EDMONTON. Doris Lewis, six- months-oid Indian child. is among lit! Indians facing eylctlon from their homes on the Hobbema re- serve 40 miles south of Edmonton. The eviction notice from the re- s FACIN EVICTIO vgistrar of the federal Indians at-i fairs branch. followed a deK'lx'lfln 'by officials who reviewed a com- illlaint that the forefathers of thrust- rights The protest is permitted under a section of the indian act. The tilt indians ordered to leave the reserve have about six weeks laffected accepted scrip, a land grant many years ago which in- volved rellnquishmertt of treaty. I to appeal the order to the district court. . CP Photo DRAMATIC CLIMAX Mining Has Had A Record Year, Tops Two Billion By I-i()RBI::S RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor xtiinnunccment of a Sl75.000.000 nick:-I-mining industry for north- crn xlaiiltttba gave a dramatic climax in a record year in Cana- dlnn mlllllul. it confirmed that (ianntla's niln- ing industry is only now swinging into its full giant stride it filled a gap in the cross - country ad- vancc into the north: and ii ad- dcd one more assurance that Ca- nadian prospcritv --largely based on development of n atu ral rc- sourccs-will continue. The development announced Dec. 5 by internatlmial Nickel Company of Canada will he in the Mystery Luke and hioak Lake area. 400 miles north of Winnipeg and about half-way between the Saskatchewan border and Hudson Bay. IECOND LAIIGEST It will be the second largest nickel operation in the free world. second only to international Nick- al'a long-established operation at Sudbury, Ont. With expansion at Sudbury it will lift company pro- duction by about 50 per cent to about pounds a year. An increase of tilt: cents a pound in the price of nickel was also announced. an encourage- ment to all other nickel explora- tion and development. Canadian mining this year top- pcd 32.000.000.000. tip more than !200.000.000 from last year and about double the dollar value of six years ago. In this growth oil. uranium and iron ore have become cliches in ptiblic speeches on Ca- nadian prosperity. Ten years ago Canada bad lit- tle oii. This year she produced l7.m0.000 barrels. worth 400000.000 and up about This production could be doubled almost some too.- I5:.0(l0.iltlil. aslicstusptlic lilind llivcr area and iron ore . . , an lead s5tt.000,000. at Steep Rock and Sault Ste. 1 Neal mdlneral DI”0(l(l)l('Il0in is takl-l. Marie. At ltinnitouwatigc. in north- rig o ireclons. nc s an at- wt-stcrn (int:-trio. (iecn Mines is vance into the Pre - .CfIIllhi'l'lIl;l)ltiIlL!lnE a copper - zinc property .lsliicl:7:iiefr(t:k (fiorniatulin l'tit.'0;- into protiuctinn at a cost of 20.- ng a 0 i na a to lie nort . 00tl.000. Tl" :ihe';1 l5l”l'lhl:i'"r'l- Pf"'kl"iil Itlaiiilnba now has two northern :19 I" "'91 ”:ed'”m 9'99"" "timid nickel developments Interna- !':)':t3edWfn':l H 0? 0:: V-Yl,l"”.V 9” tional Nickel's new project and 9 in NmvR:'u"n;ll;nt:i” l0'h'i”-mum that of Sherritt-Gordon Mines at . , ' ' i .)iin .nkHand its shares with :1”r::335rinr”vh("E :I":lilI;.li'lul"le Siiskntt-ltctvnn the Hudson Bay mm in mki-n"gV9pln"ci'c- iutXp(';r;e'lIlllIllIl2 Illltl smclting coppervztnc- it all . t i Fl . Breton for zinc. in northern Ncwtwm "ppm "M H H"? on In soiithirest Manitoba and Br wik.halh.li is-'1 . .o.'-.'c"ii fmmfin iioiii '3t'i?.i.7...i.'v'i;i,;';"mN1;f31g;:';ga;; Hg: fnlhenrltg has an interest of 75 per cent and U I t g .k I h - I international Nickel 25 pcr ccnt-- ml” '” '35 i”.' "ll" appn” "' is btiilding n ntili and plans to 5" m M ”'"'”"K "W" i' ma-ll" start a s.inc-lead-copper-silver np- '"l"""' "has" eration in the spring. Research is (yrmm nrnqognqipgs pmnmlnn 0" WT" to WMMS in its nnrth it has uranium. other large New Brunswick ore bodies. Across Quebec from Not-ands through Cliibouganiau and into the far north an attack by prospector and drill is being made upon the southern fringes of a wilderness of unknown riches. UNGAVA DEVI-2l.0I'MENT The iron - ore belt nmv licnig mined at Scheffervilie by iron Ort- Company of Canada extends north Potash tit-posits across its middle are fIPS('I'll)NI as extrcmely rich. A I23-tnile it-ni.:th along the south- ern fringe of its Pre - Cambrian shield is being prospectcd and ex- plored for base metals. British Columbia has an array of projects. including natural gas nnd nil in its Pcace River area. iron ore for shipmcnt to Japan on Vancouver island and Texada island, copper around Stewart. ss- ht-stos in the far north and many to Ungava Bay and apparently westward. "”"”'i- At leest two companies are Thc Pacific Great Eastern Rail- way is complcted from Vancouver to Print-c George. When extended into the Peace River country. it thinking of shipping ore irom t'n- gava Bay to Greenland diirlng the short navigation season. for stock-i piling and winter shipment to; hi expected to npcn up vast areas Europe. for intensified exploration. Companies active in nnrthcrn The pi-nvinceis present maior mining operation is Consolidated Mining and smelting Company's giant icad - 7int- - sliver production at Ktmbt-rlcv and Trail. in the Northwest Territories. Quebec and Labrador include Iron Ore Company. Canadian Javclin. Steel Company of Canada. United States Steel Corporation and Jones and Laughlln and Pickands and Mather of the United States. Fine Point on Great Slave Lake- Ontario. with about one-third of? about 600 milcs north of Edmon- Aricient And M By DAVID FREEMAN Canadian Press Staff Writer 3T. JOHN'S. Nfld. tCPt-When a Newfoundland fisherman hauls . cod from the Atlantic. chances are it dankles on a piece of Cord from the Rope Walk in the south-'. west corner of St. John's. The Colonial Cordage Company is still going strong 75 years after; it spun its first piece of fibre. V l The factory is a low. SDFBWIIIIS building flavored with the odor oil tar and the new - hay smell of. hemp. The ancient and the mod- ern mingle freely. g One room In a brizhh 3175' place where a slim wionion watches big new machines slilnl cotton and nylon threads into rope and twine. Another room. where some of the yarn fol" WP?- maklng is drawn through I 1038- biack. dismal tub of steaming '37-. smacks of witchcraft. UNIQUE OPERATION The works are never called anything but the Rope Walk. and theyira located on Rope Walk Lane. v The appendage responsible for the name is the only rope walk left in Canada-a dralty. quarter- snile-iong wing of the building where rope is drawn out and twisted by a time-tried method. Originally. says James Alder- dl. factory manager and a di- rector of the company, workers; trudged the length of the rope-. walk. spinning the rope as theyl went and letting it fall behind. them. i -"it was all done by handspln-. nlng." he says. "and handspin-. ning was an art." Now tracks run the length of the rope walk. Heavy strands are at-' tached to a revolving plate of. books on a railcart and drawn out to the end of the walk. All the strands are spun they tighteni around a wooden cone that sep-: arates them and maintains ani even stress. The cone is attached. to a second rallcart. When thei car is squeezed to the opposite' end the rope is firm. fat. a quar- ter-mile-long. and finished. A length of rope six inches In diameter was the largest pro- duced. it was made last summer. and the company sent it to Que- bec. possibly for use on the St. Lawrence Seaway. Wins Operation on 1 Heart By Minute SOUTHAMPTON, England (Ami A British surgeon has removed a i tumor from a patlent's heart' in a rare operation in which the doc- tor worked against time and won by 5 Slnlzle minute. wlihholdlnl the names of sur- FWH Ind Datlent. a spokesman for "'9 5"Uih3ml1tnn Chest Hospitnll said this in what happened; A month ago the doctor discov- ered a tumor growing in the ion ml? 0' 3 25-3'0:-ir-old man's heart ' ”I decided to remove it" the' surgeon was quoted ,5 gayinz "Had I failed the man wnulti have been dead inside two years." lennsttigprinaiih W" mm" '" "''i d m 0 t 0 heart I0 dayg ngml "' "I "W Surileon decided to end that operation and operate lilain from the right side. i The patient was "frnzpn" in mi degrces and the heart clrcnlationl isolated. With the heart isolated in this way. the maximum flmP(po.. sthie for the surgeon was 10 mln.: utt-ii. I Th? nllvrniion was completed in! We believe this to he in. (mg operation of its kind in the worlcll -and definitely the first In Britain ::.t.r::.'::.:-i"..w".:"” W; - ' . e os it .i man said. p 8 spoke-3 it took place shortly hem.-.. Christmas and the mans wife via. lied him Wednesday. Marie Currie. died of leukemia in- curred by work with I'lfIIORCIlt.'(v materials. Among her other M-.3 Comftliahments. she was the first woman to hold a cabinet post in the French governmcnt Two well-known British subjects who died were Sir Alexander Korda. 02. Hungarian-horn film producer. and Louis Oppcnhcimcr. hit, fotinder. with his four broth- ers. of a diamond mining empire in South Africa. l li..S. P0l.ITl('lAN in the United States. Srnator. Albcn Barkley of Kentucky. 78;- died while addressing a group of' university students Barkley it-asl best known for his form as uce-l i i In St. John's Rope Walk odern Mingle Transplant Eyes MON1'REAL tCPt e The trans-. plant of the cornea of a dead. man's eyes to a young near-blind; The rope walk is only part orpman last Thursday became known the operation of the factory now.-.WPdll95diI.V. , Twines and lines and snmel Eye surgeons at Maisonneuve. ropes are twisted from spools ofiilospital in Montreal are anxiously cotton and lately nylon. that 3;-.faw'aiIing results of the operation. l'lte already spun The netting isi The wishes of the dying man accomplished with solemn clank-lihal somt Sighllfss 0!" nflf-SIEIW ings and muttering: by a hugeiless person benefit after his death maclnne that turns out net gt jwerc made known before Christ- speed no brat-c of outport fisher-lglal Til? "'35 did I55! wednw av men could equal. Mr. Alticrdice l MANY PRODUCTS Ea” me Rope The transplant nrielnallv was to i1:'Ji.f.”.3ti::-E” ::.Z:.P1:.::::.:t 5-""53? '35-5-i3ii"53”Bi-'353i with their lines. ropes and nets or i.'s...i;a,.plg)l.3.indbf,f;imhi;,g-5 bani "N 3”" Tl” l3”9'Y 9mPl0Y5 wilt-al condition prevented the o:ei',a- 10 30 people at peak production t-mn being clnied out Three gciie-rations of some fam- A patient at Maisonneuve Hos- iiies have worked at the Iiopepital was found by the Canadian Walk. and Mr. Alderdice says &l National institute for the Blind. tear men are common. livhich has been co-operating with William Ptlzit-Donald says he eve surgeons in setting up a cor- can't remember for sure how long. "93 b5"k- - he's been working at the factory, but figures it at 54 years. The Company was started in L333 by Rinses ltlnnroe. brought to; .Newlotnitilaiid from 'orthern Ire-.frnm life FAMOUS PORTRAIT Earliest portrait believed done terian minister in Newfoundlandlartist. lYoung Man Gets i Raises New Obstacles” To Suez Canal Clearance 3 WILTON WYNN t'.eleSli95 of the W” ””l”'” y lwere scheduled to meet in Genevl CAIRO IAPt-An authoritativelocg. 29 (M 1513. gtmga atgaettling Egyptian source said today Egypt the canal problem. The six prin- will no longer consider negotiat-lcjples; ing a settlement of the Suez Canal 1? Open In-"Sn wjmoug dim.-rm. dllplglt bVilII'i Brtthatn and Frarice inluunl on t e asts of t e six princip es . . - agreed upon through United Na-7 2- hgeydp” wwnlgmy mm be tlons mediation. T9599” i , h 11 be i One of these principles was tbatl 3- Callal 0p'"uon E T n the canal should be insulated from the political policies of any oneicoumryt sulated from the P013595 0' "W i nation. The six points were ac-. cepted by the UN Security Conn-. cli as a basis of negotiations last October. The informant said Egypt would no longer accept them because Oil the Brtiah - French attack on Egypt. He said Egypt will ncteri negotiate with Britain and Fraiit-e.j and will discuss the matter only with the l'ntted Nations. I'I2)'pt also has raised new ob- stacles to clearing the canal of- sunken ships and other obst.acles,i SIX PRINCIPLES . in Lnndon"s National: land as an ailing lad by his uncle. Portrait Gallery is that of Henry; REV Moses Harvey. first Pre.shy- Vii. dated 1505. by an unknown Oct. l l The foreign ministers of Brit- ain. France and Egypt notified the Security Council in New York 12 they had agreed on the six principles. The Egyptians said 4. Egypt and the users will de- cide on fixing of tolls. 5, A fair proportion of the revenue shall be allotted to the canal's development. 6. Persistent disputes between Egypt and the old Suez Canal Co.. shall be settled by arbitration. But the Israeli attack on Egypt started on the day the proposed three-power conference was SUP- posed to get under way in Ge- neva. Two days later British and French planes opened a bombard- ment of Egypt. EGYPT WON'T FORGET "we cannot forget what hap- pened." the Egyptian source said. ”Vi'e cannot enter negotiations with those who attacked us. par- The Guardian. Page 1'. Thursday. Dec. 27. 195! t;cularly since we have broken I ielatlona with those powers." Though a spokesman for Egypt Suez Canal authority only Tueadz night reported Egypt had raise a new obstacle to speedy clan ance of the canal. the Cairo i formant said the Egyptian gover merit has reached an agreeme with UN Secretary-General DI Hammarskjold to begin the clea nnce as a result of meetings b tween Foreign Minister Mnhmot Fawzl and Hammarsklold in Ne York. "Th e necessary lnstructioi have been given regarding this he said. without revealing any d tails. 'i'he canal authority spoltesmz had said President .N'asser'n gp ernmcnt ruled out any work clear the waterway of wreclu ships and debris until all Israc forces get out of Egyptian ten tory. It may be weeks before israc lforces complete their withdraw from the Sinai Peninsula and I rael's governincnt has announct its intention to hold onto anoth- captured territory. the Gaza Stri FIRESTONE HOME & AUTO CO. LTD. POLICY 90 DAYS FREE SERVICE by trained technicians ALL MAKES PYE C.B.S. AS LOW AS CROSLEY PHILCO CHOOSE FROM SUCH GREAT TV NAMES AS-. HALLICRAFT ER MOTOROLA ROGERS MAJESTIC ' ADMIRAL ELECTROHONE EMERSON MARCONI WESTINGHOUSE FROM 7” to 21" a I r Canadais mineral production. islton -will npparcntly be a big sinc- active across its whole north lir-licnd produccr if and when it gets anium production is expanding inirall transportation. -.Many Noted Men And Women Died During The Past Year Dy PETER MAITLAND litnlitmnrc lleraid at 15 and later Canadian Press Staff Writer was drama critic and editorial Babe Dldricltson Zahnrlas. the writer for the Baltimore Sun. With in a year if markets and trims- portation could handle it. in an emergency. Canada's complete oil resources. including Alberta's oil sands. are beyond any demand that can be made upon them. CHANGING PICTURE Ten years ago Canada was about rper-cent dependent on lm-l ported oil. since then her con- sumption has quadrupled but sh! is supplying so per cent of her needs-and could supply all. president under Harry Trunian from I949 to 1953. p Fred Allen. comedian and limit- 90 DCYS OH PCHS . p I YEAR ON PICTURE TUBE 9.95 ON EASY4 BUDGET TERMS orist who often topped US. rnriioi popularity polls in the '30s smi- '40s. died at si. 1 Jean I-Iersholt. us. Danish-born film actor for 50 years. creator of the radio and film role Dr Chris- tian. was another who died The golden trumpet of Amn--. ica'a sentimental gentleman 1' DWIIIR. Tbfllmy Dorsey. was sil- enced when the band leader died . f 'i dl - . . . " n”..':ui:I,',l"';",f,".,.';,',.,,..I,pwnntrs greatest woman sthictc. tieorge Jean Nathan he took over at his home in Connecticut He "2 beg. hum "um me puma lost the final round of her three the American Mercury in 1924 and.was S2. 1 year battle with cancer in l956..msde it a strong critical influence The career of Dr. Alfred Kin-i in the Pacific coast. Toronto and Montreal. Within two years nearly every city and town from Van- couver to Mmtreal can be served by natural gas. Ten years ago Canada was a small producer of iron ore. year she produced more than 0,- sey, whose name became almnti n synonym for sex in the United states after his studies of sunal.' behavior were published. endedi suddenly with his death at C2. The death of Frank Hague. '79,. recalled A colorful and sometimes! Although the disease had wastcd 1 in Li S. IlIl'rMllI'F. away the superb body or the 47'.-i The author of some two dozen year-old Babe. it never touched books and thousands of essail. My wt.-ng g.Vlcncken's scholarly inquest into "1 gln't gonna die honey." were the origins of American Ipeech. the last words she spoke to her The American Langunit. ataiida husband George. as a monument to his towering in- nabe excelled at AFTER WE SELL WE SERVE g 73,, nierypteltert. sordid episode in American politl mm m, ' lnuncenmn wort she tried. She attracted! in England. two authors of a cal history. Hague was mnyof all 0 ' "C um?" ml... t, cgntrg-(I qntworldwide attention with her ft-an more gentle school tiled: Alesan- Jersey City for many years and at meunmn l; H: 3:, M.” Vawjat the tin! Olympics ltnd in her,rirr itilno 75. author of Winnie powerful political boss. Q ' "l M ig,lm.y, inter i-ears. she hot-snic a treat The Pooh. and other children's other personalities who diocii .. . .- htmndhndi "mum Fl re ila golferi winning All major Wnmf'It'i bunks norms and Plays. and Wal- during 1954:: I: . (,:":mbm' A':.?"r:.:::;V., rm, "mun. mi,.,' . g pter tie La Mare. 03. poet noted for Mlstlnguelt tleanne Bourgeois ll m."yA mmlnd ,,.,.;,.b., NW1, TAn -Any "ml ichtldrens verse Frev,i:'-Ir:"rI"i'u.'s(i'trt 'Ithl.lI"lIl1lCl'b.lDd p H" In "'9 uumls M m. Ind Another loss to the sporting 'mwAR"MN wmnim ti.fiil.lregs in the world." N. i rinc mine of (ionsoiitl-Iitd Will"! and smt-inns company M Kim- berley. BC. "Peaches" Browning. 40, whose six-month marriage at the age of is to Edward Daddy llrownlngi st. in um. and subsequent divorce litigation received widespread pub-' lictty. world during the year was.thci Sir Max Rt-crbohm. K1. I-Irllllsh death of Sam Langford. 73. Bow satiric writer and rttrlftnillrllliiif , . V t t ed t r baby Born in the Victorian and Ediiardtan eras. Onlrnlu pclmiiirdilhizrnlnigiziiirsitii-inbid:-yimoalli VS” he was rated oneitiied in Italy where ho had lived 'ario an i ' ' i i -' I ' - . l-ti et in niire,sinu- l9l0. urn this year is ialucd RI::t.'I(I.("!'Ilh:ift;. al&2m':""g.r gnsm Mu W mm M ".9 my ,,.,.....,..,.,. tag. T :f,t(t,I"iQ deaxupftflrd toiimi ammusti he never hold Diff! of Italy: f-ac-st rrcimt -Win M a gums -- - ' - ;shsl Pietro Dado lio. Italian chief " ghh more W mm mlgnltimore mourned its most fa-lot staff who led llhp ms invasiol of Ethiopia. died at 32 H0i'.'.'E AND AUTO co. LTD. N0 CAMEL ; headed mous resident when Henry Imiis A camel's - hair brush has no '1' , I . . . , . - . -i t'.:.":';'"..t'.'..". :;.:"'..-.'::...".'....:i:..;'.i::..':.'.r..:::'";. .;:' :.'":.':."-"v "ti: '37 Gr-at Goorso 9- Di I 5545 "”"' '””'m' '""""d Silt. was iiuugiu editor of thoicovareu at miuin. Pierre and lab um amiss imam. O Il&dIS23.C. EV"