. Two cows supply mill-: and I flock of hens produce eggs for the children. A few lambs and attempt to eliminate unnec- ehlstodosohulltsotbeenfor the timely arrival of the Brent which came to Summerslde after nrrsngements had been made by J. Watson MacNnucM.M-Pu snerslde. i Assresult4be NOVIPOI1 WI! nhlebdeekndtbensell ghlploedofpotetoeseonslgn iI5 Orphans Sell Apples In Effort To Save Home lbcrville-Napiervllle, for the Lib- erals in a federal by-election call ed to fill the only vacancy in the 265-seat House of Commons Th h b I x h Have Successful c usan”o agir w wilt - to the farm as a child doeso muech An"'rabI.' s.rum of the heavy work and superv:-res died in an autotmobiiie accident five years ago. While the children will be warm and well fed for Christmas. Miss St. Jean said prospects for Christ- mas presents are not too bright. "Somehow or other I will find enough money to get each of my children some little thing.” she said. "But most of the money apme selling GENEVA (Reuters)--The World M15, st, Jean has ope,-amt um Health Organization announced farm since Father Beaurc',(:ird M0"fl8.V "highly S"l'C'355l"l 79' suits" in the use of an anti-rabies serum to save the lives of people severely bitten by rabid animals. notably wolves and dogs. W. H. 0. said this "strikingly successful" method of treatment mt-resente” the "first definite confirmation of an important ad- vance" since the French scien- tist, Louis Pasteur. discovered must go to paying out debts." anti-rabies vaccine 70 years ago. EIGHT SHIPS IN ICE Strike Northern LONDON. tCP) -A Finnish ice- brcaker cleared the way Monday for rescue of the 14-man crew of a tiny British motor vessel being flooded. The Judith Mary was one of eight ships stuck fast in the rap- idly-tightcning ice packs of the Winter's First Blizzards slowly crushed by ice in the Gulk of Finland. s The Icebreaker Sampo fought her way through a 300-yard stretch of pack ice during a 60-mile-an-hour blizzard to make a path for a pilot boat which removed the 14 men from the 363-ton Judith Mary. The men lladibeen stranded for three days. fighting to keep the Judith Mary from being coated with ice. The motor ship's bottom gulfs of Bothnia and Finland be- tween Finland and Sweden. At the same time the first sav- age bliszards of winter struck northern Europe. At least 10 per- sons died. At Karosjok, Norway. the tem- perature dropped to 40 below and a sick man was found frozen to death in the Lofoten archipelago. Britain sliivered in chill weather and rail and road services were plates bed been ripped open by the crippled by fog and ice. and calves are raised for meet. u Fsrlnne Product Company. this have the ice breaker come to Ium- of New York wrote to Mr. Ilse side. Bren you "It was indeed my pleasure is for some Bremnto steamship witbeqnekloyonsundeyentbetele-Corporation." ed to plior regarding the arrival of our Neught: Juhsnvllle.l'lcide.D1l5'3"0'3-3-NWIDOI1-IKAVIUDNIIIY sincere appreciation and that of the In appreciation of the errange- Brsmente Steamship Company for ments made by Mr. MncNeught your efforts on our behalf in secur- g. the Bi-nmsnte lteamship Comp!!! Ill ice breaker service in summer- and her engine room was Raging winds ripped several 5500.000 Fire In Montreal XIONTREAL. ICPI.-More than 200 shoppers and clerks scurried to safety Monday when a big dry- gorilla store in northeastern Mon- iCovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Nam. report by the International ing to assist refugees to get The three - nation commission. which comprises Canada. India and Poland, reported obstiuctlon by the Communists but the Cana- dian delegation's report went much farther. Under the Viet Nam l'ruce Agreement, signed at Geneva July 20, 1954, the country was split into north and south. Persons were given 360 days in which to move to the sector of their choi"o This period expired last Jr”-t. Some 893,000 persons have let tiin Coin- munist north for the t'tuth- less than 5.000 have moved .'""m south to north. KEPT UNDER COVI I The Canadian report said that in North Viet Nam Cominunist swi- diers were frequently stationed in the houses of Roman Catholics to prevent them from leaving their homes to get in touch with the commission's m o b l l e inspection teams. Persons wanting to contact the teams were frequently called away from their villages to meetings or- genlzed by local Communist au- thorities to coincide with arrival of the teams. In other cases, the Canadian re- port said, would-be evacuees were grouped in village churches and the Communists tried to keep the 9ni&'so" Canada Tells Re Refugees OTTAWA, (CP)-Canada Monday bated tactic! employed by the Communists in North Viet Nam to pre- vent refugees moving to non-Communist South Viet In a minority report attached to the fourth interim Truce Supervisory Commis- sion for Viet Nam. the Canadian delegation cited chap- ter atnd verse on how the Communists obstructed the commlssiorrs mobile inspection teams which were try- to South Viet Nam. ics were in progress- ”It was obvious in many cases that the local clergy had been in- timidated and in some cases sub- jected to lengthy terms of forced residence and imprisonment . . . 'iln at least a dozen instances, in- tending evacuees were physically molested by hostile crowds and sonwtimes forcibly dragged away before they had an opportunity of mnciin" the team." COULD STALL ELECTION 'it is considered here that failure of the Communists to live up to the Geneva agreement in respect to movement of refugees has caused increasd distrust in South Viet Nam. - This could prevent holding of elections for a reunified country, schrduied for July next year. External Affairs Minister Pear- son has said that Canada would be willing in principle to help su- pervise the elections-if there were guarantees that they would be free and fair. lg the elections are not held Canada may be involved indefinit- ely in Viet Nam helping to super- vise the truce. There are about 170 Canadians now doing this Job. Plan Delicate teams from entering the church grounds on the excuse that serv- Europe thousand logs free from their moorings in Oslo fiord and sent them swirling dangerously into main shipping lanes. Five people died of the intense cold in Denmark and " eden and four more were killed in road ac- cidents in Britain. FOG HALT5 SEIPI Eye Operation TORONTO tCPl - A delicate eye operation will be performed soon in an effort to save the eye of Constable John Earls. severely wounded by a shotgun blast as he was chasing n car theft sus- pect last week. doctors said Mon- day. Constable Earls was struck in the face by the full force of the blast. fired at point-blank range. Walter Swetloff, 29, was charg- ed with .t'empted murder and remanded to Dec. 8. ”"F7,.:sr.t -ms Kl6N”f Thames shipping was halted by choking yellow fog and plane serv- ices from London elrport were dis- rupted. Visibility dropped to 20 yards at times in the centre of London and Christmas shoppers were advised to double their normal travel time to make sure of getting home on schedule. In the Shetland islands off the coast of Scotland. most major roads were blocked by heavy snow- drifts. Motorists were warned not to take their cars into the centre of Stockholm, Sweden. where traffic was thrown into chaos by the heav- .ll-TRUSALEM iAP'-King Hus- sein of Jordan Monday dissolved parliament and called for new gen- ernl elections. His action. reported by Jordan radio, followed violent demonstrations in protest against; reports that Jordan might join the Western-backed Baghdad Middle East defence pact. SERIOUS FLOODS BEIRUT, Leganon tflcuterst - About 140 persons were found dead in the streets of Tripolis Monday and over 300 others are missing in North Legnnon in the worst floods in the country's history. Damage was estimated at almost 83.000300. PRINCE IIIOPI WINDSOR. I ll 51 l I n d (AP)- Prince Charles went shop ing in Windsor High streetgMon ay "to buy a secret Christmas present -for mummy." With Princess AME. lhl seven-year-old nee toured the Vllndeor shops eustedy of their nanny, nurse Helen Lightbody, and mode a number of purchases. all mm by ndwunociocmuslol LONDON tkeutersl - Britain welcomed Monday the decision of the Sudan Chamber of Deputies to proclaim the Country a "fully sov- WHAT You won -rim counts - in want we TORONTO tCP i-Temperatures ire.-ii caught fire. 1.," wow of the year. issued by the Toronto public D:iui.ige was estzlmated at two. There was "gm snowfall in some weather office: ooo llorothy Larouche, 19, was pans of Ge,-manyg but prance 1-at Min Max. taken to hospital suffering a ported normal Cloudy wemhgr and Night Day l)rokt-n wrist and pelvis after in mama MOW, sunhathed in thelbawson . .. 49h 49h lP.'lplllE from a second-storey park. 0, vim". Vancouver 12 36 wuulmt M least another 24 per- 047 Victoria 25 39h sons. resident in two aparti .ents . Ftrimnnlon .. .. ...22b and il menu of the building's USE MORE RLBBER Calgary .. ...16b 10b lIl)ll0l' storey, are homeless. ovrrmwn tcpt...consumpu.,,, of Regina .. ,. 27b sh Tlll'oi' firemen were slightly in- namml, synthgtlc and reclaim run. Winnipeg . 33b 13b l'lH'Wi bcr declined in October from the TOWN"? 19 19 The tire broke out in the base preceding month, as month - end Ottawa 4 9 mi-tit of the Maison Corbeil Dr gtocks increased. the bureau of MOHHWII .. . 9 H .p:lrtmci1l store. Before the three statistics said Monday. Combined Quebec 3b 12 ininrnt blaze was under control consumption dropped in H.657 tnns Fredericton .. 2 13 j ubnili three hours later. 100 flre- from 9.1052 tons while stocks rnsc Saint John .. .. 10 18 men and 75 pieces of equipment to 14.028 tons from 12.630 at the end Moncton .. - 15 were at work of October, 1954. Halifax .. ... 19 22 A ----A V V Charlottetown , , . . 10 13 Sydney . . 16 Ill NEWS IN BRIEF w - St. Johns . 24 8 ----W ms HALIFAX tCPi - The weather CALLS ELECTION WELCOME MOVE 0m”? 53H m0dt?P8ll lb 831011! northwesterly winds will continue 90 brlns cold. dry air to eastern Canada Tuesday. The fine. cold weather will dontinue and no change is indicated for Wednes- rreign republic". day. CM; g-rocxs gwgu, Regional forecasts: Northern Nova 'Scotia: clur DETROIT (AP!-The stockpile of unsold new cars in the us. now totals Automotive News reported Monday. This is the high- est polnt ever reached in dealer in- ventories for this time of veer. The new mark compares with 569,- 835 Nov. 1 and with 35,153 Dec. 1. 1954. The highest inventory ever mdd was 048.43 on June I, Flsll STOCK! SKID OTTAWA (CF: - Storage fish stocks Dec. 1 totalled 6.494.000 .unds. down 23 per cent from t yesr's correspondtn total of &: cod, 10.194130 s t11,sso,- l: haddock. 3.577. ooo il.01l.0Nl WW1 I 90W C10!-ldyintervslsg cold: light winds increasing during the morning to northwest 8). law- high at New Glasgow eight and so Prince Edward Island and New Brunswlck: Clear with a few cloudy intervals; cold; northwest winds as. Low-high at unflatte- town eight and I). Monctnss three and I5, Fredericton. Saint Jdu and Edsnundsfon five and )0. Campbellton seven and 13. Bay of Fundy: Northwest with i; a few clouds: visibility I miles: cold. I High tide today at Gberlottettwl at 1:44 am. and 2:52 p.m. Sum- lncrside tide eighteen minutes he- er then Charlottetown. sun rises et 1:0 l.I. ml e& halibut, s.sa1,om u.so1ooo eel- moe M8 at us p.sl.