~ ANNOUNCEMENTS CITY & QUEENS DANCE wm Mt Ryap Mall Johnston's RnR ~ every Friday aight Good music kL.ABMBER ROTARY Radic Auctios De mer ., 1955. Bid early, bid often CONE EDERATION CENTRE Chor December Christmas coneert, Sunday, 12 45 p.m ‘/telket) now on sale at box office ~. CARD PARTY Hampshire Hall Wed- nesday Dec. Let, 8.30 p.m. first game ~ tournament NoW AVAILABLE at Sherwin - Wi). hams 175 Queen Street, Provincial color glaze antiquing kits. As in lea ing come decorator mag THE ANNUAL Meeting of the North Wiltshire Hall will be held on Wednes- a> De 1955 at 7:30 p.m ARTisT MATERIALS make ideal Chrutmas gifts, complete line avail- ab at Sherwin-Williams, 175 Queen at We also carry of pastels KINGSTON LEGION, New Haven Wednesday, December 1, party for the Rece jand Members and guests wo eome Ladies please bring lunch. DALGHMTLAS OF England card game iy Orange Hall LOBA Kirkwood Drive, every Wednesday night at 8 p.m Aa- misinn SO cents Luneh served CONFEDERATION Centre Choir Christmas Concert Sunday December 12th, 8.45 p.m. tickets on sale now at Rox office SEMI - ANNUAL Meeting, New Gles- Districta Artificial Breeding Nutées of P.E.1. will nol4 the Nurses’ i Hospital at 7:43 p.m. te attend. KINGS COUNTY HOT DINNER — turkey and plum pucdins in Fortune Hall, Thursday, Dec- ember 2. Serving from 5 p.m. ‘ ANNUAL TURKEY supper . Murray Harber North Hall Wednesday, Decerm- ‘her tet, serving from five o’c'ora by the ladies of the Presby- terian Church in aid of organ fund. REGULAR MONTHLY meeting, also | annual meeting of the Montague Ladies Auxiliary of the Royal Canadian Leg- jon Thursday, December 2nd, 8 p.m. All members requested to attend. PRINCE COUNTY KENSINGTON LIONS annual auctwn St. Mark’s Hall, Wednesday, December Ist, at 7.30 p.m. CARD PARTY at Lioyd Profitts in Long River on Wednesday, December |1. Sponsored by Spring Valley hockey SUNDAY SCHOOL Christmas = set- vice, Kensington Presbyterian Church | Wednesday, December 15 at 7.30. VITAL STATISTICS BIRTHS JACKSON — At the P.E.1. Hospital on Nov. 29, 1965, to Mr. and Mre. Wallace Jackson (nee Currie), a son, Michael Yarece. weight 8 Ibs.. 44 ozs MactINNIS -- Mr. ami Mrs. Charles ©. Macinnis (nee Helen Gallant) an- nounce the arrival o” their son, Chare les Joseph at the Charlottetown Hos- pital on Sunday, November 28, 1965. Weight 6 lbs., Se ozs. A brother tor Jennifer and Catherine. IN MEMORIAM PORTER In loving memory of our parents, Raulston and Clara Porter, whe passed away November 24, 1948. and 1, 1963. Sunshine fades and shadows fall But sweet remembrance outlasts all. Lone years you toiled, you did your best ' December May God grant you eternal rest. Always remembered by four daughters and three sons PORTER In joving memory of our parents, Raulston and Clara Porter who passed away November 24, 188 and December 1, 1963 So honest and faithful, So willing and true, These are the memories We treasure of you Always remembered by sons and deugt- ters-inlaw, and grandchildren DOIRON — In loving memory of Ejmer Doiron who lost his life on HMCS | Saguenay December Ist, 1940. Sadly missed by Mother, brothers and sister PORTER — In loving memory of our parents, Raulston and Clara Porter. |who passed away November 2%, and December 1, 1963. Just a prayer from us who loved you, Just a memory fond and true. In our hearts you'll live for ever, Because we thought the world of you. ‘Always remembered by daughters, | gons-in-law, and grandchildren. The Guardian, Charlottetown, Wed. Dec. 1, 1965. 15 | Canada’s Top | Slated For Tour Of Cyprus By ANCO TORONTO (CP) — Some of Canada's top entertainers head for Cyprus this weekend to ‘stage pre - Christmas variety i ‘965. All members are invited shows’ for Canadian and other ish imperial base United Nations peacekeeping troops. Gordie Tapp, versatile emcee and one of the best-known radio- TV personalities in Canada, heads the group. ‘ With him are singer Doug Crosley of Oshawa, Ont., old- time fiddle champion Al Cher- ney, who started his career at the age of 12 in 1944 in Med:- ‘eine Hat, Alta, and magician | Bob owney of Windsor, Ont. And there are girls of course —Toronto's Jean Christopher, 24-year-old actress who has he- leome, almost unwittingly, a sex | |gymbol; Dahiele Dorice of Que- \bec City, a star of French-Ca- | nadian TV; and the attractive |Lounsbury sisters from St. Ca ltharines, Ont., flaming baton _ twirlers, | ‘The trip to the Mediterranean lisland is the 10th in a series of concerts for* Canadian troops, initiated by the defence depart- ment in 1961 and organized by producer Ken Dalziel of the OBC. Shows have gone five times to the U.N. emergency lforce in the Middle East——the ltatest one in May this year- lthree times to European NATO bases and to Cyprus in 1064. and IN MEMORIAM | | PAYNTER — In loving memory of 3. |Bruce Paynter who passed away Nov. | 958. God knows how much we miss him | Never shall his memory fade. Loving ‘thoughts shall ever wander loving memory of John H. Weeks who passed away Dec. |, 1964 Dear are the memories silently kept | Of the. one we loved | And can never forget. Fondly remembered by I Wife and Family. In b To the spot where he is laid. | Ever remembered by wife and family. CARD OF THANKS ' 1 WISH to thank Dr. Saunders, clergy, nurses and staff of the P.E.1. Hos- pital, all who sent fruit, candy, cards and all who visited me while I was tient there. A special thanks te who helped in every way with the farm work at home Leith Carter. MR. AND MRS. James Macintosh, Rose Valley, wish to express their sincere thanks to Dr. Zielinski, Dr. Ellis, Rev. W. Hare, and Rev. Mr. Underhay. Also to their many friends who sent cards BUSINESS SERVICE. DIRECTORY this year. MP Raiph’ Cowen ob, jected to CBC employees ap’ pe Miss lightly clad. | Police censors eventually passed the movie, but the up- roar fastened a ‘‘sexy’’ label on piece band of Toronto jazz clar-|Jean even more than her ap- |imetiot. Phil Nimmons leave pearances for two years on the | Trentoh, Ont., Sunday and re- late-night CBC show Nightcap, jturn Dee. 14. They will do six During the Cyprus tour CBC | shows, including one at the Brit (will record the musical high at Famagusta | of the shows for broad-. cast ih a special one-hour radio \show in Canada Dec. 6. It will include taped Christmas mes- sages from scores of Canadian | soldiers serving on the island. | Entertainers on Cyprus. This will be the first such tour for Crosley and Miss Christo- pher, whose names popped up in the House of Commons earlicr “ANNUAL DEBATE HEARD /ON WAR TOY SUITABILITY | OTTAWA (CP)—The annual | growup with guns who argument about whether war | like to see men or blown | toys make suitable Ohristmas | up usaly like to ‘oll just presents for children is about | for the fun of seeing things to reach its regular climax | detstryed.” _ again. | —“My mother is right that The Ottawa Journal turned | toy guns are very much fun to to grade 4 pupils of St. Dan play with. When I grow up | iel's separate school here for will try not to buy @ real one opinions on the matter. dnd if 1 do I will shot my- Here are some of their 2 | —] don’t like war toys be cause soliders died for us War toys should stores. In the store they parents agree. But they should have games like ‘catch , should stop them when they | the mouse’ and all the others. Margaret Wiggins of Toron- get to about 10 or 11. Not any | At Christmas don’t ask ter] eee Tee ae latter or they will grow up | soliders.” |_and only apprentice THE LADY LIKES TO TINKER mechanic {n Ontario. Miss Wiggins, five-feet, four inches, is now in her second year of a four-year apprenticeship. She says she “just loves tinkering ~~ with machinery.” like Hitteler."’ —‘k think war toys are in a way dangerous. But why should parents wory. We aren't going to start a war. Like these gernades that ex- ploding are dangerous but that is around the only thing Parents are silly to worry Some of their own husband | are in the army and they | don't worry.” jold | — ‘I think that the gore. A | Up people are right. We are |stiernkrantz, author and pub. all hoping not to have war and fee of a 16-page booklet en- | yet the stores are selling war | = All the boys are getting titled Dag Hammarskjold—God and Assassin, to pay an undis- war toys and everything was quite and now all you hear !s (closed fine scaled on a peércen- bang! bang! and they are put- tage of his salary. | ting it’ on the telefision.” The booklet claims the secre- tary - general may have com- —"Why do adults dont let us have army toys? They don" | mitted suicide by overpowering |who were captu in | other Americans in a hurt us. What harm has it ‘the crew of the aircraft | done. And if we dont buy how (which he was killed, The court | attac | will the storekeeper sell |declined to award damages om |1963. | things to get money.” ‘order the booklet confiscated. |“ “I have known both sides and | —"'I personaly think war toys Stjernkrantz was facing the war m Viet Nam is of no | are harmful, not to the body |changes of defamation brought /interest to the United States. | but to the mind. Children who | by Hammarskjold’s brother, Smith said. He he is Seven, who sued him for 150,- returning home “s0 Americans | 000 crowns (about $30.000) dam- can see the light about the war ages. in Viet Nam.” | Dag Hammarskjold died four | Smith did most of the talking | years ago with 15 other passen- /at-a press conference gers and crew in an air crash |b Author Fined For Booklet KALMAR, Sweden (Reuters) A Swedish author was fined Tuesday for defaming the name of the laje United Nations secre- tary - general Dag Hammarsk- PHNOM PENH (AP) — Two American soldiers freed by the Viet Cong guerrillas in South Viet Nam have praised their ; captors and criticized United court fhere ordered Bengt States involvement in the Viet Nam war. Both told correspondents in the Cambodian capital Tuesday that they expect harassment when they get = home. The soldiers are Sgt. George E. Smith, 27, of Chester, W.Va., and specialist Claude E.. Mc- Clure, 25, of Chattanooga, Tenn, red with two guerrilla | yy. the Cambodian information near Ndola, in what then wae /mimstry. . aid they were treated Northern Rhodesia. Investiga-| Both s . Goods and Service ... Where to find them in Charlottetown and District tions threw no light on the |well during their two years of . cause of the crash. | captivity. BUYL , ANNOUNCE RELEASE _ BUYING SELLING |REAL ESTATE SERVICES DRIVE-IN PLAN LARGEST DOCK | AYNOV CC ang announced thet WANTED re et ‘big encsigh Tor 300,00. te ee a. Wastiest 3 , big for 200, march for . ; BUYING SBLLING RENTING [ONE “LAUNDRY Europe, big | Regge yet lyre aoe ALE BOTTLES PHONE 43260 STOP ee EAT OFTEN (asttnttg: Sweden being freed to chow good wil , %e per dozen J. W. MacKENZIE eit deoviee a " At The ’ ; nar ta ar ae ae a : oa ar eae 1 PHONE Real Estate Consultant : Dros es ead be <— Ae nee acca S&M A & W Drive-In §- _ CHRISTMAS ee $7 Eden St. Charlottetown |“ Beer Bottle Exchange Drop your beer bottles at MAURICE BLOCK Co. LTD. Kent Street. 20c Per Dozens Quick Servite BOTTLE EXCHANGE O'BRIEN Iron and Metal Co. Ltd. cower Prince St.—Charlottetown Charlottetown Member of C.A.R.F.B. MALPEQUE ROAD INSULATION .GEORGE PEAKE LIMITED REAL ESTATE INSURANCE 92 QUEEN STREET PHONE 2-2448 -S. W. WILLIS , { SIE eee! | REALTOR - CONSULTANT 3e | Real Estate, Residential, S SERVICES saeeladaias | Commercial ae . Appraisals mortgages, Necchi Sewing ie Centres 165 Queen St. Sales & Service DIAL. 894-7242 Repairs to all makes of sew- z : ing machines, vacuum cleaners and floor polishers. We aiso make button holes, | cover buttons. Make alterations. | 125 Kent St 202 Water St W | | SN () N Ch'town, 48272 side 6-5949 | Montague « O'Leary | 838-2761 84-3 x FOR RECORDS | REAL ESTATE | 90 Kent St. Ch’town RECORDS ..For Your Listening Pleasure. MILLER BROS. LTD. STANLEY MOL 147 Gt. George St. Dial 4-3535 ELECTRIC PLANTS 4 To All Users of ELECTRIC POWER People carry fire insurance and hope they'll never need it. How much would YOUR loss be if we should have a major power failure some cold stormy week this coming winter? To insure against this loss in- stall the proper Onan Electric | > "a REAL ESTATE LTD. Where Friends and Sales Are Made DEALING EXCLUSIVELY IN REAL ESTATE 78 Gt. George St. “Near Travel Bureau” Charlottetown, P.E.L. Phone 2-1611 a method. Call your local insulat- ion blowing contractor. Atlantic Drywall Insulation For better results use blower >} it’s the only flace you can buy .‘Chubby” Chicken” “Look for the Bright Orange Building” GIFT GUIDE | 4 The easy way to gift shopping j MUFFLER CENTRE Complete Exhaust Systems Sales Free Installation At OK TIRE STORE aetens trom tee cross from lew : ‘large assortment of Shopping Cen | Telephone 894-6275 — 992-2267 | FUEL OILS ij The Nu-S le : AUTOMOTIVE 3 oe Candy, Mixed Nuts, _ WOOD'S FUELS Nylons, Christmas _ DRESS SHOP 90 Great George St. Turkeys & Chickens 4 ’ A Very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all our customers. Texaco Stove and Furnace Oi Free .Oi! Burner Service 15 Woodlawn Ave. Wishes all its customers & Dial 892-2336 is Ch’town |} | er ee ee ‘Merry Christmas ¢ NO KAYS ; Let us show you our fine § 87 Pownal St. Dial 48465 TIRE SERVICE Albert L. Thomas selection of dressee and F< ceweuemuneneene : White Rose Dealer "* \ | ° Comrise Farm Tire | AANA CONN SEE OUR | | Service Stove a ofl, motor ofl, | complete line of |@ Wheel Alignment ies @ tak. Con | CHRISTMAS § G. E. large and O.K. TIRE STORE Phone 4-6610 FLOWERS small eters . Ch’'town | Sb tae” OPTICIANS _f APPLIANCES HUTELS a w Polneettias, Azsieas, Pot REGENT HOTEL Overnight and permanent « guests. Reasonable Rates 58 Great George St. Ch'town --Phone4-6426.- * BURKE ELECTRIC ted Mums, and Geraniums, all varieties of cut flowers. We give your order fast ~ ISLAND OPTICALE LTD. "personal attention 112 Kent St. 2-1221 | We will make up your glabses | WEST END |_when you bring in your doctor’s NURSERIES The Island- optical prescription (regular or 22 Richmond Street W. L. McKENNA = SOLLTE. Plumbing & Heating NEW ADDRESS 204 Kent St. 4-4247 | P.0. | Phone 894-3525 Grill’s | @ Supply new frames for | New Manager 6 cane aneuniae | PEPREPROERPRHOE CELE OLE Walter Lee < oa iy tt aries adjum RECORDS wishes you all . FOR A Merry Christmas FURNITURE Aylward's Furniture Exchange Ltd. 87 Prince St. Phone 48125 SEPTIC TANK SERVICE Furniture bought ‘and sold | arints ous Sane at CHRISTMAS Chinese & American j Children’s 39¢ ¥ Food | : 2 Queen St. Ch’town ‘RESTAURANTS iB Popular Hits 8c J 1? MY 559 ig Long Play from 99¢ — | ESQUIRE CCFFEE SHOP! Victor — 4 Speed ' Record Payers , . Charlottetown : Imported Jams. Jellies and Only 26.95 Billiard Club other confections. k outside ‘Saigon Nov. 2, | 5 § Canadian Pacific liner when she | struck the Empress amidships. S| and the. 14,000-ton Empress sank S| the tragedy at a Two Yank Prisoners Return With Praise For Viet Cong | ‘toward Americans opposing the war. | They crossed the frontier into | Cambodia Sunday and were | brought to Phnom Penh Mon- day. | A special emissary of the Vie: {Cong sat in en the press cos- ference Emphasizing a Communist de mand for a U.S. withdrawal from Viet Nam, he told the two ex-prisoners “Your ret States is the prelude to the de. parture of American ‘troop from , Viet Nam.” McClure. ‘said the guerrillas jeared for his wounds, shared | their food with him and allowed jhim Red Cross packages and mail from his family. He said the Viet Cong did not try to In- | doctrinate its prisoners, but gave him books to read and paper for his letters. He did. lit- |tle work in the prison camp. “The Saigon government |not the government of the peo- ple,"’ Smith said. ‘‘l have seen South Vietnamese villagers who were ready to help the Viet Cong."’ The defence department in | Washington had no immediate jeomment on the remarks the men made. The state department said ef- \forts are being made through Cambodia to arrange for the de- parture of two soldiers. . “Ne "U.S. has no diplomatic representative in Cambodia since relations were broken off by the Cambodian governmert last May. , } i Veteran Sea Captain Held Burning Memories Of Career By PETER BUCKLEY LONDON (CP)—A 91-year-old |nadian Pacific ship, the Mont- | sea captain who died here Sun- day had.two burning memories. One was a source of pride and a constant preoccupation of his later years, discussed Capt. Henry. George Kendal! was-the first-manh to use wire- less telegraphy to ffap a crim- inal tipping Scotland Yard that Ri he had .a murderer aboard his | Quebec-bound ship in 1910. The ij case brought him continuing at- | tention years later. f| But he also was commander B of the Empress of Ireland when g| she sank in the St. Lawrence | River in 1914 in one of ship- | ping’s greatest tragedies. i “He never talked about It,” Ernest Barnsley, a long - time friend of Kendall, said Monday- |*It must have been the great- jest tragedy of his life and oe . the memory was too Kendall was cleared of afl | blame in the sinking, which cost | more than 1,000 lives. He was on the bridge of the |-was rammed in heavy fog and |darkness May 29, 1914, on her | way from Quebec. to Liverpool. |The Norwegian Collier Storstad Kendall signalled the Storstad ji to keep her engities running, so} s| the great hole in the Empress's side would remain plugged. But the ' Storstad had to withdraw | | | | off Father Point in 15 minutes. Most of the passengers and crew were trapped in their ca- bins. Only four lifeboats were launched and fewer than a third lof the nearly 1,500 persons | aboard escaped. The Storstad | | was held entirely to blame for {had been master of another Ca- rose, when his curiosity was aroused by a “Mr. Robinson and son" among the passeng- ers. the other he never) He decided Robinson was| jreally Dr. Hawly Crippen, wanted by British police for the | rarer and dismemberment of his wife at their London home, and the '‘son” was really his secretary, Ethel LeNeve. Using the newly-installed tele- graph, Kendall sent a message to Scotland Yard and an in spector, travelling by a faster ship, reached Quebec in time to arrest Crippen and Miss LeNeve as they landed. Crippen was la- ter hanged for murder. Barnsley, who worked with Kendall for many years and vi- sited him frequently after his retirement, said Kendall spent much of his time doing radio addresses and newspaper recol- lections about the famed Crip- pen capture. Among Barnsley’s souvenirs of his friend are two auto- graphed photostats—one of a £250 cheque given Kendall as a reward for the Crippen capture, the other a photo taken surrepti- tiously through a porthole . of Robinson and son’’ walking on the promenade deck, unaware | they had been spotted. Kendall, born in the Liverpool | area, went to sea. at the age of 14 and joined Canadian Pacific just before 1900. He got his first command in 1908. he was navigating officer on the Royal Navy ship Calgarian, an afmed merchant cruiser, until she wads torpedoed on convoy duty in March, 1918. That same year, at war's end, he was made CP's marine ‘sti- subsequent aw! Kendall | SORE PR | marine enquiry in Canada. Four years earlier, Opposition leader John Die- ee |. “Walk a block and Save” _| a eat aeaee and scallops also | TOOMBS © Wishes you a Merry BATFE & MacRAELtd| SEPTIC TANK AND READ THE 174 Queen St, MUSIC ‘STORE Fer i tiie (oo «| CLASSIFIED ADS. Cae eee eB ini ieienensenal eonneooummanrinntian 5; : 5 TRENCHING TAILOR ; “ie BR ‘ i edu. nando sea ° poe ag wet ciibaniai ae | J h Rush, Tail ¥ To place your ad in the its ula date hig READ | © Reasonable. Rates MARKET PLACE | ~°°S5s' Gucen st if Christmas gift guide f — Grectng Carte THE CLASSIFIEDS |° ‘rov's sxenic TaN FOR YOUR — | we aeciati in alterations, ‘elephone: ao 7 fe UNWANTED All work guaranteed. 4.8506 Opposite Fatons DAILY Tryon Ph Crapaud-42-$4 | ARTICLES | ‘DIAL 4-6704 F = a . ; / - seth prt. era renee Mbre;.2 oancteetinnts —— Rie sag ey MEE BO ta 8 fenbaker, guest of honor at the Cape Breton Highland Society's — Day. ta eee perintendene and remained in London until his retirement in 1939. potty FA % a THE CHIEF CUTS THE HAGGIS banquet at Sydney Tuesday night, cuts the trad:tional hag- ¢is held by Piper Donald Mac- Millan. On the left is Lieut- is | During the First World War, i Prize Late, Author Says: MOSCOW (AP) — Soviet ati- thor Mikhail A. Sholokhov said Tuesday that he was given the Nobel Prize too late and refused {to withdraw his criticism of Boris Pasternak. ¢ Sholokhov, giving his first |press conference since being | awarded the Nobel Prize for }it- erature Oct. 15, also claimed ‘that Soviet writers have com- iplete freedom of artistic expres sion. : Asked about his reaction te getting the literary award, Sho- lokhov, 60, said: “Il smiled sighed quietly—and thought % was a little late."’ He-- won the Nobel } Prize urn to the United |Australian representatives 10 mainiy for his epic novel And Quiet Flows the Don, published '37 years ago. The short; white-haired Com- munist called Pasternak “an tm- ternal emigre.’ He said: “I am proud to be the first Soviet and |Russian write to win the Nobel The Nobel committee gave the prize to Pasternak in 1958 for Dr. Zhivago, his novel crit- ical of Soviet life. Pasternak {was put under pressure by Sov- liet authorities and turned down e,@ ‘Britis h Plan. ‘For Troops -— Turned Down LONDON (Reuters) — Zam ibia has 90 far rejected Britain’s terms for supplying a Royal Air Force squadron to meet the Ah. rican country’s rquest for milite tary aid, but talks are continu- ing, an authoritative source said here Tuesday night. The urgency of the situation was underlined by the imme@i- ate despatch of Commonwealth | Secretary Arthur Bottomley te Zambia to solve the deadlock, Bottomley was en ronte even before it was revealed by an authoritative source that he was being sent. He flew in an RAF plane by way of Aden and robi and was expected to remaia in Lusaka, the Zambian capital, three or four days. : The source said Britain's com ditions for the despatch of a jet fighter squadron: te Zambia in- eluded: 1. The force should be under strict British control., i 2. It should be stationed away from__the_ Zambia-Rhodesia--bor--- der. 3. \the Zam’ tier. : 4 VISITS MARITIMES OTTAWA (‘CP)—Air Marshal Sir Paul Holder, air officer commanding in ehitef, RAF coastal command, will visit IRCAF and RCN: stations in the Maritimes, and visit Ottawe or talks with armed forces. author- ities, Nov. 25-20, armed forces headquarters announced Thurs day. It must be used only on bian side of the fron =3 enant-Governor Harry Mae: Keen. The banquet drew the - largest crowd in the society's | history (CP Wirephotes