:, :v-M ., .._ a.-. -...... Oyous C , .gr.., .7. .7. .. .-. A. .. 'r "r' ’r' "r' ’r' 8 The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. Dec. AUTOMOTIVE 26, 1962. NOTICES I Priest Gives Cars For Sale FOR SALE: 1959 METEOR coach. Good condition. Can be financed. Private sale. Price Lost I STRAYED FROM MY FARM at Mt. Albion. two young cat-I tie. black and white. heifer an $1000.00. Apply 270 Queen St., bull. Please notify Albert or phone 4-5613. Wood P.Q. BOX 4000 EMP' “VMENT RENTALS DIEI'ITIAN Apartments I TGIecommunicatlon TO LET: DELUXE HEATED '3 Technician apartment. three large rooms] Camp Hill Hospital. Halifax (university graduation and two years post internship experience required) 35160-55880 Defence (Navy) Halifax (at least four years recent ex- perience in telety'pe and elect- rical maintenance work) $4080- Information posters with fur- ther parti'ulars of residence and qualification requirements and application forms available at main Post Offices. National Employment Offices. or the I and bath. built in cupboardsi Continuous domestic h ot,’ water. Electric stove and gar-i age available if desired. Phone FOR RENT: MODERN NEwi bachelor apartment. In Park- dale. first floor. consisting of large bedsittlng room. mod-.f ern kitchen and bath. Hot‘ water heated. own thermostat. Completely furnished. Avail-: able after Christmas. Phone: 46547 ask for MacKay. Civil Service Commission. Ral- ston Building. 105 Hollis Street. Halifax. NS. where applications SERVICES should be filed. Teachers Wanted WANTED: TEACHER FOB. Damascus School. starting January 1963. 10 pupils. grades 1-7. 12 miles out of Saint John City. Apply Mrs. Lee Kallar. R.R. 4. Saint John. 8474902. I"'~'"‘ilAI\iD|SE Articles For Sale. ONE FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGER- ator for sale. used less than two months. Owner moved. Price $175.00. was $222.95. Con- tact Lloyd Clark, Borden or Mrs. Crane 4-5997. Articles Wanted WANTED Top prices paid for —- ale bot- tles. scrap iron. copper. brass. batteries. hides. wool. MAURICE BLOCK WE SPECIALIZE in ElectrIcaI Wiring Jobs -- Large or small . Lennon Air Conditioning . Refrigeration Sales - rvice . Appliance Repair—all types . Motors Rewound—repaired Oil Burner and dd an Strather Lightning Rod- Sales and Service DeLAVAL DAIRY EQUIPMENT Room To Aid Broadcasting BETHLEHEM (AP) —— Father Claudio gave up his sparsely- furnished room Tuesday to per- mit Christians arounn the world to listen to Christmas religiohs services from Chirst's birth- lace. Father Clahdi-o. a Franciscan monk. has a cell in the Terra Sancta Monastery which ad- joins the Church of the Nativv ity. It was taken over by the Jordanian broadcasting service to relay Christmas services from the church around the world. while the monk himself participated in religious rites mm the church. Christmas came to the Holy Land with ancient pomp and pageantry. Beneath the Church of the Nativity. In the grotto where Christ was born. Roman Patriarch Alberto GorI N-en- acted the scene by lifting from the cold floor a doll represent- ing the Christ Child and plac- ing it in a manager crib. Bethlehem church bells pealed. A great electric star above the. church symbolized the ancient Star of Bethlehem. The church was jammed with pilgrims from around the 5 1 Unlike previous years there were no incidents at the holy shrine of Christianity. In recent years bad feeling among Roman Catholic. Greek and Armenian rites which share jurisdiction over the church has even le to blows. Immediately after the Roman Catholic ceremonies. ck priests — who celebrate their Christmas Jan. 7—entered the grotto bearing flickering can- dies and smouldering incense for purification ceremonies. OUT OUR WAY 1"6U6"! PUT TWO 5 IN WALNUT MY HEEK5 LOOK FAT. AN' I. CAN‘T- ISET T 7.. m "7 a Remus-norm, an...“ \T . \\\\\_\\\\\\ / § z/n////'////A.a‘j %/ \ Ewan”, " M! NOTICES NOTICES Tickets on Q.C.H.S. Music by The Downtowners $6.00 per couple sale at—Foster’s Drug, Rendezvous, Stead’s Pharmacy. NEW YEAR’S EVE DANCE For Reservations Dial 4-7I90 Old Spain, PALMER ELECTRIC LTD. DIAL 4.8543 CO. LTD. 158 Kent St. Opp. Eatons Announcements Phone 4—9522 WANTED ALE BOTTLES CITY & QUEENS ADELLA‘S clearing all win- ter millinery at greatly reduced prices. DANCE Corran Bau hall.I Thursday, December 27th. Phone 4-8595 NOTICES Pets. Supplies FOX TERRIERS: ATTENTION parents: delightful s m o o t h coats. pleasant lasting gifts. reasonable. Westmayne Ken- nels, Westcheater, N.S. Guardian - Patriot CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Mondays through Fridays 8.30 AM. until 5 PM. Sat. till I2 noon. Phone Charlottetown 4-8506 Consult the list of telephones It the for. of Classified page for the Branch office serving your area. WORD ADVERTISEMENTS 24 word house num are charged ll one word. various groups of numbers count separately. Only Standard Dictionary Abbreviations are acceptable. Cash Rate Insertion per word 4c, 3 consecutive inur- tions 31"“ per word, 6 consecutive Insertions 3c per word 10 per cent additional charge on time so counts If not paid within 7 days of lost insertion date. ANNOUNCEMENTS 5c per weld. 10 d minimum char e. SPECIAL NOTICES Births, Deaths Engagements, $1.75. ditlonsl each name printed 10c. In memorioml SI. 5 Additional Obituary noi':os will be charged $1.50 for the first 25 words 3c per word thereafter. CLASSIFIED DISPLAYS I Insertion per column Inch SI 78, 3 consecutive Insertions. per inch $158. 6 consecu- Ad_ We are wishing today. as we _ er. sister Elsie and hrOther-in- tivo Insertions par Inch 1.43. (Legal tender notices, $2.24 perl c .. l Your Guardian Patriot Classifiodl Ad appears in both newspapers. Advertisements ordered on skip- dato schedule will be charged the one-time on each insertion ordered. Advertisers are requested to read their advertisement the first day It appears and to call the Classified Department immediater In tho case of any mistake, on this newspaper In only responsible for one day's Incor- rect publication or for the Incorrect portion only of a classified display advertisement. Adimtments on Classified Advertise- Ing Accounts must be made within the firm 7 day; of billing date. tultyoodooweufytoenunhw- .d. JENKle —— The death occur- -dsy aboard a homeword-botmd Births, Deaths Marriages BIRTHS GARRETT —~ Born to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Garrett. at the Charlottetown Hospital. on Dec. 13th, 1962. a son. Arthur Donald. 7 lbs. 8 013. IN MEMORIAM GAUTHIER —— In loving mem- ory of Francis Gauthier, w h 0 ed D 9 Always remembered. by moth- er. sisters and brothers MASTERS — In loving memory of my uncle Samuel Robert Masters who departed this life on December 23rd. 1959. It only takes a little space To ' w much we miss you But it will take the rest of our lives To forget the day we lost you. . Always remembered by his niece Jean MacNoill. SAUNDERS — In loving mem- ory of our dear sister had daughter Mrs. Manetta E. Saunders who passed away December 23rd. 960. wished before That God could have spared you a few years more. Always remembered by moth- law Bill. SAUNDERS —— In loving mem- ory of our mother Mrs. Mar- etta E. Saunders who depart- ed this life December 23rd. 1960. Two years dear mom since you left us Yet your presence seems ever so near As our memories recalls preci- oments 4 P.Q. Boys Are Drowned QUEBEC (CPL—The govern- ment ice - breaker Montcalm uesday abandoned the search for four boys believed to have drowned while fishing through the ice on the St. Lawrence River. The Department of Trans- .port‘s signal service which co- ordinated the search activities of the ice-breaker. helicopters and search parties said it believed the boys' on no dropped through the ice into the 3 < The boys. ranging age from 12 to 15. started fishing Sunday night off Lotbiniere. 40 miles upstream from Quebec City. No trace of the boys or cabin has yet been spotted by any of the search teams. The presumed victims were identified by po- lice as Fernand and Jacques Letellier and Roland and Gilles Lemay. all of Lotbiniere. ‘ FREE ESTIMATE ' NO OBLIGATION NOW IS THE TIME! INSULATION BLOWING ALL WORK GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES . . . . . TERMS TO SUIT PHONE COLLECT -— “From anywhere on P.E.I." Charlottetown 894-4560 — Summerside 436-3419 MONARCH ROOFING & INSULATION CO. JAMES 0. STEWART -- 131 North River Rd. “Specialists in all types of Siding & Insuiatjon” Ization Of OBITUARY Inserted by friends and rela- lives as a tribute to the deceas- ed. RONALD MUBDOCK GILLIS The death of Ronald Murdock Gillis occurred in Summerside suddenly on November 11th, 1962. at the home of his sister Mrs. Walter Coulson. Mr. Gillis was born In Glen Martin on February 2nd. 1920. a son of Mrs. Katie L. Gillis and the late Malcolm Gillis. He served with the Royal Can- adian Airforce. before, during and after the Second World War. He went overseas early in the war with the. 110th A.C. Squad- r on. Left to mourn are his wife. residing In Moncton. his mother. Mrs. Katie L. Gillis. two sisters. Lena Anne. Mrs. Walter Coul- son. Summerside and Marion. Mrs. Angus MacDonald. Cale- donia. The funeral service was held at the Compton Funeral Home and interment was at the Cole- donia Presbyterian Church cemete . . At the funeral home the pall- bearers were Archle ilacPher- son. Alan Cameron. Freeman Whiteway. Angus MacDonald. Roy Johnson and Wally Coulson. At Caledonia the pallbearers were Chester Martin. Alan Cameron. Archie MacPherson. John N. MacPherson. Wilfred o 5 0f the day's that you spent with us ere. Though your smile Is gone for- ever And your hand we cannot touch Still we have so many memories Of the one we loved so much. Ever remembered by children Grace. Betty and George. DOLLAR —- In loving memory of Brenton Dollar wh) passed away December 26th. 1961. Lovineg remembered by his wife Idy and Miriam. red in Gonic, New Ham :hire. Dec. 19th. 1982. of Ivan Jen- kins. age 54 years. husband of former Minnie Burkc. For- tupe Bridge. P.E.l. BALLET STAR MOURNS PANAMA CITY (Reuters)— British ballerina Margot Fon- wos among mourners Mon- day of funeral services for her father-4134". former president Bermodio Arias. who died Sun- MacDonal-d and Charles Walk- l er. 3 Members of the Summerside ; Legion attended the funeral ser- I vice and members of the Mon- tague Legion attended the com- mital service. CARD OF THANKS I The family of the late Ronald M. Gillis express sincere thanks to Rev. Donald MacKIlv. Rev. Carl Currie. the Compton Fu- neral Home. Summersldc Leg- ion. Montague Legion. the choir. and those who attended the fu- neral service In Summersidc and burial service at Caledonia. Also those who helped In any way during our recent bereavement. _.______________ TDPS WITH TEENS EDINBURGH (CPI »— A re- cent survey of the reading tastes of New York teenagers showed three of the five most popular books were by British a II t h o r I: They were William Golding'r Lord of the Flies. T. If. White's Once and Future King and E M. Forster's Pu- between Boston and mi. sage to India. I "" "tam. ,. .mmkb-‘A Beef Meeting sponsored by— Beef Producers Committee and P.E.I. Federation of Agriculture CATTLEMEN’S MEETING Thursday. Dec. 27, I962—8:00 P.M. MONTGOMERY HALL This meeting is called to complete the organ- Producers and to consider the work Of the committee. Good attendance will mean a good start for the new organization. ANNUAL MEETING ASSOCIATION will be held In the Board Room PROVINCIAL P.E.I. JERSEY BREEDERS' DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE FRIDAY, DEC. 28th. 1.30 P.M. I965 JERSEY FUTURITY All entries for must be declared at this meeting Signed: Reginald Clark, Secretary thereto. Secretary L.S. Hunter NOTICE Special General Meeting of Share- holders of Dundas Dairying Compon Ltd.. will be held in (Bridgetown Halli on December 28. I962, at I.30 P.M. for the purpose of passing a resolution for the winding up of the Company and dealing/with other matters pertaining President William Hunter "r r ~r -r'-‘r"‘r"r v'r' ' . i s .=.» SOVIET COSMONAUTS An- drian Nikolayev (left) and Pavel Popovich hug after land- ing their space ships In Rus- IH 3‘. . .._.. A... 4‘ ~ sin in August. 'I‘heir record dual orbital flights highlighted a year of major advances in space travel. Nikolayev circled “‘3. > s. ‘. the earth 64 times and Popov vlch 25 times. This photo is from Toss. the Soviet agency. (CP from AP) Important Year In Space Launched By John Glenn By CARMAN CUMMING Canadian Press Staff Writer A man. commented one U.S. space official. “Is a heck of a lot better than a black box." The man he referred to was John H. Glenn. 40-year-old U.S. Marine Corps colonel and first American to orbit the earth. In five hours last Feb. 20 he cir- cled the globe three times and returned for a gentle landing In the Atlantic off The Baha- mas. He also started a year of space exploration that was to see fourlmore men—two Rus- sians and two Americans— make. orbital flights and prove that man could do much more than a black box: a year which saw vital If less dramatic ad- vances In the field of scientific and communications satellites. Glenn's flight was overshad- owed by longer Russian space voyages both before and after his. But for the United States. which had managed only two suborital space flights in the previous year while Russia made one-orbit and 17-orbit flights. it marked the end of the drought. The flight. first on which the world was able to keep in- formed from liftoff to landing, had Its bad moments. For the control centre at Cape Canaveral. the worst came when a warning light in- Icated—erroneously —- that the ceramic heat shield on Glenn's capsule had become unlatched. Without it. the astronaut could not have survived re-entry Into the atmosphere. SPACE FIREFLIES ~ There was an element of hu- mor. 00. Icon afterward related a incident in a "debriefing" Inter- view with a space agency psy- chiatrist. He was telling of the thousands of luminous “firefly” specks that appeared each of the three times he watched the sun rse. ' "What did they say. John?" the psychiatrist asked. hree months later. on May 24. Glenn‘s flight was matched by a similar trip by Lt.-Cmdr. M. Scott Carpenter. But here the drama not In was so much the flight as In the landing. when Carpenter overshot the designated area In the Atlantic and was out of touc :- sev- eral tense minutes until a plane spotted him riding In a rubber raft. Russia’s major achievement began A 11. when Major Andrlan Nikolaycv was rock- eted aloft In the spaceship Vostok III. A day later. when PROFESSIONAL CARDS Architects Peter A. McNeil 126 Richmond St. PO Box 513 Architect PHONE 894-4872 La‘urie A. (ioles Gx‘KeIth Pickard W 98 mm mm “W”: . r. o. lo: a n onu- It Charlottetown manna-o... Melt-ill! Bummer-side Melt]. mam. 9.8.1. , Phone m1. - “I. we wand was waiting for his It was astonished by . vet Popovich. had been launched into orbit within sight of his fellow cosmout. Nikolaer remained In space almost four full days, circling the earth at times and cover- ing more than 1,800.!!!) miles— equat to three return trips to the moon. s com The fifth space flight of the year—a six-orbit junket by U.S. mman er Walter Schirra. came Oct. 3. Compared with the earlier U.S. flights. this one had almost the atmosphere a milk run. Schirra travel- 160.000 miles between breakfast In Cape Canaveral and dinner on an aircraft car- rier In the Pacific. :16 5—.- W communications was taken on July 10. when the U.S. Telstar satellite was launched and al- most immediately put to work relaying television and tele- phone messages across the At- was launched in mi of space exploration in Septem- ber when its 320-pound Alouette satellite — first ever designed and built by a country other than the U.S. or Russia—was launched by an American roc from a California base. It was sent Into a nearly circu- lar-polar orbit some 600 miles high to make a study of the ionosphere. f the dozens of other space- craft sent aloft during the year. two of the most spectacular “a. 5... A major step ahead in space) lantic. A similar Relay satellite: ‘ r. Canada moved Into the world! ""295 new 009199.!!!"- ‘by the Russians and towards Venus by the Americans. The 447 . pound Mariner sent up by the U.S. Aug. completed its 34.000.000 - ie. voyage to the vicinity of Venus Dec. 14. Russia’s Mars I craft. launched Nov. 1. Weighed al- most a ton and was expected to take seven months or more to reach the area of Mars. II. 27. No Decision Is Male Yet, MIAMI. yFIa. (AP) — Were there any 'turnooats among the Cuban invasion prisoners? Many remember prison- ers to Korea who collaborated In one way or another’ with the Communists. But judging from comments of returned Cuban prisoners themselves. there was no such collaboration in tho jails where the invasion prison- ers were held for 20 months. “We stuck together." said Raoul Arango Kindlain. “We kept each other's morale up." Said Luis Entrialgo: “I never heard of a single man who had anything to do with the Commu- nlsts." Apparently the Communists made no serious effort to con- vert any prisoners. "They didn't attack us physi- cally." said Humberto Sanchez. “The worked on our minds. to humiliate and upset us." Edgardo Buttarl said this In. cluded changing meal hours widely from day to day. and occasionally dousing naked pris- oners with cold water and toss- ing them back Into their cells In the middle of the night. An effort to separate the men into income groups. with privi. leges for the lowest - income en. ed. "We refused to accept any» thing for one group, that wouldn’t be given to all." said Buttari. Castro helped drive the men closer together by lumping ihcm as “yellow worms." and Issu- Ing them all yellow cotton shirts to wear. The men adopted them as a symbol of opposition. Outer Mongolian Premier Praises Russian Policy PEKING (Reuters) — Outer Mongolian Premier Yum- zhagln T s o d e n b sl Tuesday praised R u s s I a‘s policy peaceful coexistence In a speech before Chinese Communist Pre- mier Chou en-Lai. Diplomatic observers here said Tsedenbal’s speech was a forceful reaffirmation of Outer Mongolla's support for the So- viet attitude to international problems that has been c a lenged by China. Tsedenbal spoke at a banquet given in his honor by Chou. The Mongolian leader was here for the signing tomorrow of a treaty fixing the 2.500-mlle border be- tween his state and China, The observers ~said the main purpose in signing the treaty at this time was to put pressure on India to negotiate Its border dispute with China. Former U.S. Senator Dies BURLINGTON. Vt. (AP) ‘Warren R. Austin. 85. former U.S. senator and United Na- tions ambasador died Tuesday at his home. Austin had been health for some time. He served in the U.S. Senate from 1932 until he was pointed chief U.S. delegatc to the United Nations by President Truman In 1946. In the UN. he ridiculed Soviet Russia. saying it carried on aggression while talking peace. He frequently took part in UN debates and once, looking directly at Soviet delegate in poor M '6 s Completion of the treaty was announced Sunday night but de- tails have remained secret. Outer Mongolia. until 1921 a part of the Chinese empire, forms a buffer state between China and Russia. RUSSIAN A-TEST UPPSALA. Sweden (APR Russia set off another atmos- pheric nuclear test In the Novaya Zemlya area on Christ- mas Day. the. Uppsala Unlvcr- sity's scismological Institute rc- ported. The Institute estimated the strength of the blast at 11 mcgatons. equivalent to 11.000.- 000 tons of TNT. It was the 24th test of the Soviet Union's cur- rent series. ._— Jacob A. Malik accused him of trying to folst the “big lie" on the Security Cguncll. “WWII” Geofnysoo.ConoII-'sm lud.condtnmu00mmte- mamhm‘k' notional caching director. “stimulated!- MMMM.“ “WE'LMIIU "infill. thmfl*