and dads on Christmas morn- they'll make up for it New ‘THINGS POPPING the house while the more hon- est type of father may frankly admit -he wants to play with junior’s toys. The real reason, however, comes from the hearts For East-West Accord By. DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer He said he feels Russia is gen- uine in its announced desire for a disarmament agreement with the West. At another point, Mr. Green said NATO is a “very strong al- liance.” Press reports had overplayed ;the agreements. at -the NATO council meeting just ended. ly long enough for families to join together in peace and hap- piness and reaffirm their faith im the knowledge that the true spirit of Christmas is known _ ‘Morning such actions are” ac- | Year's Eve, some: mothers may e : eee f-* cepted in good part. Many rea- | attribute it to extreme‘curiosity | of those who consider Dec. 25th | and understood in millions of | should get down to work about If there were disagreement NEW LETTER BO — dit sons have been advanced to ac- | over the contents of an odd | a brief pause in the mad scram- | Christian homes throughout the — a earets —_ can’t lay a = or : , : count beaming i shaped parc sneaked existence, a pause bare- | world. Gen. E. L. . B \ s throwing ie an . . fo or = er rie - al be Chabde's chiar onpeianen: alliance of this kind.” The post office has ordered 25 | will be given a trial in most | of the first boxes produced. : will visit Geneva, Paris and Lon.| NATO bonds were “a good deal oe ae eenee oo ee ‘Canadian cities. Here Post- They are made of reinforced UPW No 282 don early in January and reach|stronger than most Canadians letters ee oe to be | master-General Hamilton is | : e here about Jan. 8. He will meet!realize or I had expected,”. Mr.|_*% use by early next year. They | seen depositing a letter in one ' fibreglass. (CP Wirephote) representatives of the other four Green said. Ski,Boom Leads City People Back To Old Fashioned Yule , Road Accident — Injured Four _Ch'town Enjoying Peaceful ’ | : |Elects Slate Christmas Holiday Season : Clifford Murphy was re-elec- ted president of Local 282 of the United Packinghouse Workers oi America at a meeting held in Canadians Participate ~ PEMBROKE, Ont. (CP)— Four = A light snowfall on the day be-| Wind up a 10-day-week series of Labor Council Hall in Charlotte. | . 4 cia P es aaseien sommied oko] Seay with Gen eancan “he lel “Beane on acer” soamed to| ona Mendes. Sight | MONTREAL (CP) — A modern |Marcel/Baron, the club chaplain ft CW OC eC rin idiers from nearby Camp Pet- f : member Jesus Christ.” Th e| prevail on Christmas Eve as the Other officers named_to the ex- | boom in skiing has been -leading|who has parish in the Montreal | i oe a were SPENDING HOLIDAY and Mrs. Hillard Arthur ‘Summerside are spending the with Mr. and Mrs. War- Henderson and Mrs. Arthur’s R. V. MatIntyre was conducted by Venerable Archdeacon J T. Pbbott. Pall bearers were Ernest Lord, T. J. Knox, E. V. Bell, G. E. Proctor, W..N. Wilson, J. R. Finley. inter- ment took place in the People’s cemetery. a CAR HIT POST An unknown car jumped a curb in Victoria Park last night and knocked down a lamp post. Police are confident that their investigation will be fruitful as the car is probably extensively damaged. The post is one of a ‘type supporting two overhead lamps and is made of heavy THOM FUNERAL — The fun- eral for Lawrence (Larry) Thom, §-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Thom, 92 Queen St., was held from: the Hennessey Funeral Home on Thursday, Dec. . The service was conducted Rev. D. A. Campbell, assisted by Brigadier Arnold Hicks of the Salvation Army. Members of Zion Presbyterian Church_choir, with + John Lee-Morgan as organist «gang the hymns “Jesus Lover of My Soul’ and ‘Safe the Arms of Jesus.’’ The pallbearers were Raymond Wong, J. M. Mar- and Ralph Yeo. The service the grave ucted by "Doral © : , was in the People’s Cemetery. By JOSEPH E. DYNAN TEHRAN, Iran (CP)—Iran fs reported to have put more troops on the alert along the Soviet bor- der as well as the frontier with “Iraq, as a result of the tension between Iraq and Iran. declined to comment, reliable sources said the alert orders went to a division in the northern province of Azerbaijan and to-an- other stationed near Kerman- Shah, on the central western frontier between Iran and~her Arab neighbor. : _Army, navy and air forces around Abadan — site of the world's largest oil refinery—were put on a full alert Wednesday after reports that Iraq was mass- ing troops across the @earby Shatt-al-Arab estuary, the boun- dary at that point between the two countries and the waterway connecting the Western-operated refinery “with the Persian Gulf. Reports from Abadan said the situation was quiet all along the frontier. DENY: TROOP REPORTS The government - owned Iraqi news agency. Thursday night denied. the Iranid4n reports of Iraqi troop concentrations, A statement broadcast by Baghdad radio said Premier Abdul Karim Kassem’s government affirmed its peaceful intentions “‘but at the \Same time is capable of suppress- More Iranian Troops Said Placed On Alert Although army headquarters, the listeners. . The local detachment of the| RCMP joyously received a Chi1s- mas gift of a clean traffic fatality much of the holi- ing aggression from whatever source it comes.” The Russians rushed to Iraq’s defence against Western - allied Iran. A Moscow radio commenta- tor accused the Iranian, govern- ment of embarking ‘‘on an ad- \venturist path in an attempt to distract the attention of the Iran-) ians from their disastrous (eco- nomic) situation.” The broadcast charged that | “Tranian newspapers have delib- erately raised a hue and cry jaround the frontier disputes ;which can and must be settled | through, talks\ and have created | a tense atmosphere.” | Iranian sources have expressed | fear that Iraqi Premier Kassem, with. Russian backing, would send troops across the Shatt-al-Arab in an effort to seize a strip of land claimed by Iraq on the Iranian sidé near the Abadan refinery. Iran maintains that the boun- dary between the two countries, established in 1938, is the middle of the Shatt-al-Arab, the broad estuary formed by the union of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. It connects the Persian Gulf with Iraq’s river-seaport, Basra. STILL HELPING LONDON, Ont. (CP) — At 65, | Samuel Harris is 15 yeafs over the approved age limit for blood donors, so he volun his car instead to be used for transport- ing blood donors to and from the local Red Cross branch. ecutive include: Jack Brown,|some of Quebec’s city - dwellers vice-president; James MacFad-' back to an old - fashioned Christ- yen, financial secretary; Miss; mas. Theresa Bowlan, recording sec-| Before the Second World War ‘retary. ; most of the’ skiiers who visited Trustees named are Clifford Quebec's Laurentian Mountains ; Gillis, I. MacDonald, and Keith for their magnificent natural and Mutch. The new officers will assume office January 1 and serv one-year term. man - made skiing facilities were ;well - to - do sports - lovers who e for.® patronized the province's luxur- : ‘ious resorts. But since the war the develop-| ment of co - operatige ski clubs’ ‘has put the sport within reach of | Leveryone and French - language |Canadians have taken to the hills} in droves. And in many ways they have taken skiing into their lives and| touched it with their unique blend | of religious and cultural tra-) ditions. A case in point are the mem- bers of the Val David Ski Club, all from the Montreal area, who New Icebreaker Docks In Quebec QUEBEC (CP) — The new Ice- breaker Wolfe docked in Quebec Wednesday to start work with her sister ship Montcalm to keep ice flowing down the St. Lawrence. The Moncalfh patrolled the | Quebec City area alone last _win- ter. The Wolfe, 220 feet long and have taken to spending Christmas| weighing 2,022 tons, was launched jn the club lodge, about 30 miles in Montreal three months ago.' north of Montreal. She arrived here from the Mar- itimes after her shake - down|PRAY AND MEDITATE cruise. In numbers as high as 60, they suburb of Outremont. OBSERVE OLD TRADITION After mass they return to the lodge itself for less religious fes- 'tivities, beginning with the reveil- |lon — Christmas dinner beginning lat 2 A.M., a tradition which dates |back to the earliest French set- tlement in Canada. As well as organized club ac tivities like this, many skiing families or groups of skiing friends — who have their own cottages and chalets in the Laur- entians — have begun.to spend Christmas in them. They attend mass at the near- est village church, perhaps going there on skis, holding a reveillon afterward and then begin a round of visiting back and forth. Wrecker Needed To Move Wreck A wrecker was needed to extri- cate a 1941 Chev. from the side of a 1959 Chev. station wago~ WASHINGTON (‘(AP)—A four- stage rocket carrying a 48-pound payload was fired 560 miles above the Atlantic Ocean by Canadian and American scientists Tuesday in a new study of galactic noise, the strange radio signals given off by the stars. The apparently successful .ex- periment also provided a test of the X-248, a new solid-fuel rocket engine which is comparatively in- expensive. ‘ The Canadian and U.S. scien- tists who teamed-up. on the shot hope the study of Celestial radio signals eventually will help man to improve his communications and aid navigation. ee 7,00 POUND ROCKET The rocket, named the Javelin, measured 48 feet and weighed 7,000 pounds on takeoff from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration station at Wallops Island, Va. An administration spokesman said: . ; . “All stages fired, and accord- ing to initial estimates, the. max- Main duties of the two ships will be to clear paths for the Que- bec - Levis ferry, prevent ice from forming dam - like jams and escort ocean ships expected spend Christmas Eve quietly in conversation, prayer, or medi- tation. For the last three or four years, they have put solemn and meaningful religious activities in |after a traffic mishap last night on Great George Street. The vin- tage Chev. buried-its nose in thc wagon which in turn bounced off a half-ton truck standing nex‘ imum altitude reached was~ just to it. No one was injured and th | older Chev. bore the brunt of th | attack. LINK WITH JAPAN MONTREAL (CP) — A Japan- Canada Society has been formed here to foster cultural and com- mercial relations between the two countries. The society staged an exhibition cf ancient Japanese culture at McGill University’s here this winter. the place of hectic Christmas par- This will be the port's first ef-| ties back in the city. fort to handle winter navigation| One ae ee ee ce — on a considerable scale. Sepmaliy appetated lender, ant filed into the surrounding woods. ‘ | There each’ group built a fire VJ L War Veteran jane iier er". -‘ietcee, Waniers Leave spruces and sat around it, pray- ° ‘ ing or singing softly under the r H | d Passes In N.S. direction of the leader. or oO i ays The ceremony was suggested Known to members of 104th by the shepherds who sat around} OTTAWA (CP)--Governor-Gen- | Battalion here Major R.F, Mac-j\their fires on the hills abovejeral and Mme. Vanier left Ot-| Laughlin died at his home in! Bethlehem before the first Christ-\tawa Wednesday for Quebec City | Yarmouth, N.S. recently. He was/ mas. and Camp Valcartier where they | the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.|; Shortly before midnight, as tra-| will attend midnight mass on W.A. MacLauchlin of Saint John, | dition says the shepherds did, the|Christmas Eve with the three, N.B, ; | groups gathered to pray at ajbattalions of the Royal 22nd Regi-| He was born and educated in| nativity scene or “creche” which| ment. Saint John and during the First;}had been modelled in snow and} Major-General Vanier is colonel | World War went overseas with|then returned to the club chapel|of the regiment and one of its, the 104th Battalion. He wasj|for mass, celebrated by Abbe|founding merhbers during the! wounded at Passchendaele and First World’ War. j later awarded the Military Cross. His stay in Quebee for Christ-, On his return from overseas mas means he will not be here to he and Mrs. MacLauchlin resid- receive a delegation of university ed at several points in Nova students from Montreal who have Scotia and at the beginning of announced their intention to pre-; the Second World War he was sent the Governor - General with | stationed at the Basic Training a petition Christmas Day protest- | Centre in Yarmouth. He retired ing the government's decision to from the army with the rank of arm Bomarc anti - aircraft mis- sy Calgary draftsman, displays a Swiss-made watch which tests have shown contains an abnar- ° . ~ RADIOACTIVE ‘WATCH David Straker, 90-year-old ; mal amount of strontium 90. | luminous dial. Tt has been sent Tests have the watch gives off about .1, times as much radiation as a sommal 5 ___ | Redpath librar; siles with nuclear warheads. DANCING | TONIGHT | Charlottetown, =| Curling ‘Club x DRUG STORE OPEN MEDICAL PHARMACY || Corner Pownal & Richmond Sts. | HOURS 10:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY | to Ottawa for further tests. | ee 6623 FREE DELIVERY | ill | THE GUARDIAN PHOTO - REPRINTS of local pictures that appear in the and the EVENING PATRIOT are available at the following prices 5 x 7 GLOSSY 1.25 each 8 x 10 GLOSSY 1.50 each PHONE 8506 er call in person at the switchboard THE GUARDIAN and THE EVENING PATRIOT Branch Offices there while en route fo their New Brunswick homes for Christmas. Detained_in hospital with facial lacerations were L.Cpl. Lawrence Hierlihy, 20, of Tabusintac and Gdsm. David Arbo, 21,.of Saint -— John. E about on the nose—about 560 mile high.” . After an 18-minute flight the Javelin plunged into the ocean about 600 miles from Wallops Is- land. cle radio re- ae ree ee a rocket to| Discharged after treatment fol- pick up the noises which come | lowing the accident,Tuesday were from the sun, some other stars|Guardsmen Cecil Ramsay, 21, of |and from gaseous materials in| Newcastle and Morris Miller, 22, | space. of Saint John. | The administration’ spokesman! None was seriously injured. Cat — | said it would be a couple of days driver Ray Douthwright, 22, of |) ‘before scientists can determine | Mapleton, Ont., was unhurt-when the degree of success of the shot|the vehicle left Highway 1% on a ; and what information it provided.‘curve near here. © + > > Reserve your table now for the NEW YEAR'S EVE BALL at the ROLLAWAY BALL ROOM Dancing from 10 fill 2:00 Music by | Mr. Soye, Elmer Gallant, Wendell Murphy, Ive | Cudmore, Jimmy Coady and Angus MacLaren. Admission $5:00 a couple 150 couples only Tax, tables and novelties included: For Reservations Dial 7142 or 8830 Reservations must be picked up by 5 o'clock Wednesday, Dec. 30 at the Rollaway Club. s | C's 4 eR Be ew ee TO-DAY — CAPITOL Calg MATINEE AT 1 AND 3— EVENING 7-9 COMING MON. and’ TUES. IT’S AHAPPY HOLIDAY HIT... BRINGING YOU... A feact of merry. # ANOTHER MERRY, MADCAP MOVIE BY THE AUTHOR OF THE FAMOUS ‘DOCTOR’ FILMS RICHARD GORDON , SOHN GREGSON PEGGY CUMMING DONALD SINDEN WADIA GRAY MATINEE 2:30 — EVENING 7-9 lk kk wk wk kK wk wy