....-,- -1 - .i-s- . 3 tiotio VACCINE RUSH Kltlistt-nine CQMP3Nl' we .w.-mg, Eli Vii ,, guy The first major shipment of commercial Salk polio vaccine to enter Canada from the United States arrives at Toronto for COMMERCIAL SALK VACCINE I trans-shipment to every major city in the country. Donna Tuttle of London. 0nt., Trans-Canada Air Lines stewardess, poses with the - 11iursday. Oct. By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Preso Bullnelo Editor QUEBEC (CP) Canadians have never had it so good. J. G. Crean of Toronto, president of the icanadian Chamber of Commerce, said today in an address to the cllallll.l9l'.S annual meeting. Caiiadtans. he stated. will earn more, spend more and save more this year than ever before and, with expanding population and intliistijt a bright future over the next ten decades is certainly in- dicaied .. ,til, Illts. however, would not -' i happrii atiltiiiialically-and if the future ua. to be improved and prospt-rirx cnliaiiced. time and et- fori must be given to sound think- ing anti ilyiiaiiiic action. Tllele is said Mr. Crean, I challeiitie ill prosperity, and be atitit-ti "it no lore:-t that prosperity can liriiig ('0 iii pia L” e n c y and lapath). that a great measure of lour prtIsl)0l'Ill is selling in world niairkt-is and that we can price 0lll'NDlll'N (Hit of them: or if we 1 ftlrtlrl tturiiiu tiie present battle of itloolouttw that our prosperity is ..l);i-vii on otir liindaniental spirut- iial fault and morals, then, as bus- i met) (0MPAi.2 My ..(,;.0, , ,bii.siiit-ss roiiiinunity and Cana- 'di;ius at large " Isot'iAi.isM I)AN(2ICR l Mi". Crean listed some problems lip -aid taco Canadians: its onrroarliments on individual lll)Pl'ly; the dautzer of inflation. or higher prices. the problems of ed- ucation and t-i-onoiiiic understand- ing. and tho niaintenaiti-e and Sil't'lli.!ill9IllllL' of Canada's world trzitiing positioii. ('anadiaii.s ltl(Ia)' were better pri-paired iliaii ever before to it 'v.":.'i ynitwt all Illt'll' problems. Mr. lview on his travels during the last vaccine, putt of a thrcc-ton ship- ment, enough for Gtluuoo l'r'it'('ln- ICP Plltlltll Illfltli. Asbestos industry Most Expand To Meet Demand By .VlARl'l-LN MOSS tkiiiatlian Press Staff Writer ASllES'l'()S, Que. i(IPi v Que hots asbestos producers Il'ttl('l- pate new and greater markets will 5-Vmhellc "y”alj .b”" labelled the result from the adaption of atomic 905! "100 Dl'0l1lblliV9" l0 P1'0diil'? ('tt('rL1y to industrial uses. Hi I" 13789 Qii3iililiE!- "ll:iut more uses for fire-resis- lit-sins will develop because is iial production will involve .K.'litl K:iiI l' l.tnd(-ll, vice-presi- Bflilizhton. flt'lll ill Canadian .lnltns-llIanviIle;L3li9 in Bfltlilloil 10 Asbestos. (,,,.,,,,,m Some mining operations are --t,.,i ,h,. ,,,d.,,.-try "PM not yurllcarried an underground. other: in inxthiltly to meet the expanded dz-gigantic open pits. M Black Lake. mniul i he added. ”(?anarla has 50 mil" "St "I I39”. (in! com- siifiitiviil prrircn asbestos ore re-iI”"'.V ll ilrillnini iliC lake that Ff'Fl'f'K' to last for the next half-iiltvrs the town its name to reach of I synthetic fibre taking the place of the natural product. One company, after years of extensive live Sit-ilians arrt-sit-ti The companies operate 11 mines (Ill the belt. providing employment, merit officials. The ship iias iii- for residents of such thriving com- uorl. under higher tt'mperatures.''.lmllniliel 8! Tlieliord Mines. Etisti iV"I'b91l05 ind RINK lain little infori ation Expect Break In o . Immigration Case MONTREAL tCPi An illi- inigration departnit-tit spoki-suinn said Tiiesday (icvclopiiit-nts iiiny come at any time in the case of while at- i tempting to enter Cunzida lll(”.'1lll)'. he inen, urrtisti-ti iii an litlllli raid Sunday on the lt'li('Ilt'li lireighter Juliette, are being inter- rogated by imniigratioii tit-pziit l bound from Marseillt-, Authorities have been able to oi)- froin the yittowaways, aged betwt-on 44 and . 47. Police believe the men in- itended to enter the L'iiitrd States ,l illegally after arriving here. . RCMP said they are ronsitlt-ring J the possibility tiic llli"ll are mem- bers of the Italy's Mzillui, a r-i-tm- 195 ,.,.,,,,,r,. and um. i, ,. m,.s,.rv,.'an ore deposit below the lnkgbpd. inal organization snuictimt-s rc- tiro cslimntc ” The open pit mines readily lend i"”d '9 5' "l-he hliiilli hand-" PRODUFTIVE AREA themselves to , utively in- in n rectangle 50 miles by 15 FXPPHMVE Nploltlilnn. which are then loaded on Montrcnl. seven mining rnmpan- ""- by large power in now prodtice 65 per cent of,”"”k' the tree world's asbestos and em- ploy tmm pm-,,,,,,g lplt to processing mills at ground Doinestir consumption lit onl ,l9V9I- five per cent of the 1,000,000 ahort,I-INDERIWOUND MINING tons of the ”magic mineral" pro-. A "'9'? 93507819 Ind "Pen- flil('Pfl aiintinlly in this eaIttern.”lV9 '"9”'0d- Hll9d bl0Ck C8ViI'l8. tow nsliips area. The remtainlnglii Used in Underltround mininiz. tonnagp .5 pxp()r(Qd' mmiy go ghe ?Elytnd.cul.r to the main haul- United Suites, the worlds largest lite level. I drift is cut otit sev- gonmm.-r 0! 335,530.. oral feet below the ore body and in I945. 467.000 short tons of theJKlVClI I cement roniiniz. Finger- greyish, silky fibre were extracted "nil brlnflilnl UPWBFG from tilt (mm this rich hen, Th. pi,-,1 year drift are then dug and the lower the area was mined commercially '0'-'"0Y' 0' ill! 0" body dynamited. ins, pmducum. wlg only so mm, After the rock debris lit hauled Also reflecting tho in dugtryufnw-v. he law of gravity i-kes growth 1. .1. tnvuimghg M g95'.lover. The ore falls through the fltltl.000 the companies will havol0PH' iiiiiteriintin from its own made at the end of 1957 for ex- Wlllllil Mid ll SCDOPM "Um "I! pamainn and modernization in a dim Ind Poured in haulage uni. gpvpypypgr pgrlod, Powerful crusher: bound the At present, ubutm, Qjllgd are into small chunks before "gray gnid" by the man who mine is carried to the surface in large It. has more than 3.000 min nng- bucket: for processing. ing from brake lining: to paint: "TlI0i'!'l I bi! dm!l'PM'O ti?- and lnsulntlnmt. It is also one of,tvreen mining osbeatoo and other the most widely used materials lnimlneriill. lll('lI as gold." My! Bill the building industry. lArcher. oniatnnt underground nu- DF:Vl:L()Pl-jl) 3? RESEARCH tpervisor of the Jeffrey Mine here Then cnmpanley vast researchmnd a former gold mining engin- pt-ngrnmn have rliscnvrred manyieer. uses for certain grades of the mln- "in gold mining they think in oral that had previously had no terms of thousands of ions." no commercial application and were can. "Here, we think in terms discarded. of hundred: of thousands of Meanwhile, there is little chonceltonn." Dulles Insists He Must Edit Stories From Talks To Press WAIRHCOTON (AP)--secretory oin and Franco over the lues lo- Ddlol inaldetl Tueotlly I e. "mg on g-t;m..i; min After that conference, aide: dio- tho forohl relottolo of cuuod with Dulles the pooothlliu States - to edit the the British and Fronch might ro- 9. I 32;.” Dynamitel rr-tics. hoglnnlng 100 miles east ofill Used in blast loose masses of shovelxl vand oarried up the side! of thel M1,. ,Civil Servants Make Own Path OTTAWA (CPI-Twice this your government groundkeepers have l rrsodded A broad lnirn in front of ythe Supreme Cniirt building. And i three times civil siwvants from a l large government building next I door have trod a rutted'shurtcut l across it. 1 The last time it was rcsndded a woman who couldn't wait for the job to he finished stepped on the fingers of a gardener laying and. Officials set tip thrcc giant sprinklers along the soddcd strip. The water was turned on just as quitting time approached. not the sprinkler: were ignored and the new trail was blu7ctl. Someone has suggt-strd an ele- 'pliant pit as a last resort. iMile-High ion... i lPlan Is Unveiled ' l CHICAGO iAPi -- Frank I.loitl ;Wrlght, R7-year old art-hitocl. un- lveailed a sketch of his propmml mile-high building at a press con- ' ference Tuesday. I The biilidlng in the slteirll looked i like a long, long sword thrust hilt- iflrst into the earth. Wright said 9 that was the principle. 4 The legend under the drawing noted the structure would be 628 ltoreys or 5,280 feet, plug o on foot aerial as a plnniirle. Wright contributed some verbal statistics: lilljlm people could work in It ctwntortably; 20.000 car parking space: would he provided around the base; it would cost about 8lN.iIltl,000. The building would have I rigid incl cute, with the bottorn reach- ing into bedrock underground. and an exterior of aluminum or stain- less noel. Asked if anybody had offered to finance construotlon. Wright said he didn't think any individual could swing it. No INIID 0'' gov- ernmental body has come forward with construction money thus fnr., WON'T STOP DIUG SALE UTTAWA ts. 1956Page 13; The Guardian ,' lCanadians Never Had It So Good Says C. of C. President g 1",... i,.,,,t,.,-Sp we Wm not be di5.I Icliool and it was from here he who died in Ontario a year ago and .(lll;ll”t;lllLl Stir responsibility to thelfomed "'9 R-C-A-K iilis scores of young friends here. the transfer are being handlul by The CIlallPlll.!P of socialism and. , attack on the street and died sud-' ttircan stutt-ti. and be based thislhave moved m Mme” village lreside. Mr. MacDonald is employ- year from st, .Iohn'5 Nfld, in the ed in the City and finds it about llaveaux does most of his trove; East, Wintistir, tint , in the Smith, 'lmpossible to get home during win- ling on foot. First Time In Ful Colour! Traditional, World Famous THE SCOTS Deoervodly famous the world over for one " production, the traditional Scotsman Calendar is once (gain available to Canadians through this newspaper. Printed with all tho old-country flair for eieftomenlilto clarity on high grade paper, this is more than a more recorder of time. The 1957 Scotsman Calendar is a faithful reproduction of'tfto bounty of Scotland . . . end for the first time, in full, true-to-life to out. See the pastoral ocono near the Loch Awe in Avgyll, the beauty of Eileen Donn in glorious colour, the violet lieu of tho Colnigorino, high- land cattle on the Culllin Hills, on well us view of Iolinorol Cooflo end Edinburgh and more. Time on tlilrtoon in oil, each one oultoblo for fronting. Certainly this is o your 'round Christmas gift, either for Media ony- wlion or for youroolf; Order now for delivery ouywlioro In Condo by Christmas. Ploooo ooeoonpony your odor with office, from your carrier, or by null. Mailed llireclly To Anywhere In Canada from Edinburgh For . Ortlor III In Tliiio For Ohrlohoo Iollvory Tliroogt Order at our office, from your carrier boy, or by mail. Encfooo 81.00 for oocli calendar dogma, : Uoo1'IlO0'UPON'!o0rIerbyHII I Ploooo soul no . . . . .. cooler at I , : Il.IIoopy. l:nclooodloI..... . : nan .......... O 19 m E All . . . . . . . . . . . . .............., : fillet ii I I '.' NORTH LAKE mill. "' The following il the NBC! I! the North Lake School (C Auguat and September. , Grade IX. 1. Linda Rose: 1. He!- ien Somers. Grade VIII. 1. Hen Dlngwell. Kemp, 3. Grade Vll. l. Elni Russell Bailey. Grade V. 1. Norma Jean Bennett. 2. Edward Bailey. Grade lV.l . James McDonald. 2. Gary Young. ' , (trade ill. 1. Donald Fraser and Buddy Fraser lequuli, 2. Howard Mallard, 3 John McDonald. Grade ll. lilernadette McDon- ald: 2 Roger Conway, 3. Berna- dette Oickle Grade I. No Tests. Joan Murphy. Teacher. i.rrn.s SANDS The funeral of Mr. Norman C. Stewart. Hill! Bank. f.le Sands United Church unusua- 't ttended. Victoria in the West, and Akiaiik very ugely . The In the north. . Creon said one current problem is the growth of govern- ment and the dangers of the ”slip- P811! oe" to socialism. "As a chamber we believe lll(-ll the basic aim of public policy Illould be the maintenance d per- Ional freedom: that the lndlvitltliil should be able to spend his dollar; how. where and when he likes." On the monetary and fiscal sit- uation, he said: "With increases in produi-non and employment there has also been an increase in prices. The gross national product, the ialue 01 Ill goods and services pro- duced. now is running at iusl under a year” a rate about higher than a year ago.” were turned away hum a crowded high esteem in which he was held. charge of the Iervice at the grave. lntenunent was in Little Cemetery. ' fun: and two children, Pauline and Lloyd. Carleton Siding. former trten the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Cheater MacLesn tcr months. when the lil!'I)0I' dis- INC! is very much isolated. The iiiaclionalds have taken an apart- ment in the spacious Stanley Brown estate, once the l-I.H. Cox proper- y. Hrs Clifford McGurk left last Friday for Hamilton. Ontario. to- long llllh her three children to join I her liushand. who went to that city tmmmrrjr sortie iteek ago. Mr. McGurk was eniployed with R.T. Holman, Char- lottctottn store, for a short time y before going to Ontario. This Vicinity was shocked on Sat- Miss Francis Sinnott. of the in- "TCIIY to learn of the very sudden come tax office spent the weekend P3-"ill! of Mr. Garth McEwen. fol-l at her home in Bristol. WWI"! h.heart attack at his home work has been received from in the city. Born in this vicinity Reginald oiarien. of the R.C.A. :0" M M" End M” Claud MN-"i F. now stationed in Vancouver Eweni he aneiided lite Vill3IZElB.C that the remains of his wife day weekend. Sands over the weekend. Mr. Callum to Grand Master of cere- monies. The blower has been at work Besides his was buried there will be transler- here in the district threshing the wife and tour 1-f)i'urr! vie leausged to this vicinity for re-burial in his parents to mourn his passing. i the family plot. Arrangements for l with it. of school days join in E-xtehdingj the t'harlottetown funeral home sincere sympathy in lhgn-I an. land the funeral parlors in Ontario We learn with regret at tbeiwh” "”"d"Cled me funeral" Mr" sudden passing of Mr, John H. O'Brien was the former Stella Car- Jay of Fort Augustus. on Friday ter. and passed away about a year while in the city. Mr Jay was re- "3" al 8" early aget rhe tm-Ieeichlh Ported to be on his way to see a dre" 18" to mom." a.re.bemg cap doctor where he suffered a heart ed (W by ME -Onnens parents" ' i Mr. James Dingwell was a bus- iness visitor to the city last week for a couple of days. ague has been busy digging pumps and High Bank recently. He is well diggers of Montague. This job. Messrs Frank and Bob Cook and sons. Wood Islands North. have hauled many loads of slabs to Lit- tie Sands lately for tire wood. Farmers are glad to get this fuel. Dust to the heavy snow fall last winter farmers were not able to get their usual supply of firewood. Mrs. Sadie Boimell. accompanied denly. This vicinity extends its sin- cere sympathy M M5 ITIPIIVP-"r l Mr, Charlie Daveaux, who has Mr. and Mrs. James McaDon- spam many wars M, the htghway aid, St. Peter's Harbour district, 35 3 mender and lately agent for l0 men's wears is on the go again. His well along in life now, Mr. AZ OF EDINBURGH MA 7 CALE DA who pooud away in the P121. lioopltal on October 1. was held from the Lit day. October 1. The funeral was string of can and the many who diurch bore ollent tribute to tho ' Monybrangemen came from near and for to pay tribute to one of their members. Rev. L.S.' Wool- frey conducted the service in the church and the Orangetnen took Sands Mr. and Mrs. Avalah Mecca!- visited do in Little Sands over and son Murdock of Winsloe. visit-. ed relatives and friends in Little send: over the Thanksgiving boll- Mr. Edwin MacKenzle spent a few days at his home in Little Mr. Peter 0. Richards of Dredge g No. 12, was at his home in Littlei Sand: over the holiday weekend. , A.A. Maccallum. Carleton! siding, visited former friends int Little Sands on Thursday. on his, return from on 0raogemen'o meet-i tug at Murray River. Mr. Mac- grain and other farmers are ex- pecting to thrash their grain soon Mr. Johnny Macxenzie of Mont- in several places in Little Sands working for MacLeod and Green. modern equipment does a quick by Miss Sarah Bolts of he Proph- clal lndrmary visited trhndl in Ememumm on Saturday 3130!: . mid av tiiitrlotaetowir H V Mr. and Mn. Mack. MacPher- on. Wood lolnnds East. visited at the home of Mr. and Mn. John . Abney, tor a few days. l 1 Poter Sands. - - Stewart. Ifrlted homo nun Alberto. to lltend the of father, Mr. Norman C. Stewart. Hill! Bank. I pxm( VJ)- . wi loot-loch Alto. Auyl THIS! rm nw uiouriis I've , Carnation Evaporated Milk in . results on Carnation form of milk. No other tlon cookery can be. gether my most special recipes. I had on important reason -because now we're putting those recipes on beta! They're not the fancy. complicated. try-them-just-once kind. but recipes you'll use over and over again. some are brand-new - all give you I quicker, easier, better way to make dloheo your family will love. The recipes all call for Carnation Milk of course. They depend for their speed and smoothness and Ipeciai qualities not found in any other Carnations special blending qualities. Do get I few i cans of Carnation - nee how clay and delicious Carna- been buoy getting to- mllk hu double-richness pliu WHAT IICIPIS will you and on Carnation labels? Well . . . there . are soups and sauces and main- couroe dishes-denertl. plel. I ti-outings. candles. But of course. of oubioct and to poyrnoiit. Order at our .00 I II C W eoclucoeooopooeloooooi Joovnuta ........................t.' l Mus; opgirttscstvrp at . oiitgics 27th is it wasn't possible to put all my fnvorlteo there. So . . . let me give you one of my newest. I recipe for a moat wonderful whipped salad. You'll love it as I refresh- ing deuert. or as o delightful main-couroe. There's no need for expensive cream in special reci- pes like this. Jun hoe Carnation -tho milk that whim. NOVIADAYS we all oeem to servo chicken more often than we tiled to. So I'd be like to give you Q. my special cream ....:. sauce tot-chickt-n -opecfal becouoe it's mode with better-blending Carnation Evapo- rated Milk. oo it's always lump- froo and smooth-flowing. Easier to make, too, because Carnation in double-rich. when you make cream some with Cor-notion. you ' need only hall on much hour and - have only hut so these ingredients to much of 01!