Oe Oe SO we ete - GOOSE NEARLY COOKED IN S’SIDE Cecil Clow of Summerside holds the goose that wasn't cooked. However, if Summer- side firemen hadn't arrived on the scene as quickly as they did about 10 o'clock Christmas Eve it might have been a dif- ee : 3 “oe MONTAGUE — The WMS Aux- -iliary of Trinity United Churcn, see ete _ t Montague. meet‘at the home of Montague WMS Auxiliary Elects New Officers Slate ferent story. Sir Goose was the only living thing in the small barn owned by George Morri- for the auxiliary as possible, also ; i ae | By JOSEPH MacSWEEN EF i t egteere ent i E NATO’S ASSENT The 15-nation NATO minister- ial council met in Paris before the Western-Big Four confer- ence and then again afterwards giving assent to the summit e ' External Affairs Minister Howard Green of Canada was es ee Sake P > Ree ie : - ° for the first time—a Christmas week drama of death and res- cue. . Three fishermen, cast up by the sea which claimed their. peoples he visited their hope “for betterment of themselves and their children” and “their deep-seated hunger for peace in | freedom.” 5 PAGE Summerside 8031; Ajberton 68-2; Montague 97-2; Souris 32-3 1 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Sat, Dec. 26, 1959 3 | WEEK’S NEWS IN Bethlehem Peace On Earth tory Seen Dominating Christian World | minister and bishop. Bishop ;;MacDonald, who was affection- QUEEN’S GREETINGS Queen Elizabeth, whe ai 33 is expecting her third child | early in the new year, assured | the of the Common- | “Tf am particularly grateful to the many kind people all over the world who have sent me their good wishes at this time,” | | ment dredge. ee) py Marmoset monkey and hippopotamus. tery in Antigonish, N.S., over- looking the cathedral church he served as curate, rector, ad- ately known as Bishop John R., died Dec. 18 after a long illness. Halifax Shipyards Limited, hard hit by layoffs in recent months, received nearly $3,000,- 000 in federal works contracts during the week. The contracts called for the Dominion Steel and Coal Company subsidiary to build the hull for a new car ferry to ply between Prince Ed- ward Island and the mainland and to build a works depart- Shipyard officials said about King Hiram Preceptory Holds Annual Election At Bedeque The Shah of Iran and his new Queen the former Farah Diba, sit for photographs after their wedding in a Moslem ritual at BEDEQUE — The annual meet- ing of King Hiram Preceptory of | the Royal Black Knights of Ire- | land was held in the Orange lodge j at Central Bedeque Dec. 2ist, WP Lloyd Affleck presiding. At the conclusion of routine business reports from the retir- ing officers on the past -year’s work were heard. Past Worshipful 200 of 600 men laid off would be recalled when the projects are started. i cold when fire destroyed a four- storey tenement building on Place | Royale in the city’s oldest sector. QUEBEC’S WEEK In Montreal a messenger left Queen sai ja package wrapped to look like nat — ‘a plump Christmas turkey at pro-| NEHRU REJECTS the rights of smaller NA —< = | vincial police’ headquarters and it | members. = BRIEFS NO ACCIDENTS The RCMP reported a clean slate in Prince Edward Island as far as holiday traffic accidents were concerned. Automobile driv- ers appeared to be on their best behavior over the holiday and police are im hopes that we are able to report the same after the New Year celebrations. LOL HOLDS ANNUAL The annual meeting of King Edward Loyal Orange Lodge was held in their lodge room at Cen- tral Bedeque recently, and after the opening exercises were com- pleted, and general business over the following officers were elect- ed: W.M. Lioyd Affleck; D.M. Charles Henderson; Chaplain, A. B. MacFarlane; secording _ sec- retary, T. J. Inman; financial secretary and treasurer, Cyril MacFarlane; marshal, William Montgomery; 1st lecturer, A. Al- lison Profitt;"2nd Jecturer, Frank Jardine; 1st committeeman, Hec- tor Leard: 2nd committeeman~ Ernest Johnson; 3rd, George Murray. Professional Cards Chartered Accountants T. Earle Hickey & Co.‘ - *Yanadian Bank of Commerce Y i eg Building Summerside, P.E.I. Phone 2235 | Insurance R. E. Ellis & Son Limited Fire — Auto — Casualty 5 Summer St: Summerside Optometrists E. E. oe . Ds, Paolo ans 3287 Summer St. Summerside B. F. Hunter, R.O. nee Summerside, P.EI. Phone : Smallman’s Building Photographers The Read Studios D. W. SEARS Barristers George R: MacMahon, LL.B. a © t ’s) {Also Keusington on Ogle 255 Water St. Summerside A. B. Campbell, B.A., - ‘ LL.B 3818 for peace and that the light of > secretary, Lloyd Fraser; Christian citizen- ship secretary, Mrs. L. A. John- OTTAWA (CP) — Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker has offered ta discuss with Premier Sauve of Quebec disposal of some $25,000,- Christians (Continued from page 1) divert public attention from eco- | nomic woes. ~ At Quemoy, the Nationalist Chi- nese held island off the mainland, the Chinese Communists also broke the peace of the day by peppering the island with 53) shells But mostly it was a day for | Christian religious services, fam- | ily gatherings and feasting—even | behind the Iron Curtain. For the first time in several years, a Roman Catholic priest, Rev. Louis F. Dion of Worcester, Mass., conducted midnight mass for Moscow’s foreign residents of his faith. He was let into Russia | last winter. Episcopal services were held in the British Embassy in Moscow with a midnight mass. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, which rarely mentions re- ligious events, said special Christ- mas services were heavily at- tended in all Roman Catholic churches throughout Russia. Poland’s Communist press fell in step with the country’s ardent Christmas spirit and prifited tra- ditional holiday greetings to its readers. QUEEN ATTENDS CHURCH Queen Elizabeth, her family and a small legion of relatives attended Church in Sandri i where the Royal Family is spend- ing the holidays at the royal coun- try estate: The Queen, who is ex- year, recorded in advance her traditional Christmas message for broadcast to the Commonwealth. President Eisenhower, resting from a strenuous 11-nation trip, spent a quiet day in the White House. Sir Winston Churchill, having the day with his family at Chart- well—his country home southeast of London—was reported to have successfully thrown off a new round of illness. He is 85. Fifty-thousand persons cheered Pope John a§ he stepped onto the balcony outside St. Peter’s Basil- ica to deliver his Christmas bless- . celebrating mass inside the cath- edral for another 20,000. In a speech from the balcony, the pontiff expressed his hopes Phone S’side Ghockett & Gallant Bida S'side priate Christmas carols. Diefenbaker Offers Quebec Chance to Share Back Grants 000 in accumulated federal grants to Quebec universities. The offer, dependent upon reaching agreement on an alter- native plan to provide assistance to universities, was made in a letter Mr. Diefenbaker wrote Mr. Sauve. The letter was released Thursday. It was a reply to a letter Dec. 14 by Mr. Sauve asking for fur-' ther information on the alterna- tive plan announced by Mr. enbaker Dec. 9. At present, the federal govern- ment pays grants of $1.50 a head of population in each province, to be prorated among the universi- ties in each province on the basis of student population. QUEBEC ONLY HOLDOUT All provinces except Quebec have accepted the grants, distrib- uted through the Canadian Uni- versities Foundation, a private jbody made up of university heads. The foundation now holds in trust some $25,000,000—includ- ing $7,500,000 for 1959-60—as Que- bec’s share. In Quebec City, a provincial go ernment spokesman said the prime minister’s letter would be submitted soon to the Quebec cabinet. Speculation there was that the letter meets Quebec’s views on the main point that an adjustment in corporate income taxes could be made without the province being required apply additional revenues from the change directly to provincial uni- versity grants. The new proposal, apparently designed te satisfy Quebec ob- jections to federal university grants as an infringement on pro- vincial rights, would be in effect from next April 1 until March 31, 1962, when current federal-_provin- cial fiscal arrangements expire. } PLAN DESCRIBED Mr. Diefenbaker’s letter de- scribed the plan's application to Quebec this way: “If the legislature of Quebec should choose to raise the provin- cial corporation tax to 10 per cent or more of corporation profits, corporations liable thereto will be allowed an abatement of 10 per cent, instead of the present nine per cent, against the federal tax on corporation profits. “The grant of $1.50 per capita of population which the federal government has with the sanction of Parliament been providing for universities would cease so far as the universities of the province of Quebec are concerned. “The difference between the yield from the one per cent addi- tional tax abatement and the $1.50 per capita population of your province will be adjusted so that the fiscal position of the federal government remains unchanged.” Italy, with its scenic beauty and historic attractions, has about 15,500,000 foreiga tourists an- ually. i “All are determined that this | be an alliance of equals,” he said. “I think that this is pretty fundamental to maintaining the strength of the alliance.” DISARMAMENT ISSUE Green said in Paris and later in Ottawa that Canada was par- ticularly happy at a NATO decl- sion to accept an important role in disarmament. He told an Ottawa press con- ference there seems te be far more hope~ now’ for. an East- West disarmament agreement. Canada is a member of a 10- nation disarmament committee which, the five Western coun- tries have proposed, should get down to work about March 15 | at Geneva. HOLY LAND | An unusual peace in thé Holy Land of Christ’s birth allowed the greatest number of pilgrims in years to visit Bethlehem and attend midnight rites and Christmas morning services. But peace did not reign there —not entirely. An Israeli front- ier soldier died from gunfire | alent thn chores of Ge Gea af | “| Galilee. Israeli spokesmen said | the fire came from Syria. Meanwhile pilgrims flocked the dusty 11 miles from Jerus- alem to Bethlehem, a right ac- corded by an annual truce be- tween Jews and Arabs. The Israelis and Moslems set aside their years-long hostility in the divided holy city of Jer- usalem to allow the Christians to make their pilgrimage. The Christian travellers were greeted with carols sung in an open field believed to be - the place told by angels of ‘the tidings of great joy.” POPE’S MESSAGE Pope John said in a Christ- mas message that ‘“‘things and institutions—the ,state—are pri- marily for man; not man for them.”” He called for a true peace that respects the dignity of man. “There is not a state of war but neither is there peace,” said the pontiff. CHRISTMAS ARRIVALS Twenty European refugee families—each with one mem- ber suffering from tuberculo- sis—arrived in Halifax Christ- mas Eve under the new Cana- dian plan for admitting a lim- ited number of handicapped refugees. There were 71 men, women and children in the group, the second to arrive under the Ca- nadian formula for assisting tuber e ular immigrants from European refugee camps. SEA STORY Nova Scotia produced — not DIAL 4336 where shepherds were | DRUG STORE REDDIN BROS. only drug store OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY HOURS 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. 132 Richmond Street India’s Prime Minister Nehru | rejected parliamentary de- mands for “police action” to push Red Chinese troops from disputed Indian border areas. | Such action would- mean-‘‘an , indefinite war because we will never give in and they will | never give in.”’ Néhru also rejected a de- mand by Red Chinese Premier Chou En-lai for a Saturday meeting to discuss the dispute. Nehru advised Chou that pre- liminary discussions would be ry to make a top-level conference worthwhijlé- He charged that Chou’s latest letter to India _ contained “merely a reiteration of claims) to extensive areas in our ter- ritory.” HERE AND THERE Lord Halifax, 78, former Brit- ish foreign secretary, died in | York . . . Industrialist Alfried | Krupp offered to pay as much as $2,380,000—$1,190 to each per- | sen—to Jews forced to work in | Krupp factories by the Nazis . . . Peter Townsend, 4, former suitor of Princess Mar- garet, married Marie - Luce Jamagne, 20, in a civil cere- | | mony in Brussels .. . | Bronx Zoo in New York an- | 50 persons fled into 10-below-zero | The |; turned out to be a cool $1,000,000 | in stolen securities. ime messenger aidnt hang around to be thanked. Polce said the package contained 5,230 shares_and_bonds_ stolen nine | | months ago from a vault at J.W. Kilgour and Brothers Company, a furniture firm at Beauharnois, treal. | Director Hilaire Beauregard of provincial police said the bonds | were returned because they were | apparently too hot to handle. By} the time detectives got around to open the package, the messenger had vanished. The little German tanker Inka | left Montreal Dec. 20 and headed | for the Atlantic, closing the har- | bor for the 1959 shipping season. She carried a cargo of anti-freeze for Naples and Genoa and was the last scheduled departure. In Quebec City Tuesday some DEVELOPING | Your Film For 20 Years In Today — Out Tomerrew GARNHUM PHOTO STUDIO 135 Kent St. Ch’tewn | | nounced a couple of blessed | | events—the birth of a one-ounce Community Credit Union Open Membership @ Savings & Loans Insured @ Leans at Low Interest @ Office Open Daily *Russ Hunter, Treasurer Smaliman ° Bldg. 2nd Floor SUMMERSIDE HOWARD McINNIS| FOR SHOES McINNIS. FOR OVERSHOES McINNIS FOR RUBBERS McINNIS, _ FOR SLIPPERS McINNIS FOR VALUE McINNIS 175 QUEEN ST. OPEN Get A Cheque: or, ~ Cash» For Christmas? Why not get that extra pre- sent you couldn’t afford be- fore Christmas? . @ Watches @ Rings... : @ Jewellery 1 @ Cameras @ Handbags Happiness Is Our Business % $ > FY eweiienrs ir 121 Grafton St. Dial 4253 Happiness is our: Business One girl suctered slight burns but there were no major casual- ties. Three burly policemen smashed through a barricaded door in Montreal Tuesday and evicted ail- ing Constantin Spodinuk, 77; from the dingy, cold-water flat he had refused to vacate if a slum-clear- ance area. The flat was in a midtown arta under demolition for a low-rental housing project. The Ukraine-born spodinuk, an occupant for 18 Que., 20 miles southwest of Mon-| years, had been told to move in | & | 1957 and had ignored repeated no- tices since. Shah. He divorced the first two wives after they failed to bear a sop (AP Wirephote) Lemuel A. Burleigh, and Frank Quigley. é were served and a scoial time spent. the Shah's palace in Tehran. The 21-year-old commoner is the third wife of the 40-year-old RAILWAY FREIGHT re ee ee Wheat, iron ore and bituminous mae : “'coal made up nearly 27 per cent tion of the following officers; of total railway freight in Cam Worshipful Preceptor, Lloyd Af- ada in 1958. fleck, re-elected; Deputy Precep- | tor, Alexander A. Dawson; Cha-| Retisier and Treasurer. Tear SOURIS THERTRE Register and Treasurer, Theophi- lus J. Inman; ee | trar, Peter M. MacCauill; > Dec Lecturer, Cook Howatt: 2nd Lec-| Saturday 26th "Ma & Pa Kettle Back — turer, Frank Howatt; lst Censor, Cyril MacFarlane, 2nd Censor, ts On The Farm with | Russell Bell; 1st Standard Bearer, Asage S. Johnson; 2nd Standard Bearer James Higgins; Pursui- vant, Arnett Bell; Tyler Charles | Henderson. Committee members are: Heath Macquarrie,.MP; Stewart |Inman, William Montgomery, alae dab Marjorie Main Percy Kilbride ‘= Henderson CAMEO KENSINGTON ma 7:15 os 715 — 9: Matinee Saturday 1 p.m. “Ma And Pa Kettle at the Fair” Yes it’s an oldie but still funny. WIN $180 THE EVENING PATRIOT \ ASH ROSSWORD ONTEST Valuable cash prizes! Fun for the entire family! Re For The Holiday Season TUXEDOS # When the season takes a festive turn, your tuxede by by H&C adds se much te the eve ning’s pleasure ... cheose from the Island’s largest stock e+. every size—IN THE STORE ..- All accessories in- cluding, ¢ um m er- bunds, ties, shirts, shoes, hose. PHONE 8506 for carrier delivery or your nearest Guardian- Patriot office. - 2 FREE DELIVERY REGENT To-day (Sat.) 2-7 and 9:10 2— BIG HITS — 2 OLOR The Store For Men and Women Who Shop For Men ae >