5.5.. once. as uuvu-um ton sin. ' lhlur. Frank Wllkn i Illlch clinch II sumimnide. tilnnusue and Alberta Authorized In Second Class full by Ina Pan Ollhn g , Department. 0hawI By t.Iu-mo cltrunteiuixu auuimeruur ulu.uIi pea II mun Els-when in P L. I. 89.00 Jlhe: Pmvlnenn Ir U S 111.00 per umiun "The strongest memory II wens Illl the weakest Ink." ,-.1:-LTIKITAVY:-V.IA.'tilTAlVlilf' infuse Situation Stiii Grave It would appear that while the I)l'Cakt.IOWl'l in power services has created a serious emergency in Prince County. the situation is still worse in parts of Nova Scotia where floodim: rivers have forced niore than stittpcrsoiis from their homes, where a dozen major bridges have been washed out or damaged and where highways and rail lines liiiw hecn cut in every direction. South eastern New Brunswick has also felt the effect of the extraordinary iveather conditions. The total loss will run into several millions of tini- lars. At the time of writing no deaths-ihad been reported but this appears to be the only redeeming fcatuifgj)of' the situation in areas vrherei-;the havoc is most severe. Every effort will, no doubt; be made to give assistance to these com- munities.-Itmay be weeks before the full damage is repaired and there is always the possibility of g another storm interfering with thr- woivlcu One serious aspect of the su- uatiion in this Province and no doubt in the other affected areas, is the disruption caused in rural areas where electrical power is used in dairying activities. Even water is unobtainable in many farm estab- lishments when the power is off, as , 'i the. oldtime hand pumps have long beeh out of service. Perhaps the present unfortunate experience will be serviceable in the long run, in underlining the need of maintaining emergency equipment of some kind in conjunction with rural electrifi- cation. Parliament Meets Matters of more than unusual interest and importance will con- front our members of Parliament in the session which opens today at Ottawa. Dominion-Provincial fiscal problems will no doubt loom large on the agenda. The conference call- ed ii few months ago to discuss this matter came to no definite under- staliding. and the Prime Minister has put forward new proposals to the Provincial Premiers which have not yet been divulged. Another great problem concerns the surplus in agi-icultui'al products, particular- ly wlicat; but equally important to this section of Canada is the potato marketing situation, and the urgent need for revision of our tariff pol- i icy with the United States in this respect. 'l”bis'year a, limit. of ten days has been set for the debate on the Draft Address. By this innovation It is hoped to curtail the time wast- ing that has gone on at every ses- sion. to the detriment of serious business. leaving at the end a mass of unfinished chores which go to swell the agenda for the next ses- sion. The Ottawa Journal complains that the Government has been nee,- ligeiit in the past. in not announ- cing its legislative program in the Thronc Speech zind placing it he- forc the House in order and on time. As an example the Journal cites the Senate Finance Commit- tee, which reports on the :ountry's fiscal position. and which last year wzp not set up until it wasitoirlaie to do its work properly. -'0ttawn dispatches indicate that g one suhjt-ct that is sure to t'(lnlf' up p 'l Ion rlrhale is the sharp fall in the ' l immigration rate, 304:. fewer immi- grIntii having come in 1955 than had been expected. This. certainly. is it matter for parliamentary at- te tion. and It is to be hoped that ih will result in a strengthening of th Government's entire immigra- lo policy; for there is no doubt g t something has gone wrong with It. t in, of course, true that British- I and Bu-opeans have less reason - migrating to this country than . had in the immediate post- , period, now that economic con- in their own countries have - V for the better. o mat, however, is not the vuIOAsJ story. ,. Just where the fault lips is not easy to ascertain. Persistent re- ports of arbitrary ' treatment aci corded immigrants who have been ordered deported for one reason or another are not calculated to win friends for Canada, in those coun- tries which might be expected to contribute to. our population in- crease. In many instances, appar- ently, those oidered deported are not even told why they are being sent out of the country; and IP' peals against the ruling are heard privately by selected itnmilritmn officials. It may be that in each in- stance the deportation order is Valid and justified; but in a free country, where even the most hardened crim- mat is given the right of defence in open court, it is incredible that this- right should be denied any landed immiumnt. Government by immig- rntinii offit-ials is not a democratic pi'iu-tire, whatever else it might be. It is IlUCOSSal'y not onlythat jus- tice be done in each- and every case but lii;tl no appearance of injustice hp ptililllillilfi. It is reported now that steps are lining considered to that end. The sotmrr they are put in operation,' the l)t'llt'l' Not The Solution In it speech before the annual meeting of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, Mr. W. V. M. Ash, Chairman of the Canadian High- way Safety Conference, made a couple of observalifions which de- serve widespread distribution. One was to the effect that bigger and better highways do not necessarily mean a greater, measure of high- way safety. although this sugges- tion hasbeen made by traffic ex- perts from time to time. On the contrary, according to figures cited by Mr. Ash, sutper-highways have more than their share of fatal acci- dents. On the Pennsylvania Turn- pike, to mention one instance, the deat-h rate in 1953 for a given num- ber of vehicle miles was 7.5, while the rate on ordinary highways was 5.1. Again, the ratio for the New Jersey Turnpike in 1952 was 6.1. compared with an over-all rate of 4.7. In 1953. however, this turnpike rate fell to 4.1, the Itate average for all highways. opinion, which is substantial-ted by New Jersey authorities, was brought about by stricter lbw en- forcement, which calls for one man on highway patrol duty 24 hours I day for every nine miles of road. All of which leads Mr. Ash to the conclusion thaf vigorous enforce- ment is the best single solution of the problem. Perhaps it is. Cer- tainly, it is clear that, without im- provement in drivers' approach to safety.-either voluntary or en- forced-the finest roads that en- gineers can build will not reduce significantly the mostfrightful car- nage of our times. EDITORAL NOTES The dairy industry is of prime importance to this Province and there will be keen interest taken in the annual meeting of the Dairy Farmers of Canada which is to take place in Saint John, January 17 to 20. This will be the first time the organization has held I meeting in the Maritimes and I large Marl- timc representation is anticipated 0 0' O In welcoming Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia to Egypt, Premier Nas- ser said: "True and lasting peace is attainable only when every coun- try, big or small, is given the right to lead its own life without outside interference". Now, if he and other Arab leaders would practice what 110 Preaches. and if the Israelis would follow the same laudable doctrine, everything would be nice and pcziccablc in the Middle East. The account of the expenses in the 1955 British general elec- tion compares very fnvorubly with the one for the previous election in 1951. Among the leading Tories only the election of Mr. Butler cost more in 1955 than 1951-i841 agIlnIt E797. He was returned with I re duced majority. Sir Winston Churchill's campaign cost E700 against 5798 in 1951; Sir Anthony Eden's cost 2842 against I948. The election costs of both Earl Attloo and Mr. Morrlnn IWIM, alt dnl tieally-from S618 to I498 Ind tom 1714 to E551 respectively. This improvement. in bits Ashls V" mi '7” Eeli EVERYWHERE Our New Senators By ll. L. Jones I A Canadian Pres. Ollawa The 13 new members of the SeuIte have listed their lNl””C3I- Ifflllltions for the Parlianicntary : Guide. considered the oifical hund- book of Parliament. A breakdown of the list shows nine Liberals. one independent Liberal. one Progressive Conscr- vntive. one independent and one with no political affiliation. Prime Minister St. Laurent. in making the appointments last July -first in'more than two years- stressed that the new senators were being sent to the upper cham- ber Is Canadians. not as adher- ent: of the Liberal party. At that time the majority of the 13 WII known to have Liberal lean- ings or past or present ties with tliIt party. And one of the Ippointees, Senator John T. Hack- ett. 71, of Montreal. was known to be I Progressive Conservative, having represented the party in the Commons. But it wIs I matter of conjecture until now as to how the others would llst themselves politically. ANSWER QUESTIONNAIRE ln replies to I questionnaire cir- culated by the Guide. Senator I-Iartland dc Montarville Molson, 48-yeIr-old president of Molson's Brewery Ltd.. Montreal. listed himself as an independent. Senator Donald Cameron. 52. University of Alberta professor and director of the Banff school of fine arts. said he is an Liberal. Senator Calixlc F. Szivoir. 1'-0. of Moncton, N.B.. listed his political affiliation simply as ”nil." Senator Hackctt. of course. put himself down as a Progressive Conservative. TO BE SWORN IN The other nine replied that they are Liberals. They are Senators C.G. Power. wartime air minister and dent of the Commons until his Senate appointuu,-ht; Jean-Francois Pou- liot. long-time Commons member for Tetniscouata: David (troll. former llmise member for Toronto - Spadina; Harold Connolly. i'nrnici- premier of Nova Scotia; Fred A. McGi'I nd. Fredericton. former Jot Age In Travel (St. Ciltherincs Standard) A succession of large orders by United States airlines in the jet tnnsport field given perspective to the swift rise in jet develop- ment. says The New York Times. Wlinf has happened in that American aircraft industry has become the world centre for jet transport production. It was only ' I short time ago that we were genuinely worried by our apparent bIckwIrdness in this field. Most of the major airlines have now signed orders for delivery of the great Douglas and Boeing airliners, which will rarry more than 100 passengers and cleave Lhe Iiriuves at speeds in excess of 550 miles In hour. The Boeing bu completed many test runs. Ind its performance outraces the imagination These gigantic gul- Icona of the sky cost as much I: I fair-slzcd ocean liner cost not many decades ago. For the two jet models alone. not count- ing airliner orders of the con- ventional typc. contracts are mountlng toward the hillinn-doI- lIr mark. Two yi-ars ago the British Com- et was the coming sensation. But. it ran Into the kind of difficulty that Iny revolutionary I nt- CII device must overcome. It is true flint the British experts pion- eercd the wny. and we benefited from their probing into I new and exciting world of power tnnd Ipeod. Now they are fIr beyond the plonoerln stage. In witness the Iiiociumf Ippllutton of the jet to the turbo-propeller type of In the Vlckers Vla- eoont. Americui orders for the Vlscount Ire slndily mounting Ind In fact this Ixccllent perfor- lior II Ilnody Icon on our Ilr- indcpcvid-.-nf ' the i New Brunswick health minister; ' Thomas D'Arcy LccuIrd, Toronto. president of Canadian Permanent Trust (12).; Donald Smith, Liver- pool. N.S.. I dentist and former MP; William M. Wall, Winnipeg. first Canadian of UrIlnlIn descent to enter the Senate! and Mrs. Florence Elsie Inman. Montague, P.E.l. ' Mrs. lnman. In official of the National Women's Libel-II Federa- tion, joins five other women the upper chamber. The new Ippolntees will bu sworn in and seated It the start. of the new session opening Jan. 10. Senator Croll. who becomes the first Canadian of Jewish origin to enter the Seiute, will take the oath on I Jewish bible. . Entry of the new members brings the standing in the 101-sent Senate to K) Liberals. eight Pro- gressive Conservatlvu. one inde- pendent Liberal. one lndopendnt and one with no designation. This still leaves 11 vIcIncloI. Antarctic It's all but impossible to tell the ladies from the gentlemen Imong the little natives of the cold, white and lonely land It the bottom of lhe world. Tliis is one of the blis of in- felligence gathered from a risltl with a small party from the ice- brcaker Glacier to I huge penguin rookery near the base of Mount Bird on Ross islInd. off the Ano- arctic continent. The party from the lead xlilp of the U.S. Antarctic expedition is believed to be the first to visit the rookery since I British expe- dition in 1917. This giant mnternily ward is es- timnted to have some 50.000 Idelfe pengulnl. Adelies Ire the small model, averaging Ibout I8 inches in height. The larger emper pen izuin. which stands about 40 inches. is more difficult to find. LIKE MECHANICAL TOYS On the way across the buy ice to the mountain, we passed sev- eral of the walking dinner jacket! out looking for food. With the while breasts. black bIckI and waddllng ualk, they look more like mechani- cal toys than birds. They move In if they had been wound up. The penguin in socllble only up i to I point. While I penguin may be I curious ham. and while it may waddle to within I few feet of a human and show off. it does not like to be touched by slrangerl. Try to touch it and it will squawk like a wounded chicken Ind belt you with I flipper or nip you with a sharp beak. i The way to I penguins heart is paved with pebbles. Malcolm Davis. curator of birds at the National Zoological Park In Wash- ington and mother member of the party visiting Mount Bird. glvu flirts picture of I penguin court- s lp: One penguin circles another. trumpeting and holding its fllppoi-I outstretched. The circling penguin then offer: the other some peb- bles. If they Ire Icceptettlheii the penguins are Iogally n-led. The Age Old Story . For when we won nl IICIIIIU strength, In in time CIHI II for the nails. iuouion Ium-II Moon in. suit. ten-city M. imm- cIuIed' oomphin cltyhll. lllnbununggmndl hanlncludod the round I cliiual.IIuboolIIdthopuulo t-.1 WINTER SPLENDOB I This I dIy to be compared with llonI If one cmulde . the yellow-inlnod round-faced sun; or with III eagle for its Icy glue; i 01' with I III: for Iometblng tense Ind proud (And perhIpa the Intlorod thickets enter In). If men were clioun. l'd choose Chu-lcmngne For wliIt wna Northn-I in him. lnughty, clen; Horn: would find tliclr cold IIII proper echoes: MIgnificem is perhaps not quite the word - But I up come no IQINI. lunch I day Tower: Ibove III follows, passing by with cbaruou. Irmlnu, pouiious. Ind with mean. ; , -uiupiatit Cutaworth Penguin Rookery . By PIul Poly! - win to U. 3. AiiAII-we lnodlhou But we still don't know whether in the male or fornIlI that Inp- plied the dowry. Even the experts cII't. decide. SLIDIZ ON DTOMACHS When, wIlking, penguins holo- their flipper: out for bIIInce. They aim ti-Ivcl on their stomachs propelling themselves by dig : their tou into the ice and pus 3. They look II it they are ilelgb riding without Ilelgha. The rookery on Mount Bird stretches across I red-black ridge of volcIn-ic uh, with penguins standing only I foot or two Iput. As WI picked our wIy among them. bird: becune protective. howlln Ind nipping It our Ion. In In lncubItloii period of Ibout 40 dIyI, the puent penguins Il- tennte sitting on the eggs. The penguin clrlck mutui-es In three or four months. lie then goes to sea for two years, following the shrimp north. Penguin: lkequciitly ti-Ivol beyond the Antarctic circle. which mean: I trip of more than N0 miles. After two years they mun to mate and hatch their eggs in lg: rookery In which they were I'll. CIVIC EXPENSE HORSHAM, llnglIiid- (CP) - Munlblpal Iutboi-mu of tblI Sussex town paid householder Willlnrn Rodlot II 8d. The Index- celllng of his munlclpIllyown- ed house fell in. braking 14 eggs. WALL DECORATION! I-'rIncli scenic wIllpIperI. with I numbered chart to Insure hang- ing in correct order. boouno pop IlIll' about IG. m i sums nu: munuio rnoczss . Iva-y once in I while you read Iboul. I bIby who in born with I While I youuastei-'3 teeth gel. don: Ire visible It birth. the crown of his baby teeth are fully formed It this time. In fact, they nve month: before the child is born. WWII INCISOIB .v (finally, the first teetlito Ip- , 90!? are the two lower central In-, dlon which come in between the months the upper cent:-Il lnclsorl Ipponr. Tliue Ii-esfollowod by the two uppg alongside the upper central incisors. Most children have all six of then teeth by the age of one year, although the time the teeth come In may vary greatly. The first four molars, or grind- ing teeth, appear between 11 am 13 nlollfflh. . Your lot. will get his four cuspid tcctli around 19 to 21 months. The cusplds Ire the sharp- pointed teeth It the corners of his mouth. Some persons refer to the upper eusplds as eye teeth and the hw- ers as stomach teeth. ,Tlic Cllspifls come in between the lateral ill- cisorn and the first molars. The four second molars, or grind. ing teeth usually ,r between the age of 22 months and two and I half years. These teeth. farthest buck the month, are the last to come in. . Occulonally. the upper or low- or central or lateral incisor teeth mly come in crooked. In" most cases. they will straighten by them- selves II the baby grows older. However. in baby may inherit crooked teeth or I had bite. This my man he will need special treatment It I later time. Teething seldom makes I baby sick. Ilthougli he may fret for I My or two because his gums are lore. Qumsriuu AND ANSWER ,D. V. M.: Both my parents are Illarglc. Does this mean that I will hnva aegleu also" Answer: Chlldiien who have two Illerglc parents are much more likely to hlvc In Illergy than those who do not. or have only one allerg- ic parent. There II also I greater tendency for the allergy to appear It In elrllor age. I Man On Wagon (Montreal Guette) A man we know II considering acting on his wife'I urglngs to go on the wIgon for the coming you-. but to II: liIsn't been able to get her to Igree to his sug- gutlon II to I suitable reward. I-Io clIimI he's been just. waiting for I leap year to advance it. be- uuu tliIt will mean In Id- Iitloml few billion for him. Ills propoultlon is that on New !IIr'I Day. if he II still on the wngon. IIII pIy him one cent. doubling the pIyment each day be rennin: on it for the 366 days of the yen. At first suggestion lured to the idea. but , ' " . neged when I mathe- ” " minded friend started to work out the progwsslon in- volved. It was reIsonIbIe up to the kntli day or so. then started to skyrocket. When she found that on -Illluury 31. in addition to the already paid over. she'd t 901,258.24. and keep t ' ery day for the balance of the liIve to give her husband S10.- bogln forming In the laws about- Ile of six Ind eight months. some- . where between pawn Ind nine , r lateral ineisou. directly ' um. Dij. Bowdeii has now. founditiinl "if I 10w of I irlutleunufnnoo it'll” ..”23l”"l;.'i."”;t””.....'”i.i'. - . .0! ,'I bott'er.. In one tell. I 1-uni which , lb wltid ikkII took onlysl second; wlthcbopluw .- lc coating. -London Observer. . We like that story of Dr. Arthur - Kore of Markham, Out. who took, to his bicycle to nuke ldsprno leuionnl rounds when danlnd, I .some time-this is most important. renewal of his licence to di-Ivggi car. Dr. l-lore is only ll, Ind I youus than with so much initia- tive should do well. e-OIIIWI Journal. ' Those tragic Ind dreadful house fires. in which so often smuu and helpless children are the vlcttmly are I painfully famillu item In the picture of the CIpIdlIn Wintor. There is no euy Iolution to, tho problem--and nothing to glvo -Io much assurance Igainst disaatcr igsletemul vigilance.-Ottawa Jour- a. A return to uni; II I put 0'-' , the day-to-day masculine attire, If least in Winter time. is something &P to which Culgarians might well give .-ittention. A wrrespondent notes that spats are conductive to both comfort and security. In I cold Winter such an the one we Ire caucus. at E T I "mt" which seems likely to continue for -eiitabllahed fuel! min aircraft -flu first importueo. -Iroekvflla R 'nlIB." ; ' " If North Inn: wnlr to gr A 10-gallon hat is the trIdlt.lonIl- WW '1" MMl0I.0f'ehuIlnx. mark of the Calgarian. or some - ' C.-tl;v:iriuns.But on I sub-zero Syd why” 5” . morning the 10-gallon but, which I”! " . -t . "I011 :4 gives a romantic Western look to 3'" PWPIOOI f-IIONOICIIIMQ. :4 do Iii: nearer on special occasions, IMY -PING loinnaldollhgl Ill! does nothing for the man. parilcul- (""1119 nllthlbo Int! byihalr n- urly for his ears. ivlilch will; of 'v-"mu" ' H3" .ald3C, I' , course, freeze. -Calgary I-Iernld. '"m'-'9 ,5, ” O -u 3-. E i i 2 We are sure that Dr. Smlrlo LII- son, the chief coroner of Toronto, has the best motives in Idvlsuig eicryone over fifty to avoid shov- elliiig snow. Exertion may bring on . a heart attack. he says. and of course he is right. But there in more than one way of dying, and ue wonder if being put on an sick. list, so to speak. at fifty. may do as much harm as good? Does it not suggest that we should :odtlle ourselves more than is good for us? Nobody suggests that men about give up golf at fifty. or give u hunting or sailing or curling, at tlitiuqh, these pursuits lnvolvfo .I.. good deal of exertion from time to - time. It would be ridiculous tony - that I man should Ibllldog the ,9'"'' sports of a lifetime It fifty. are:-. borough Examiner. A: I political IIIIII, Ipplnjoek may.liave cost M. Manda-Proud votes in the French ” ', deco-,, ion. The Norman peasants gIvo' I rather rough reception during the campaign to the man who wants to prosecute bootleggei-I of cIlvI- dos. Elsewhere in France. the idol T of reducing the vineyard acrelgo was uupopula . M. Mendeu-Franco promised no interference with the legal limit of 10.5 quarts of home- made pure Ileohol Iyeur. He P0Illt- , ,. , I I 1 . ed ouf..uiat if France produced ' Pg. more food and less wine It could" -Ill..CIpO Bntonen whenever lllq live Ihnre II this lIlIId'I lilltnry,--'-' Ind Ire nelgliboi-I If no Imchr. T” -Sydney Put-Record. ' 5 sell more to West Germuiy. But his diences were no twholly rIu- . . sured. Perhaps he should have (JLIAN1 - : - come out with I program for pop-, ,, ,. wan. . - ularlzlng apple Ind grape II well" as milk. --Exchange. Pli0FESSt0'Nkl ctiiiltsll 5- BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS. in.- -w e-. year. including February 29. she quit. At Int report her ” I d wasn't going on the wagon either. TALK NOT CHEAP HULL, EnglInd (CPI -The tele- phone committee of this town an- nounced I 23-per-cent increase in chllfll. on of the few public IyIfemI not run by the post of- lies, the Hull telephone service will still be cheaper than else- where in Brluln. Refrigeration Ilepuii-I To All intu- APPLIANCES Inns I sinnviou MOTORS - lowindlng Ind Rellllll ELECTRICAL llopaln Paliiiiir Electric A. Plcluird 4'. Q. .. Caterpillar Diesel Electric Sots,Avoi-Iuble 1-60 KW Iocilllc SOB 2.-so xv: noun. an nu. ma Ooullu amt. son Machinery ev- . . , W Efi.'l.?.2l'...f'..""”". u- : ..i- 33 :.”"”"”&..?t.'.. .. ,.; 1 ii. A. Farmer. q.c. mu. J..A.&7IIIII.3- "'15 Bunkofcunuuronlldg. Jllml... Z ..'.Et'l"""'.. .”g-i-T :' ..:-.-..-.-.-.2-.. 7 Allison M. Glllh. LLB. I-Inlclllllollllt. XUC m....m.....m............ A. Walthen Goudot, LLB. PlilllIpIIiltlg. iuonnun. o.'..,,...., Palm llllhll ,&pg,' .. nunuhlivauuuuu.--' I", I,.I.l.; M-h-o- we 4- CHIROPRACTOI. - ; l'lI1giglht2IbolTroot BF-. W-:91 ' .,i..T , an Initial. , II .. I. A. Wm - , Currlollltu. DIIIOIIO on-5 ' Oliu. B. McQuI9II. l.A.' out 5 '"””"”'”"”'l ”"'-'5'-' I.-:'ao'f'3'.I.i. I MacPhee bTrIlnoI' Ii I55 Queen at , , X, - CHARTERED OUNTANT3. cmuniu. N in-L” Ind mu. noun-oooII!'iW i ,. IICIIIICIIDI-gQ,itU&It - rumour-an . ' "Luann, x-.3 fi-rlomihvl angina-I . III!!! M ' mm-2.1! l - - ' cimri-niiun Aooooirrturr Provincial Bnnk Diiflnl ” ' uonciou.,I.I. I . roii voiiii iiisti , oonuuun ' I - I , . .- g ' -7 ',; 3;! X4.-. - it iiviinitiitim. no; in. Omupmnudnu&l'&.&ddII&.'i' mi-ance Underwrltu'I.tI.It.yo:c,IpIII:l- iv .l , . !. ,2, - us... a . ' . .7. V 3 X, . pl