+ Buyer Ads. ~ TELEPHONE 8506 meets seller with Guardian Watt. Dial 8506 ask for classified ad taker, for quick results. > - VOL. LXXII NO. 267 - The infant son of Premier and Mrs. Duff Roblin of Mani- toba is shown with his parents, posing for his first pictures for public release. Siephen Andr-w Roblin, born Oct. 18, now weighs 13% pounds and bears a strong resemblance to his father. The premier says: “He hasn't wak- ened once!"’ Mrs. Roblin says the baby sometimes seems to have the lungs for pol'tics 3 Shipwrecked Fishermen Rescued From Lonely Isle SHELBURNE, N.S. Three shipwrecked fisher men/the harbor entrance. were rescued from a lonely Nova, Scotia » It was snowing and blowing is and .Wednesday after,and dark and they could peer but not in time. The wind carri (CP) '__1 they headed “past the island at, said they suddenly saw rocks |ahead and cried to the skipper. Enslow turned the wheel hard | ed Propo i he Guardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1959 ( Post Office Iran's For Announces Rate Hikes OTTAWA (CP) — The post off department ‘announced Wednes- day increases in the selling price stamped envelopes, post cards, post bands and stamp rolls. The department said the in- Greases, effective Jan. 1, are due to higher manufacturing_ costs. The increases do not affect the selling price of reply po® cards which remain at $4.60 for 100 cards. : Price of stamped envelopes A ba] j | | Ottawa Boy | | Suggested Fighter Of Year Choice. OTTAWA (CP)— g Marshall); whose great love is sport, particu- whose life hung im the balance} larly football, They were from after he broke his neck while| Johnny Bright, Roger Nel-on and measuring 6'2 by 3% inches will; water-skiing last summer, is go-| Russ Jackson, winners of the na- go up 12 cents a 100, to $2.40| ing homedfrom hospital for Christ-| tional player-awards, The. same from $2.28 for envelopes bearing mas. two - cent postage, to $4.40 from | $4.22 for envelopes bearinz three-| before his 18th birthday and Doug cent postage, and to $5.40 from| was not expected to live. He sur- day, the boy, helped by artificial The accident occurred the day | aids, walked 40 steps. Big Four referee Ray Boucher, who also is. chief of Ottawa high POLICE CARS ARE TICKETED MONTREAL (CP) — Mont- real's zealous policemen are slapping parking tickets on each others’ cars again. A special constable on traffic duty said he ‘was forced to double-park Tuesday while in- vestigating three or four other ble - parked vehicles in the des Neiges district. He left his vehicle to search for the offenders and returned to find a $5 ticket on his own windshield. WEATHER Clear with a few cloudy intervals, north- west winds 15, lighter in evening. Low- high at Charlottetown 15 and 20. 20 PAGES s Forces Are Alerted s Iraqi Mass On Border _ i’ e 5 Armored Brigades Are Mounting Threat By JOSEPH E. DYNAN “TEHRAN, Iran (AP)—All lran- country’s chief economic asset, 4 The ‘Shatt al Arab, forming. the ian armed forces were placed on| boundary for 50 of its 120 miles, the alert Wednesday after Pre-|is formed by the union of the mier, Abdel Karim Kassem of} Tigris and Euphrates in a y Iraq was reported concentrating} area northwest of Basra, chiel five armored brigades close i Iran’s southwestern border. $5.23 for envelopes bearing five-|vived an operation The private cars? They had Army, air and naval forces re- pute flared up last week whem cent postage. ENVELOPES UP Stam Scnvelopes measuring 9% by 4% “Inches also will go up by 12 cents a 100, to $2.56 from $2.44 for envelopes with two-cent postage. to $4.56 from $4.44 for envelopes with four-cent postage, and to $3.56 from $5.44 for en- velopes with five-cent postage. The price of post bands — used mainly in mailing such printed matter as newspapers—will go up 10 cents*a 109, to $1.50 from $1.40 for post. bands bearing one - cent postage. pital, but examination indicated he might never move again. Skil- jful surgery apd exp barely. kepty4imn alive But therapy and dozged cour- age, plus the steadfast k a host of friends, has restored a measure of life to his limbs and rebuilt the muscles in his nek, He will return to hospital the d |after Christmas for further treat- ment. AWARD WINNERS WRITE | After the Grey Cup game Nov. ! 28 friends returned from Teronto ‘with three letters for Doug, @ Men Of Goodwill # ¥ Said Peace Hope By FRANK BRUTTO VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope John declared Wednesday that “only men of goodwill’ can lead the world to a true peace that respects the dignity of man. In his Christmas message broadcast to the worid, the Pope said that “‘the road to Bethlehem truly marks the right approach to that peace which is on the lips. in the eager desires, in the hearts of all.” But, said the 78-year-old su- preme ruler of the Roman Catho- lic Church, such a peace has not yet been achieved. “There is not a state of ‘war, but. neither is there peace,” he said. ‘In the world of today, how miany roads of peace have been sed and imposed?” facing death from the sea and/only a few “yards ahead. They! (Cniinued on Page 2, Col 6) |CRITICIZES COMMUNISM icy cold and ‘seeing two of their shipmates swept to their doom. Captain Joseph Erslow, 58, and) fisherman , Luke Berringer, 53, | were washed overboard after En- slow’s 56 - foot fishing boat Ray- Ola-K crashed onto the rocks off MacNutt’s Island at the mouth of Shelburne harbor in a blizzard. Hector Williams, 38, Jofin Guy, about 28, and Rayburn Zinck, 40, were washed ahore with the wreckage. They waded through water up the Island. They spent the night, soaked te the skin and half - frozen, huddled in the shelter of some trees. Res- cuers found them there early Wednesday. It was another story of tragedy in the Nova Scotia fishing fleet, only more painful because it, came almost on the eve of Christ- mas. | The Ray - Ola - K was home- bound for Shelburne, near Nova Scctia’s southwest tip, after a two - day trip to the fishing grounds. She ran into a snowy) ga'e Tuesday afternoon. At home Mrs. Enslow prepared | her husband's supper and| watched the gathering storm. She)- thought he might be late: All the other boats came in but there was no sign of the Ray-Ola-K. The survivors said two crew were on watch, with Gartcimn T--'-w ot the wheel. as to their waists and turns from a Union Rejection Hinted WASHINGTON (AP)—Early re- David J. McDonald said As McDonald told this to re- WHERE-TO-FiND-IT Announcements, notices . 18 Births, deaths, etc., .. 2, 18 Classified section .... 18, 19. Comics, features ........ 17 Charlottetown news ...... 5 Church, notices ............ 2 Editorials .......... juased Finance, markets .......: 19 Island news ...... hvcent: eon Ge cS. ns sss, inane Women’s page. 6, 7 Of Steel Industry's Bid tions board announced plans to some 600,000 steel hands Jan. 1l- 13. * | = poll. among! conduct an official secret ballot | climbed a cliff to reach safety on steel workers pointio a one-sided vote on the industry offer among! jrejection of the ‘steel industry's last settlement offer, union presi- dent Wednesday. This government poll will come | eeks before expiration | © | porters, the national labor rela- on “Spear cooling off "eu | That truce was ordered by a fed- ‘eral court and Nov. 7 it halted. a crippling steel strike that had ‘lasted 116 days. The union will be free to walk out again Jan. 26. unless a settlement is reached. Union and management bar- gaining teams held another fruit- less session with federal media- tors Wednesday Further such talks were put off until Sunday, the day company-by-company ne- gotiations will get started here and across the country in re- sponse to a union demand. F. Finnegan said he detected no this week—‘‘there hasn't side.” i ig & ait Chief federal mediator Joseph | In an obvious criticism of the Communist way of life, although he did not mention communism by name, the Pope said that so- cial peace ‘‘is solidly based on the mutual and reciprocal respect NEW CHAPLAIN Group Captain Frank W. MacLean of Trenton, N.S, has been chosen as Chaplain Gen- in the position | ee Armed Forces (Pro ' ” {for the personal dignity of man “Things: and institutions, the state — are primarily for man: Not man for them,” he declared “The disturbances which unset- itle the internal peace of nations,” said the Pope, “trace their ori- gins chiefly to this source—that man has. been treated almost ex- clisively as a machine, a picce of merchandise, a worthless cog in some great machine, a mere | productive unit.’ | rt nursi0g!the Marshalls. _ parents, giving them a great mor- at Civic Hos-| school officials, says the youth is his choice as “fighter of the year award.” Boucher, a neighbor of watched Doug's stout-hearted struggle for life and his tortuous progress toward aly Of) some degree of mobility. In a recent letter to sports -edi- tor Bill Westwick of the Otiawa Journal, Boucher described how @4aY | Doug’s teen-age friends and mem- bers of the Rough Riders football team rallied to his assistance, The teenagers arranged a testi- monial night for Doug and his ale boost and some “‘tangible aid.” | Among those who attended were : |Rider players: Fred Smale, an- other neighbor; Don Allard. Lou Bruce, Bobby Simpson, Frank Tripucka, Gary Schreider and Hardiman Cureton. The. football | team ‘‘maile it their unpublicized | but very vital mission to keep this boy alive.” been ignored by the ticketing officer. Last week a rookie constable issued tickets against 30.detec- ‘ive cars parked in a no-park- ing zone on downtown St. Louis Street near detective headquar- ters. The zone had been set up especially for detectives so they could get to their vehicles quickly in emergency cases. Lord Halifax Is Dead At 78 LONDON (Reuters)—Lord Hali- fax, 78, former foreign secretary, viceroy of India and British am-' bassador to the United States, | died Wednesday night. ! Lord Halifax died at his home inforcements were sent to protec qi patrol fired on Iranian sa ‘the giant Abadan oil refinery in| ors, and civilians. Two Ira the region, where a border dis- were killed and three wounded. iM The. Iipnian “army 24) | SEVERAL VIOLATIONS. Iraqi forces were: scsiad steel «Phe: Shah: toid a press confér- the ‘frontier facing the Iranian! €@¢¢ Sunday, however, that I Fakkeh, north |had violated the border several var Fakkeh, gorthwest of ines. He said Iranians did Iran, which has mptual secur- intend to become impatient. oF ity agreements with the United tose their heads but were “m States and with members ot the 8° to give away what does be- Central Treaty Organization, for- 100g to us, merly the Baghdad pact, long 1.0. Siciale the dividing lime poe baek: under Soviet Syeenure: | ee swe the middie of take DELAYS HONEYMOON al Arab. Iran pays for oil tan Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi,|and other shipping to use the who took his third Queen, Farah,! waterway and Iraq is supposed in marriage Monday, delayed his; to use the proceeds for maintep- honeymoon to the Caspian Sea in|; ance and dredging. Iran order to deal with the border dif-| plains, however, the I ficulty. | ‘ spend the money for other ‘pur- Artillery, tanks and anti - air-| poses. < craft units were deployed along Last Monday Kassem again“at- the Shatt al Arab, the broad tacked Iran as a tyranny. Hé Wag no eS com gis) Sportscasters spoke words of|—©@ttowby Hall, Yorkshire—in waterway at the head of the Pers- reported here as clatming all. encouragement to Doug over the air, and Hap Shouldice, eastern| representative of football com- missioner Syd Halter of Winnipeg, visited the boy in hospital. No Paper Tomorrow Tomorrow being Christ- mas Day, the next issue of the Guardian will be on Saturday December 26th. | ; yrchern’ England. His son, Lord Irwin: “My father was just completely worn out.” Lord Halifax broke his hip re- cently in a fall and then under- went an operation. Lord Halifax was Britain’s am- bassador to the United States from 1941 throughout the war. | He became foreign secretary after Anthony Eden resigned in protest against Britain’s policy toward Nazi Germany. } ARRIVE BY AIR TODAY Refugees Find Joy At Christmas. ter Year Of Misery, Despair By JOHN E. BIRD Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) — The eve of Christ's birth will be one of hope land happiness for 20 European families after years of despair and misery in refugee camps in Italy. The families — each with one member suffering from tuber- culosis—will arrive in Halifax and} Saint John, N.B., today by ‘air! from Rome, They will be the sec- ond group of refugees to be brovugit to.Canada uider federal government sponsorship. Each of these families—71 per- sons in all—fled their Commu- nist-dominated homelands to es- eape religious and political per- secytion. Many of the male adults | had served jail terms because of their outspoken opposition to.com- munism or had been in trouble ‘with authorities because of their religious beliefs. After their escape into Italy they enjoyed religious freedom but they were stateless persons in a strange country. For many of these people Christmas Eve in Halifax and Saint John will be their first opportunity to attend church in a free country that they can call their own. Their Canadian Pacific Air- ¢ lines charter plane from Rome will arrive fn Halifax at .7:30! a.m. AST and at Saint John at) 9 a.m. i Interviewed through an interp- reter at the Latina refugee as- sembly centre 45 miles south of Rome, the families all told one Tax Appeal Is Fanciful OTTAWA (C2) — An appeal by a Montreal veal estate firm against a revenue department in- come tax assessment has been described by the income tax ap- = board as ‘‘more fanciful than real."’ The board in a judgment made public here Wednesday said the grounds for appeal by Aden Build- ing Enterprises Inc, do not show that the assessment was founded on error, The firm in 1956 sold property valued at $248,548 to Jake Rubin of Moncton, ‘N.B., te be paid by | March 16, 1960; story. They had made their way to Italy from their homelands in search of freedom from religious and political persecution. Dominik Luci, 49; his wife Marie, 38, and their 29-year-old son Domenico escaped to Italy from Yugoslavia in 1958. They | report, by radio and television, on 2 AppealForNeedy Launched By Ike WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi-, interest and hopes for peace. dent Eisenhower appealed to! quire that the U.S. continue Americans and friends overseas “financial investment and aid’?-te Wednesday to join in the spirit, of less fortunate lands. They*aise Christmas to help desperately ? h id. th ; the United needy le in their battle for | eU!re, Ne sald, tha’ ie ae y peop States persuade all other. free survival. . ; : ’ : ‘ lands to join, to the limit of then Eisenhower was making a first | ability, in a “long-term progran | dependable in its terms t its duration.” ~ ‘his trip & 11 countries on three |continents. He returned at mid-| ~, g ; night Tuesday. We believe each people of th This Christmas, he said, the | Maman faenily CR contribute words of the angels over Bethle- | Something to a. developing world hem 2,000 years ago, “Peace on! embracing all peoples, enhancin earth—goodwill to men” — have | the good of all peoples. for him “clearer meaning, | “But we recognize — we must sharper significance, more urgent: recognize — that in the counsel.” * fierce and even vicious battle fo The setting for the address was | survival — against weather and a park back of the White House, disease and poverty—some with the national Christmas tree | ples desperately need help. waiting for Eisenhower to light it; nied it, they could well beco as part of a pageant of peace. ‘| so desperate as to create a world Eisenhower said that the best! catastrophe.” were refused admission to other countries because of Mr, Luci’s TB condition. The family’s most serious dif-! ficulties with Yugoslav Commu- nists occurred about a year be- fore their escape. Communist of- fic:als in the small village i> which they lived took strong ex- ception to Mr. Luci’s anti-Com- munist views and his insistence on a feligious funeral for his father. He is a Roman Catholic. Mr, Luci escaped with his son in February, 1958. When he went back to get his wife he was cap- tured and sent to prison. The son sent a guide from Italy to help his mother cross the. bor- der and his father broke out of jail. in August, 1958, and suc- ceeded in rejoining his family, “GOD HELPED US” “God helped us,”’ said Vasilije Krisan when asked to describe how he and his family made thei?" he way to Italy. : Leposava, Canada Bank Interest Edges Up During Week OTTAWA (CP) — The Bank of ,banks — is set at one-quarter Canada interest rate Wednesday one per cent above the aver fee's 28 last week with the sale| Yield on the weekly sale of S1-da of $100,000,000 in -92-day govern- | ‘reasury bills. This week,.. ment treasury bills. bills’ maturity was 92 days*t The rate, an indicator of con-|cause of the Christmas ditions in the short-term money! The bank announced Wed market, now has fluctuated within! day that $100,000,000 of the a relatively narrow range of one-; were sold by tender at an tenth of one per cent since hitting age price of $98.74§ for an 5.18 per cent at the start of this age yield of 5.03 per cent, month, {highest yield was 5.07 r ‘The bank rate — minimum and the lowest 4.99. Last .7m charge by the central bank on its|the average price was $96,774 %e 1 a Re p Krisan, 51; his wife \ on Page 3, Col. 5) infrequent loans te chartered) an average yield of 4.98 per Gam