A group of students will grad- LEFT. SEATED Glennnla Ford. um lrnni Uiiion Commercial Col- 1.-gi-. on Friday, December 21. at Lorna MacPhail. Argyle Shore tho annual Christmas closing. Event Of The Day is When Planes Arrive And Take Oil By DAVE itIclNTOSH tzinadian Press Staff Writer IHU SUWEIR. Egypt (CP- ncarly two weeks of "C" 1..-.iiins4t(?” is for cans-Cana- Hi..ii troops based in this sand- t...il began getting fresh food. iilic Canadians. among other lliillils. are looking after the feed- ing of the United Nations Emer- ;.'l'II('y Force. All get the same ra- IPUIIS except the Indians. who need silch things as rice and curry. Capt. Lloyd Leonard of Glace Bay. N.S.. and Camp Borden. illIl.. was supervising unloading of tattoos from an Egyptian army ll'li('is. The supplies are obtained imoiigh the Egyptians who must iiiiiiort a lot of their food. MK AND BOIL lie said nothing can be served mi. Vegetables must be soaked Ill .1 chlorine solution and then lliiiltifl. Fruits with skins, like ba- ll.ilidS Zllld oranges. can be eaten ...,” after being thoroughly ; -I ' i. vl'li-(s(. Iiiilpli McNeil of Saskat- niiti mid John E. Kelly of HBIIIIX ...,-p lugging crates of eggs. ba- iiiiiiu.-. oranges. Cabhnllcsi P035- oiiiiiiis and potatoes from the truck mm the warehouse. kit-Noll said hc'd rather be back in Crete llis RCAF plane was stalled there for four days. -up had a movie every night and too on Saturday and Sunday. lIf' tutti ”I's'e lived on a navy ship illlll L'-'tl Ilttodnmeals. . (Alli. Leonard said meat will be ii pi-iihleiii. , iiniird meat from Arllenillih Ind Australia and possibly some frozen moat. Dl'ST EVERYWHERE The Canadian limestone bar- racks are separated by patches of unit and dust is over everything. It rains here infrequently. Even If I there was enough water to damp down the sand. the wind nni.V blows in more immediately from the surrounding desert. The Canndlsns can't leave camp and even if they could there is no place nearby 10 80 i0- Ti"-V quickly garner lnfonnation from travellers from Cairo. piannini their first leaves. A few Canadians are stationed at UN headquarters in Cairo and mine of them have had I chlnci to get away for an hour or two to in the pyramids of Giza and the Iphinx. ('AMF.I. COWBOYS lit Giza they find Egyptian camel drivers loml experienced with tourists. The camela scuttle by on their soft pads and the driv- ers yell "hi ho. Silver" or "the camel: are coming." when i.be drivers are photo- graphed, they remark "Sly tlierse" For 100 pinstrea I83) I strung-logged Egyptian climbs 450 foot to the top of the great pyra- mid of Cheopa and acamperl flflltn again in seven minutes. There is no respect at all for this 5.000-ycar-old wonder of the world. A ritiinl with Canadians since their arrival-the first I) arrived Nor 24--has been inquiries about mail. They are completely cut off lrom home and want letters and Hinadian newspapers. They think min-ii more about this than miss- iitit (thristmss at home. They keep up morale by joking about their situation. For Instance. five supply men were talking about clothing. They It'PI'l' Staff Sgt. Harry Jones oi Montreal and Camp Peiawawl. 0u': Sci James Martin. Mont- real. Sgt. Vic Short. Cnllllryl woz Witllrr Ward. Camp Shilo- Man. and Victoria: and W01 Arriuc Bnlmer. Rivers. Man. VINTER WEAR As thry stood under the hot desert sun. they remarked on clothing they had brought with ihrm. such as heavy gloves and a 'hI'mnent of greatconta. "I suppose we'll be getting Show Iittweis any day now.” said Jonca. -Ward talked of setting up I rink to curl on the sun Canal. His two would wear tuna instead of am. Pie" in the signals office. CPI- linlv Brat-ey of Magog, Que.. n 3”rctxville. oat. not the cans- ” . 5'-UPI? aim pm said. Nfvas ii harder Job than normal P2 Inc unit didn't yet havc "I; "rrrcr couiornent. , "" '”'i lair McPherson of I. ”' " ltiines. N.S.. was operat- ilf n "t"I'l'II9 act connecting var- ign UN offk-on iii the camp. it was hoped to obtain u. III said loan had been depreaud iiitns vi-are trying to hook 00 power CHRISTMAS GRADUATES Ebenezer; Violet Cairns. Kinkora; STANDING Natalie Mac-Klnnon, sparrow eggs. Sgnm. Orion Bell of Charlottetown talked ecstatic-ally about the joys of Malpetllle Oysr ters. Charette siiid Abu Suweir re- minds him of Camp Borden- sandy. Others compare Abu Su- weir with Camp Shilo and Camp Petawawn. both also sandy. Sgnm. Martin Angus McDonald of Saskatoon said wryly tithi Canadians seldom have a chance to travel to Egypt. Seriously. he added that he has a hitch to serve in the army and is just as willing to do it here as anywhere else. About the only entertainment for” Canadians here is the nightly con- cert of an Egyptian army band. It plays British airs. Each man is issued one pint of Egyptian beer a day. The consensus is that Egypt- 'ian beer isn't bad. Because some 30 usrds are o duty around, the clock, many non- commissioned officers are doing sentry duty for the first time in years. As each new batch of Cana- dinna arrives - they now total about J00-it is promptly awarded guard duty. Alexandra; Heather well Cove; Jennie Mayhew. Kin- kora; Muriel Henry. Vernon Blind Boy Gets Chance Of Sight MONTREAL ICP) - Jean-Paul Del Biondo will mark his lsth birthday today with hopes of I wondrous gift-sight. A dying man gave the boy his chance. The man, before lapsing into a coma in hospital. said he wished to donate his eyes for car- ncal transplants after his death. Jean-Paul was at the head of a Montreal General Hospital list awaiting such a donor. But he al- most lost the opportunity because his family had moved after giving his home address. A press and radio search for the boy started Sunday night and he heard about it when he reported for work Iilonday. Doctors said his eyesight is "very poor" and he would soon be completely blind. The rare corneal transplant will Illive him hope for recovery. al- though the operation in not always success'iii, doctors said. It must be performed shortly after the death of the donor. Bonshnvi; Anette Morrlssey. Or-intuit. MacLeod..IBridgd: Ruby Ford. Oyster Bed Bartar'a Film Lab. Troops Alerted As Raiders Strike ' In North Ireland , BELFAST 'Rcutei'sl-Security troops throughout Northern Ireland were placed on the alert Monday night as raiders again struck at several points along the frontier with the lrisii Republic. A constable was shot in the leg during an exchange of shots with raiders at Newtown Butler. County Fermnnagh. British troops based at Enniskillen hurried to the scene. Other members of the outlawed Irish Republican Army. which op- ened a new series of anti-British raids last week. attacked a police patrol car in County Armagh. Police also were reported inves- tigating an explosion at Liswaskea. where s barracks was blown up in I raid last week. The new outbreak of violence occurred as Northern Ireland's prime minister. Lord Brookebor- ough, was telling British television By noai-znr RICE Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDQN iCPi .- The price of 311013 still almost an unknown quantitys threw a gloomy siindow over Britain's so-called "plateau of stability” an 1955 dmw in . close. -"Pace the truth." the Financial Times demanded after the gold and dollar reserve glumped by 3270.0tl0.000 in November, when Britain and France took action in Egypt. This losshaa stripped away the tinsel with which we have Blfnished 10 years of economic tall"?! and economic lmprovj. Helm It said. "First (II: land! I" moftltlited, then the servant; go. and finally the rooof fall; in, Britain now stands somewhere be- tween the "Good Ind third stage." NEW AUSTEIIITY A pessimistic view perhaps. But It was generally agreed um; um country. which began 1953 on . wave of plenty-too much pr-0;. Remy. Said some-ended the year closer to the austerity of mg 1.1; 1940! than ever before. There was an oil shortage ma a dollar dilemma. Britain had to ask the United States and canndn to waive interest payment; on post-war loans. Then, to bolster the ' " gold-dollar kitty, bank. book of the sterling area, she made uiiangemenia to get 3551,. 470.000 from the international Monetary Fund right away, with viewers from London the story of recent raids. "At this very moment as I speak to you." he told his audience, "they are attacking a pong. car near my home.” Police captured two of the men who attacked the police car at Nutfield Cross midway between Lisnaskea and Brookeborough. The raiders, who appeared to have eluded Republican border forces, travelled in a truck. WELCOME DUKE NORFOLK ISLAND iReuters)- The Duke of Edinburgh turned up at this remote Australian island outpost Saturday for a look at a whaling factory and a tour of "bloody bridge” where convicts on the former prison island once walled up the bodies of guards they murdered. Most of the is- land's 943 inhabitants turned out to welcome mm. the right to get another 8738.530.- 000 in the next 12 months if needed. . The effect of these two move: was to strengthen the reserves byi 31.300 000.000 and bring their level to more than S.'i.000.000.tl)0. The Purpose was to restore con- fidence in Britain and her ability to pay her own way in the world. TIGHTENING UP "The way to hold what we now have is not to be greedy for more." said Prime Minister Eden in January. "There is general agreement that . investment and consump- tion are growing too fast for our economic health." said Chancellor of the Exchequer Macmillan in February. I So be boosted the bank rate to Sir; per cent. asked banks to re- duce loans, tightened instalment- buying arrangements and cut milk and bread subsidies. In March. a government white paper said ex- cess demand was the root of the problem. in April, Macmililan brought down hls”d I-””J the Monte Carlo budget because of its bond lottery proposals - its purpose aimed at saving money from a government level to the; individunl's pocket. l The government tried to hold the line-to keep full employment. ! to halt price jumps. to curb new wago demands. and to export more. import lens. This was to bet the "plateau." IMPACT OF SUEZ Then. in July. President Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal. a virt-p uni challenge to Britain In Octoberl Israel invaded Egypt. and Nov. 1 saw Anglo-French military opera- tions begin in the canal area. Economically. the result was a complete disruption of the canal, which was blocked by S0 vcssesl' sunk by the Egyptians. Tankers delivering Middle East oil were diverted around South Africa, a longer. more costly route. Shipping rates shot up. and Britain depends to a large extent on goods which reach her by sea. The United States stepped in and offered oil to Britain and Western Europe. but rationing was inevi- table Macmillan raised the petrol taxi an vehicle owners queued to got' their gasoline coupons. As the year made way for 1051. the country settled to face the future. to build up the reserves and to hold back innntion. FIRST ARRIVAL The first Canadian into Port ficer. He reported he was "liais- ing" to beat the band. planes get in from Italy with more UN troops and supplies. the Canadian soldiers walk about lilo yards over to the tarmac to watch em. "it's just like people on thel Prairies turning out to see the, Transcontinental go by." one of-I ficer said. i The planes park near buildings, recently bombed out by the Brit-I ish, unload quickly. get refuelied and take off again. The crewsl don't eat here but have box Said was Capt. Gordon O'Brien of, lsaskatoon. acting as a liaison ow At noon hour. when the RCAFI I ISLAND OR TURKEYV MA NUEL' Grade "A" Fresh Iii. 49c DRAWN IF nnqunsrnn MIXED NUTS 2 lbs. 95c (NO PEANUTSI CAPE COD lunches for the seven-hour night, back to Naples. ' CRANBERRIES. 16 oz. pkg. ...... . .. 29.-. Is Arrested For Ago Khan Robbery, HAVANA (AP!-The Cuban in-l vestigation b u r e n u announced! Monday it has arrested Paul Man-. dolinl. 40. wanted by French au-- thorlties for helping rob the Aga Khan and his wife of 3850.000 in jewels in 1949. Twelve mcn were accused of" plotting and staging the highway holdup of the leader of the Moslemi Ismalli acct in southern France.' Six were tried and were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 4 to lo years in 1953. three were Ic- quitied. two were never caughti and Mnndolini jumped bail. He was tried in absentia and sent-, enced to life imprisonment. ; Police said Mandolini arrived; here Sept. 20 with a false Cana- dian passport under the name of Rolland Samiel and had been op-i crating I small night club here with a partner. Ha is being held for deportation. . All but 9240.000 of the loot was recovered during the French po-. lice investigation. when a package- containlng the jewels was mysteri- ously tossed into the courtyard of a police station at Msrseille. French Aviation l Export Shoots Wife, Suicides puns (Ari - Rene Couzinet.' noted French airplane constructor and adventurer. has found dead: in his fashionable apartment Mon- wife's body. shot In the chest. was. slumped nearby. ; Police issued a verdict of mur-v der and suicide. They said Can- zioet. inventor of the "ralnr ' in which Jean Mermor. crossed the south Atlantic in I938 for the first time. apparently shot his wife and then took his own life. conugnra brother Alexandre. also known in the aviation field. about his pet protect-a rocket-i ed plane rising ventrally whirh he displayed last summer. Conzinel. who was about 50 years old. was In-on-n as ii rI.Vtl' in"... f(in(II'IIi"IIIV' iiith ideas But most of th- time he had riiffirulty iii riiaiemiiziiis his protect!- IIG IIIPYARII mum, important IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIW PERFECTION CREAMERY BUTTER.2lbs. Sl.25 CHRISTMAS NAVEL ORANGES. 2 dos. . SLICEI) EMPIRE swirr IACON.I lb.pItg. . . Moira 2V2 lb. JEWELL 3 LB. TIN & 1 LB. FREE SHORTENING.4Ibs.................89c I"LORIDA-LARGE PINK MOIRS CHRISTMAS WRAPPED POT OF GOLD, lb. SLI9 CHOCOLATES and CREAMS . Britain Began 1956 On Wavem" 5itiPl'-W OI OI Prosperity That Receeded -"Christmas Soul" Will Go Anywhere ST. JOHN'S, Nria, i(,'PrDC3p(, Peter Tornlie. seasoned judge of the tides and tickles around the Newfoundland coast. now goes to Iaen to hunt microbes instead of codfish. Capt. Troake is skipper of the motor vessel Christmas Seal, tioatiiig x-ray Clinic of the New. I0IlDdiIlId Tuberculosis Associa- li0II- The Billy. dynamic captain was born about 40 years ago at Twiliingate on the northeast coast and marked his 16th birthday utchtns codfish off Labrador "live been on the Seal six years now. been around the whole 1:. land twice in her." he says. "an- IIGVI me I'm a man who can talk about TB. "We'll atop anywhere if we can 3-11)! Iorneone. if there's a house on a point and just one man liv- IBE there we'll stop for him. The I68-too Seal has been in places Imurid Newfoundland where no 'FR:aO Ii'.'i.'-L"i3"...s.5"...fi'”'il. ".?iii'i'.' ".3 Ti” GMNIIIE Pill 13 (2 PM" Thursday. Dec. N. 1956 i Some people however were shy about coming for x-rays. Capt. Troake said. "I do my darndest to get them to come aboard" The work of the Christmas Sell and shore X-ray units is helping to trim down Newfoundland: tub- ercuitsiii death rate, but at 24.0 per 1,000 of population it is still the highest in Canada. Labrador has the highest rate in New- foundland: Of every 1,000 death; there, 130 die each year of tuber- cuiosis. Alberta has the lowest rate in Canada: 61 per 1,000. The Newfoundland rate makes Capt. Troake familiar with trag- edy. "I saw a man row a puntful of folk suffering from TB iaway from the Seal once." he says. "The man. his wife and three children had T8.” The bewildered father could not understand how the disease had made such inroads on his family. not until Capt. Tronke reminded him the family had not shown up for X-Rays when the seiii had called at the community four Cities Service, Ltd. Plan New Refinery OAKVILLE. Not. ICP - Con- struction of a 322,000,000 oil re will begin early in 1957, it was iinery by Cities Service Limited announced Monday by Jack Mc- Dowell. vioo-president and general manager of the company. V. E. Sicks. I member of the 00ml!-Iny's Canadian study group said construction contracts have been let to the C. F. Brnul Com- pany Limited of Toronto. Paul Hodges Cities Service pub Iic relation officer in New Yorll said the refinery will be located in the Toronto area. The actual site has not yet been definitely de- termined. GREAT GEOLOGIST H. M. SIMPSON LTD. Practical Gifts For The Man Doing Office Work At Home And Away From Home LIST rmnnns FOR NAMES ADDRESS ' NUMBERS-FROM ' E8 S TELEPHONE nnsx BLOTTING PADS mom ... LETTER nasxncrs, wmn AND our. ...-.... 33.75 to 511.50 S2.15to89.50 FROM Sl.50tnS4.60 ESTERBROOK DIPLESS DESK PEN SETS - CI-IAIR CUSIIIONS POCKET AND DESK STAPLERS BBIEFCASES-FROM .. DAILY JOURNALS AND CALENDAR PAD H. M. SIMPSON LTD. 160 BICHMON D STREET A COMPLETE LINE OF OFFICE EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES SINCE I927. g6.95 to 517.50 PHONE 8571-8578 Box 51.49 IIOLD-PAK day with . biiiii.-t iii his head. Hisii ' Pkg. 43: FRESH FROZEN PEAS Pkg. 29c HIAIIII OI HINDI 2 or 45c JUNIOR tooiis 6- 59c nuts ioit BABIES ..- GRAPEFRUIT.3for.................25: rs CHASE o SANBORNE on man nosr: COFFEE.Ib.......................SI.I9 lI AYLMER.-15 oz. rm l FRUIT COCKTAIL. IS on. tin . . . . . . . . . 29: ' . d smnnirrs t - 220 os.tIns FRUIT PUDDING. Tin 35: 111.,.3,m.,, p r.. .. rm . 35C t.:itEAANii8Eliiiiil shliuocys. I5 oz. rtii . . . . . . . 25: 49C , I cnmsmgg Cottage 7 oz. GRAPES HEINZ unv roons CHICKEN. Tin 4.. T V 2 15,, 39c CEREALS 8 01. 25;; 3"" 2 1b-- I 2 POTATOES ...25c l ' G Large Each CILERY .. . . . 25: GOODYEAR DRIVE SAFELY uhxbhxxy , yrlllllilux.-i u 5 N t N it I-NNNNNHU, Ripe Pkg. TOMATOES . . 19: Head Each LETTUCI . . . . .27: Ground SUITIII. .....20c - qngbgc, ' , frst chris- Ioegiiellrliiinte do In; iv! Chim- jaii I16. PEAS, Thrifty Pair, 2-20 oz. tins . . 39: DUCKS (H DIAI. - asao . CHICKEN Ti: 6589 Ice and Snow Make Suburbonitos ci Must for - - - O Gl.'l'l'lNG IN AND OUT 01' SNOW-FILLED DRIVEWAYS e snmrnnn STARTING FROM iiiiun zoi WIYMOIITI-I s'r. Little Scotty Picks t r -4.... , other vessel her size has stopped." yeftris eamgen 1., Mr wnuam I-'og"' ti"! dimcmtl I ..E.':.'. 2:: .':2::..:.:::. l: .r:::.- :::.:37 55-”i”'ri3?3- it-3 . WANT SOMETHING DIFFERENT THIS ' 3 CHRISTMAS? Visit pi i; JOE LOUIS AND SIIBIIRBANITE WINTER TIRES BY LIKES FAST STARTERS Little Sentry always has been an admirer of fast starters. When Joe Louis was in his heyday winning so many fights with fine round knock-ours Little Scurry was his Number One fan. And for the some reason Lift-Io Scurry is a terrific booster for Subur- bnnito Winter Tires by Goodyear . Ho lilies that old one-two coin- binarion of the Suburbunitea--" More Gripping Power and faster starts IIIPOIII ice and snow."- En ch Suburbanire has over 1856 Fi'9"P- 5"i"9 04110! Working on your beliolfln oilrypes of Weath- er-tiie only snow-mud tire with the Iogicial tread design. With Siibiirbunitot you'll find that driving in even iiiib-iiigii snow is an easy matter. See then! new or Island Tire Service. They're the not answer to your winter driving problems. DURING THE HOLIDAY SEASON WITH . SUBURBANITE RETREAD Island Tire Service will retreod your own with the Goodyear Sulnirbnnito Trend to give you the some tr-nclon. features and quality as the new tire at a much lower cost. Drop In today uidnooiisforyourttronoeda. O PIBITIVE PULL-AWAY FROM PARKING O SAFE. SECURE DRIVING ON rinia'""s"i"s”Evicia . DIALISII