- All the wonder and mystery of “Christmas are in Coal a she MONTREAL (CP)—A spokes- man for Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation, replying to charges by union leader William . “it would will not help solve » Nova Scotia’s coal industry Shah Wi Common TEHRAN, Iran (Reuters) — A commoner who used to wear sloppy Joe sweaters in the Paris student districts will become the third bride of the Shah of Iran Monday in a gown insured for out her $140,000 trousseau, it con- M3 oo 3 . 3 tk ig. PKs > ater eoneE ye Ae WONDER AND MYSTERY gazes at the Christmas Tree at the garrison officers mess in Chariottetown. 19 months old ,0al Spokesman Replies~ To Union Leader's Charge’ The spokesman, who asked his name be withheld, declined to an- swer Mr. Marsh’s charges spec- side could afford at present.” * Me. @fiarsh) president of the Il Marry er Lass sists of 44 feet of white satin em- broidered with pearls and rhine- stones. HUGE ENGAGEMENT RING The bride's jewelry will include her 55-carat engagement ring, a diamond-studded crown, diamond earrings and a single - row dia mond necklace. Reward Is Up For Rustlers KENTVILLE, N.S. (AP) — An- napolis Valley farmers Saturday offered a $1,000 award for infor- mation leading to the arrests of cattle rustlers in the area. The award was offered following a meeting at nearby Horton. Last week, two men were sen- tence to three-year prison terms for cattle rustling. Police said re- ports of cattle rustling are still being investigated. W. Gordon Woodman of Grand Pre, N.S., said farmers in thé area lost nearly 30 cattle during the last year. Most of the miss- ing stock are believed the vic- tims of rustling. Navy's Peak Strength Was Reach OTTAWA (CP)—The navy said a 4 ° ed In 1959 gress” was made in developing the anti-submarine proficiency of planes and helicopters and in .| sharpening the intercept capacity of the missile-armed Banshee jet fighters. PERSONNEL STRENGTH At Dec. 1, personnel strength totalled 19,933, comprising 2,451 officers, 17,187 men and 615 wrens. Forty - nine per cent of these were serving at sea, prob- ably the highest proportion ever, in war or peace, and one of the highest ratios in any navy. More Canadians saw their navy in 1959 than ever before, first during the royal tour and later when 19 NATO warships, eight of them Canadian, assembled at Toronto for seaway-year celebra- tions, Opening of the St. Law- rence Seaway permitted major warships of the RCN to enter the N.S., that the “for thet past decade has negotiated im goed faith with the agion. ” He the. she is Lori Hobbs; daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Hobbs. Workers Ind., said Friday in a statement released in Glace Bay, has been threat of further mine closures,” said the union leader. ~ His statement followed four days of bickering between the un- ion and management that started in Halifax when he and a com- pany official tangled at a meet- ing of a fact-finding committee to study the industry's. problems. Mr. Marsh demanded produc- tion costs for Dosco mines and the company refused to disclose them, saying it was not Dosco,; policy—nor policy of any North) American firm—to disclose such figures. In his statement Friday Mr. Marsh said the company’s stand is “‘preposterous.”” NOT UNCOMMON “The practice by management of submitting their cost per pro- duct to organized labor is not un- common either in the United States or Canada and Mr. Fair- ley (Albert L. Fairley, Jr., Dosca president) must well be aware of a Mr. Fairley was away on a business trip to the U.S. and un- available for comment. But the company spokesman said: “I think it would be in the best interests of all if both union and management attempted to main- tain a mature and sensible atti- tude towards one another during the weeks immediately ahead. ««“While there certainly are, and will be, differences of opinion it is vital that both attempt to reach agreement on the major issues in- volved.” “Intemperate name calling ip the press is not going to help al- leviate the situation or win pub- lic support for the industry.” Dosco has announced it must close three mines in Nova Scotia unless new markets for coal are found. The union contends pro- duction costs must be studied to solve the industry's problems.” Reds Release Yank Sailors HONG KONG (AP) Two American sailors who said they overstayed their shore leave in Hong Kong and wandered into Communist China last week were released by the Chinese Commu- nists Sunday. The sailors, identified as Jerry K. Munfrada and Roy D. Bazzell, both 29, spent four nights in Com- munist hands. They said they were questioned repeatedly but were not ill treated. They said they did not know they had crossed the border until, they were picked up by Com- munist militia. Navy officials here said they will be placed in custody pending a decision on the disposal of their ite ti tii ai af ries vital i it * iH i i dod z ' : g | g B ; F ‘ : B . ; pute i 2 & % ; ; Ef 3 E ES 38 : § 8 4 3 il Sie3 RSEs -modern point is that it is bbish. a ei i ip EF A fash | B entered 3 § RE i i wi = it wou ie a Ht i e¥ z Be I 3 ? wet.” were what the jpost.climaxed a career as + EDMONTON (CP)—A state fu- neral was Saturday for Lieutenant-Governor John James Bowlen of Alberta, who died Wed- mesday at the age of 83- Thousands of Citizens lined Jas- per Avenue, Edmonton's main street, as the funeral cortege, the flag-draped Casket on a gun car- riage, crept to §t. Joachim’s Cemetery. Mr. Bowlen had been lieuten- ant-governor for 10 years. The rancher, farmer, businessman and politician for the Prince Edward tsland-born man. Archbishop J. H. Macdonald of Edmonton conducted funeral ser- | Catholic Cathedral. | Pontifical high requiem mass rt Award jnual art exhibition coming on, he was sung by Bishop F. P. Car roll of Calgary. Rt. Rev. J. M., calls abstract. impressionisms. The other two were objective— the trade name for understand- able—and were serious portraits respectively of a girl student and a_calypso dancer. Neither was) among the three winners. He says his sole purpose in. submitting the abstracts was to discredit and. ridicule such work im the eyes 0, viewers. It all started with an article in and then, with the students’ an- decided on a different tack. The three abstract paintings were executed on canvas board, with the artist making them “as disgusting as possible from an esthetic point of view.” Clown, the award winner, con- sists among other things of: But- tons; toothpaste tubes, with. their respective caps strewn about hap- hazardiy; a tuning dial and a cigaret box. All were embedded in plaster and painted over with ~ dashes of garish paint. TRAINED LEADERS ‘NEEDED’ Revamped Recreation Program Malone, rector of —W: ; The bearer of the lieutenant- _. Jovernor’s decorations followed. On the casket were Mr. Bowlen’ islature. Mr. Bowlen had been a ls Goal Of Parley Planned In City ‘The revamping and co-ordinat- ing of Charlottetown’s recreat- ional and playground activities, is the goal of a meeting to be called early in January, it was learned iast night. The meeting is to be called by R. Russell St. John, chair- man of the Charlottetown play- ground commission, as the result of a. suggestion made in a re- port ‘of chief supervisor Joh It will have to be a co-operative ‘by groups of private cit- ' clubs, organizations and the City council Mr. Ready said. The chief supervisor suggested that the meeting ‘should include representatives of Prysical Fit- ness, Abegweit Club, YMCA, K and: other groups interest- organized recreation. is] i good trained leaders. of. apparatus does not playground. It is only good as the supervisor who the program. Mr. Ready stressed. “If you do not have a program you do not have a playground.” he emphasized. “The of our super- consequence”’ his report stated. maturity. future.” time. * Great Lakes for the first time. visors are not ‘equiped to carry out a major program of any personnel we could draw capable and interested supervisors, \Mr. Ready observed. “Our playgrounds should now be going from infancy to “If we are going to plan for the A leadership.course to train supervisors was suggested at Easter or some other suitable combined He had warm praise for Cotton who supplied the site R. L. of the (Continued on page 5 Col. 1) . and Mrs. BJ. Haywood. Mr i : State Funeral Is Held For Alberta Governor - St. Joseph’s PARIS (CP—Wwestern’ Sunday night invited Seviek Pre. mier Nikita Khrushchev te them in Paris in late April for the first of a series of summit con- ferences. Letters from President Eisen- | hower, Prime Minister Macmillan jand President de Gaulle ‘sug- | gested the top-level talks could be held alternately in London, Mos- cow and Washington after the ini- tial Paris meeting. Details of the three letters will be announced here at the emd of | the three - day Western summit | talks later today. West German Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer, fourth participant in ‘the top-level western meeting, told-reporters Sunda y night: “You are going to get a beauti- ful communique.” 5 od King. (Story f= | Khrushchev “total and universal’ disarma- Percy Page Is Named essor 10: _ 2 a YMCA. She ts a- daughter of { Mrs. Frank Curtis, was crown- page 5) ‘jing pressure? said West Germany should. give up nuclear weapons. The Soviet leader's letter, de- suggesting controlled dis- armament should be “the pri- mary aim of every statesman.” Adenauer’s message gave grounds for believing West Ger- many agreed in principle with Russia on the idea of peaceful coexistence, Khrushchev said. good intentions, the Adenauer government should renounce pos- session of nuclear weapons and sign a peace treaty with Russia. Khrushchev referred to plans to equip the West German army with nuclear arms and the pres- ence in Germany of foreign troops equipped with atomic weapons as facts making it diffi- cult to reconcile Adenauer’s avowed support of disarmament —~—+- As proof of West Germany’s | Ni with deeds. By EDDY GILMORE PARIS (AP)—Four remarkable men—whose ages total 286 years —this weekend began a health- taxing climb to the summit that would stagger thousands of younger mortals. This unusual quartet of course: Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, wholl be 84 in 17 days; President Eisenhower, 70 next October; President de Gaulle, 70 next No- vember. And the baby of them all, Prime Minister Macmillan, 66 this coming February. In looks and action each belies his age. How do they stand the pace of tedious travel, rough, tough polit- ical negotiation, conducted in- doors and often under nerve-rack- SOMETHING IN COMMON The only thing their daily rou- tine seems to have in common is —early to bed and early to rise. All of them drink a little. Aden- auer likes German white wine and some of the headier vintages of France. And an occasional whisky. Eisenhower will take the occasional whisky and the wines of lunches and dinners. De Gaulle is partial to wine and an oc- casional cognac. Macmillan likes strong cigars with mellow port. Adenauer loathes smoking. Eisenhowec has abandoned it. de Gaulle hasn’t been seen smoking in years. But they all like to get to bed betwaen 10:30 and 11 o'clock ‘at Remarkable Ot Prepare For Summit ‘Leader’ In April: | Paris Is-Suggested For Series Opener The Western summit meeting also. produced the announcement that de Gaulle will visit the United States in April in advance of the East-West meeting. Speculation in Paris had cen- tred on April 25 as the i 7 starting date for the con- ference. Some diplomats believe, however, that Khrushchev will be given a choice of dates in late March. SWITCH SITES The choice of Paris, a non-new- tral city in the cold war, implies a Western idea of a series of ilar messages from the three Western leaders today. Copies went. off to the Soviet capital Moscow. A Western informant said the message was “‘very pol- ite.” Eisenhower made it clear Sun- day night he favors several sum- mit sessions with the Soviet Union. “The president feels it would be very difficult to solve all prob lems at one summit conference,” said Press Secretary James Hag erty. . ; ~Two—items—of—specifie. to Canada emerged from ence briefings. ’ First, it was announced that confer- Romania and Bulgaria. ; (Continued on page 5 Col. 8) Pension Plan To Be Probed “Old Men Two of them, Adenauer and Eisenhower, watch their food and eat lightly. De Gaulle and Mac- millan are fair trenchermen. j OUTDOOR RECREATION Ike plays golf: The rest don’t. Macmillan is fond of walking, but gets very little chance to do it. Three of them are married and the fourth, Adenauer, is twice widowed. ‘ Eisenhower, de Gaulle and Mac- millan have soldiered in two world wars. De Gaidile and Mac- millan each were wounded three times in the First World. War. Adenauer was imprisoned hy the Nazis. Eisenhower shouldered for four years the burden of the highest military command, Is there some inner strength that sustains these men in high office? One thing is certain—they give unselfishly of themselves. And each is.deeply religious. WHERE-TO-FIND-IT night and get up with the dawn.