v { Actress I, mu Monday “lg-hi long enough .14 for pictures and told a mob of . . reporters her plans for the Christ- , mas season with her new bus. a bard, Swedish businessman Lars ‘ Schmidt. ; mice-times-married . man to break the publicity black. g ~ on; the elusive couple had main- tained since they married getl‘etly in London Sunday. I Bergman posed briefly for photo—‘- “3 . graphei‘l outside their country ' home here. She was wearing a _ lambskin jacket and black slacks. : Garbo when she said she married ’ H Schmidt ~ wanted to be alone." grin .-i Iii; at? his: :1 I, in A Honeymoon In Southern France For Ingrid Bergman CHOISEL, France (Reuters‘t.— Ingrld Bergman stood liuSSIIQanntig‘lililchegpe here with three of ..rom her Italian Rossel girls, six. After their marria e ‘ Bergman and Schmidt fglew London to Paris and then came to this village in southern France. Call Labrador Rail Tenders MOtNiTlRiEAL tracts are being she and her rid Christmas her children _ second marriage to “film producer Roberto lini—Robertino. 8, and twin Isabella and Ingrid, aged It took Schmidt to persuade the NLSS Ber. At the urging of Schmidt, Miss lC‘P)—.Initial con- “This is our home," she told ' let in connection "reporters who clustered around with the con t. . .. the grounds. She echoed the Lake Railmiailrléitfion by Wabush classic lines of actress Greta ‘ ' Dany Limited of a railway into the W abush Lake area of Laibrador, it was aiiErliountced Monday. ngineers and surveyors are expected to begin work shortly. It is expected that the railroad secretly “because we “But it doesn't seem to work out that way.” she added. A ammnm'snmmmm andgoodcheetncdnisjoyomseason‘ mdthroughomanewYear.Mayyomholiday ' amebemmyaadbrighgnndmyf ~ 5. R. JOHNSTON LTD." St. Peters Road Dial 3548 \ l i Merry Christmasé Everyone! -/ if [STERNS LIMITED “Where Cleaning 15 An Art” llflllDllI llllSlIlS en's wishing you holiday season [low with all the and things n: help to make It lives Nightcl- MAPLE LEAF BAKERY Dial 8432 115 Kent Street Is Profitable SPRINGHIIJL. NS. ( coal miner Doug .lewkes trip to Toronto, where has a job waiting. A national soft drink tio-n at $75 a week. The he could think about w Miner’s Thirst .‘P «Ex— pretty blonde wife leave herel “The.” [‘11 {1“- Jan. 2 on an apartmenchunting.things tip here. They're even fered Jewkes a warehouse posi— old miner gave the company na— tional publicity wvheh he said all beverage and ice cream while trapped 81/2 days in the Cumber- land .Vo 8 min where Wt men; mick}: Papal Succession Was Top News Story Of I958 will stay in Toronto a hook next! month at the company“. PXpenSel i\\llll(‘ he tries to find an apart- ‘mctit. By THE CANADIAN PRESS i The Papal succession was the and l’alll‘anll‘y implicit in the world‘s top news story of 19533dralh Oct. 8 of Pius XII and in the opinion of Canadian news- PIN‘UO" Ot‘l- % of 30h“ XXI” paper men. ipullcd men‘s thoughts from poli— jtics, science and threats of war. their 16-year-old son will have a: Top Canadian story was the better future in Toronto. He is epic of Spi‘inghill, the Oct. 25 their only child. lmine upheaval that killed 75 and his back to clean .lewkes, going to furnish me with pocket l money." firm of-l Jewkes said he never wants to return to coal mining. GLAD TO LEAVE "They could never get me in- 37-year- side a pit again.“ he said. “I'll “I want to go but I'm a little‘men. but from which 19 came as their be glad to get out of here. scared. I was born in Springhill out alive days after hope was "Even with another industry and now we're leaving all our gone. here I think I’d go. The main friends and family. i All 60 who voted in a Cana- will be 42 miles long and Labrador Railway. pany, a subsidiary of ifoundland government. with the Quebec North Shore and W'a‘bush Lake Railway Com- Iron Company Limited of Cleve- land, Ohio, has been granted a railway franchise by the New— thing is that this job is perma- nent." ’ Jewkes and more than 800 other miners were left without. work when the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation shut down, the No. 2 mine for safety reasons 5 after the October bump. It was the town‘s last major industry. June Jewkes said she thinks “But I think it will give my dian Press poll of telegraph edi' connect boy a better chance.” tors had the death and election Wabush CHRISTMAS! ‘ 3..., ‘ amt, thank I you] 3? for your ‘ 'ctblessedmanory. ‘myhlnessaleof yellishnasenterths heartsotmnkind. Immune“ oilbewith 180 Queen St. the lllorlil Asonflidlulym c a F FOODLAND‘ mes.choddlb Charlottetown Found one w— w— IF— IF— iF—nm. THEN— Were filled If someone In dreams One tired shopper Because of a friendly experience here . . . One pair of eyes Because our store was a pleasing sight . . . I Seagaii'sehilf’piielpadcibage we helped on its way . . If one child believes i‘ Because our Santa proved that they do . . . - I! one single heart Was softened and won Merry Christmas To One and All! " CANADIAN LEGION Charlottetown Branch President: 8. W. Lend note of cheer Charlottetown Branch President: Wilfred J. Driscoll with delight afar coming true The blend of reverence. sorrow‘ ammu- fightmmendshtpsmwmmsmqhhot goodeheerisabroadhuhuhnmh himthmaan mhwmhtm t 7- opeatmdnam’ ' mmbwmtsmmbpu in the Vatican among their choices of the year's six greatest news stories. It oiitiianked the July 14 Iraqi coup, which touched off a new Middle East crisis, emergency of Gen. de Gaiille as ruler of France. Russian and American moon-shoots. the Que- moy shelling, and Nikolai Bul- ganin's ousting from the ruling group in Russia. All 60 had Sprinhill among their Canadian choices. mostly at the top. Some- picked it also as a world story. Next in line was the Progressive Conservative sweep March 31. The Vancouver Second Narrows bridge collapse June 13 with 18 dead edged out Princess Margaret's summer visit for third place, and the Nov. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS. our gifts, “a thousand and one" . . . l Worthwhile were the efforts . I Of all our store crew ‘ Because we pleased someone i Who might have been you. President: William Hayward CANADIAN TIRE CORPORATION LIMITED STEWART & MacRAE Proprietors Phone 8569 THE CH’TOWN BOARD OF TRADE The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed, Dec. 24. 1958 15 17 freight rat: increa-se—~averting a rail strike —— was fifth, out-t ranking the Sommers trial in Vancouver. The selection-s: World: 1. Pope Pius dics. Pope John elected; 2. Middle Ealstern crisis: 3. France picks de Gaulle; 4. Space race; 5. Quemoy; 6. Khrushchev ousts Bulganin. Canadian: 1. Springbill: 2. elec— tion; 3. Vancouver bridge col— lapse; 4. Princess Margaret's visit; 5. Freight rate increase; 6. Sommers trial. Other worldstories rated high in news impact included the Dec. 1 Chicago. school fire, the August voyage of the Nautis under bribery In The Spirit of Christmas . . . ., I ED THEIR CHRISTMAS, THE LIONS CLUB Charlottetown Branch President: Louis B. Bagnall THE ROTARY CLUB Charlottetown Branch President: Russell E. Sellers THE MAIN BRACE CLUB Charlottetown, P.E.I. President: Emmett 00on Best Wishes To One and All in 1959 TILE CHARLOTTETOVVN OR- GANIZATIONS, LISTED ON. THIS PAGE, JOIN IN EXTEND- ING THEIR GRATITUDE TO A LL THOSE CITIZENS OF THIS CITY, AND DISTRICT. ’WHO, IN ANY WAY SUPPORT- INC 1958. THE GENEROUS RE- SPONSE ACCORDED THESE EFFORTS WILL REKINDLE DETERiinNATION TO PUT FORTH A, GREATER ENDEAV- OUR THAN EVER BEFORE TO HELP THOSE IN DURING 1959. 'AT THIS ENCHANTING 'YULE- .TIDE SEASON MAY ALL: YOUR FON'DEST HOPES AND. DREAMS COME TRUE 'AT COMING YEAR Bnmo YOU HEALTH AND PROSPERITY. . polar ice. the Demacrus' sweep of the US. ot’year elections, Boris Pasternak‘a forced “ejec- tion of the Nobel Prize. renewad integration troubles in the South, and the Russian attempt to oust the West from Berlin. On the Canadian scene stories rated just under the six chosen included Whitiby’s winning of the world hockey title, the Kelloc-k report and subsequent CPR rail strike, the Montreal newspaper Le Devoir's charges about gas distribution in Quebec, the ot- tawa gas blast that destroyed: ibuilding Oct. 25, and the Mont- real apartment house fire Nov. 9 in which 16 died. PROJECTS DUR- NEED. m D MAY THE fl.<m;\e4- molten. .r- «a ~:: nfr .« - 1w: aAiuwt “mm .-,.m....—u annearawm' «M- .. «4.: ub' " (pH-I- .q. 51in AU 5 :-o