, l1 i ‘ g. I l .. 4 Was Buyer meets selle Ads. Dial 8506 VOL. LXXI NO. 302 TELEPHONE 8506 r with Guar ‘ a‘k ‘ taker, for quick resublts.tor dian Want classified ad Authorised In Second Clan Mail b Department. I the Port 0 Ottawa m“ HER MAJESTY QUEEN ELIZABETH II Spiritual And FamilyValues Stressed By Queen} Elizabeth . SANDRMNIGIHLAM, Eng. (CPI—- The Queen talked of the import- ance of spiritual and family val- ues in her annual Christmas -‘ broadcast Thursday while her - own family watched on television ' in the next room. ‘ Viewers were taken into the : library of Sandringham House, on the" Queen’s country estate in .Noiifolkj'l‘here she was waiting Jo convey her greetings to fam— lilies throughout the Common- ; wealth. It was the second time that her ripeech had been televised while .it was being broadcast. She said: ‘ “It seems to me that Christ- imas is just the time to be grate- gill-1 to those who add fulness to ‘our lives . . . the “prophets and dreamers, philosophers, men of 'ldeas and poets, artists in paint, .fSCIlIDtm‘e and music . . . ‘ “Even so, we need something ‘more. We all need the kind of security that one gets from a happy and united family." SPOKE 'FRAOM SETTEE Viewers saw her sitting at one end of an embroidered settee, her back supported by a big “cushion. In the background was I table with a double photo- frame holding pictures of Prince “Charles and Princess Anne. In warm tones the Queen spoke 0f many persons who had written 'sayin‘g they like to see the Royal children on television on Christ- v mas afternoon. “We value your interest in .them." said the Queen. “and I can assure you that we have thought about this a great deal before deciding against it." She explained she and Prince Philip want the children to grow "P as naturally as possible. _ HWe believe that public life is not a fair burden to place on ' crowing children. I am sure that all of you who are parents will understan .” SHORTER TALK She made a five-minute talk, eight minutes shorter than last year. At one point she joked about travel plans for the Royal Fam- ily to Africa, Australia, Canada, India, Pakistan and Central and South America in the coming year. “We have no plans for space travel — at the moment," she said. Throughout her message the Queen 5 t r e s 5 ed the Common- wealth lin‘k and had a special word for “the men and women and children from other parts of the Commonwealth who have come to live and work in the great cities of this country and may well be missing the warmth and sunshine of their home- lands." A slight technical hitch in the sound transmission meant that millions of radio listeners missed the first eight words of the Christmas m e s s a g e, a BBC spokesman said. TIMING OFF He said the national anthem preceding the message was re- corded separately for telev1510n and radio. It fin i sh‘ed four seconds earlier on televismn. “The television go - ahead for the start of the Queen's mes- sage was about three seconds too early for sound,” the SPORES' man said. “It was just one of those awful things. It was literally a matter of seconds." This morning at Sandringham a crowd of about 1,000 greeted the Queen and 13 other members of the Royal Family with shouts of “happy Christmas” as they left the parish church. lWhispering Giant’ Crashes, .v Nine Persons Reported BOU‘RNEAIOUTH. E n g 1 a nd (Am—A “Whispering Giant“ 'Bl‘l' L ta“Ilia airliner craShed and killed ~ “1119 Wednesday. It was the sixth . major Christmas-season air craSh "1 five years. ' The Britannzn. a four-engined turbo - prop plane belonging to British Overseas Airways Corpor- fialion. was on a training flight from London airport with 12 com- pany employees aboard. The plane broke out of a dense ‘03 and crashed in a ficld near . this Soth Coast town. Firemen and \‘illazcrs (irazicd t‘nrcc sur- vivors out of the blazing hulk and m-‘llod thcm 7o Roci-omb hospital alon \illh a z-(si-Lic \tot'lwl' Wlm l).'ldl_\ .ninr’tnl it) P“ lice. A cyclist on a nearby roadway was 31mm: hit by thp six-00pm: Plane which plowed mm 8- nerd laillllli, Killed of cattle. Three of the grazing cattle were killed. SET SPEED RECORD The Britannia pilot who died in the crash was Capt. John E. Jack- son. who lcss than a year ago broke the transatlantic commer- cial record with an aircraft of 'the same type. He flew from lNew York to London in seven hours. The mark has smce 57 minutes, . u been broken by newer let an- crati. ‘ Sincc 1954. at least 104 persons have died in plane crashes dur- ing the Christmas season in var- ious parts of the world. .\ BUM“ siraim-ruism; loailci’l with pasxcngcrs. Christmas mall and a shiplllf‘lll oi duimi‘nrlz. crashed at Prestwick. Sco WI. Christmas day, 13m. l'uuu i eight riled. Prince Charles, whose leg still is in a plaster cast following a {all at his boarding school, drove back to Sandringham House with the Duchess of Gloucester, his great—aunt. The others walked. The duchess is 57 today and Princess Alexandra, the Queen‘s cousin, is 22. MONTREAL (CPl Eleven children in u n d undernourished and numb with cold in an un- heated shack celebrated a Christ- mas of material abundance in hospital Thursday while police pressed a search for the family's parents and grandmother. Well-led. medically-treated and laden with gifts of clothing from sympathetic )lonircalcrs. the ll participated in . M Christmas Eve festix‘ities. They sang carols with [lie other t h 9 hospitals CHARLOTTETOWN, who (Education “Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew” WEATHER Variable cloudiness with a few snow- flurries; northwest winds 15. Low-high at Charlottetown Zora and 10. CANADA_, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1958 10 PAGES "my" FIVE CENTS Gromyko Talks Of War In West Berlin Situation U.S. May Have Lithium Bomb By FRANK CAREY WASHINGTON (AP) The United States may have devel~ oped a lithium bomb—a compar- atively cheap method of produc- ing a hydrogen explosion. This was suggested by some scientists T h u r s d a y with an- nouncement of the recent discov- ery of a strange air glow in the Antarctic w h i c h is believed linked with U. S. high - altitude nuclear tests in the Pacific last August. The air glow was described in an International Geophy~ sical Year report which also said nuclear tests might produce an- other bizarre happening in the skies -— man . made or artificial auroras. DETECTED BY INSTRUMENTS The eveningtide glow in the south polar skies—not visible to the naked eye but capable of de- tection on sensitive instruments called spectrographs—is ascribed to “lithium in the high atmos- phere, a constituent not pre- viously known to be present there.” Hugh 0dishaw, executive di- rector of the U. S. national com- mittee of the International Geo- physical Year, told about the dis- covery in a report highlighting scientific findings during the 18 months of the IGY which offi- cially ends Dec. 31. Speaking of the lithium air glow, Odishaw said: “A plain inference is that these new manifestations could be re- lated to nuclear tests carried out during the same period as the IGY program." LIGHTWEIGHT METAL While the IGY report contained no fur t h e r speculation, some other scientists theorized to a re- porter that the presence of lith- ium in the high atmosphere may mean this: That. the United States may be using the lightweight metal lith- ium as a kind of make-it-as-you- en explosives within the bomb or missile itself. In such a version. lithium would be contained in a bomb touched off by an orthodox A- bomb triger. Neutrons released by the A-bomb would then con- vert some of the lithium into tri- tium. a hydrogen explosive. The heat from the A-bomb explosion would also cause the tritium to fuse. producing the main hydro- gen explosion. The Atomic Energy Commis- sion declined to say whether lith- ium is used in any of its weap- ons. Neither would the AEC com~ mcnt on the IGY theory that the Antarctic air glow may be due to nuclear tests. The ABC has said tritum is a possible constituent of hydrogen bombs. But it has described only one process for making it — the fusion of atoms of deuterium, the form of heavy hydrogen that oc- curs in heavy water. Woman Teller Foils Bandit NEW YORK (APl—A man de- manded money from a woman bank teller Wednesday, threaten- ing her life. But she quickly dropped to the floor, pushed an alarm button and watched the bandit flee empty handed. Thus the teller, Mrs. Kinsey Nigro, 33, broke a growing chain of successful balm thefts based on threatening notes handed to tellers. Her bosses at the Chem- ical Corn Exchange bank gave her a $500 reward for her brav- ery. In Mrs. Nigro‘: cage was about $75,000. Less than two hours after the attempted robbery. the FBI ar- rested Danny Harris. 31. near his home a few blocks away from the bank. He was taken back to the bank where Mrs. Nigro iden- tified him as the man who had Ten-year-old Prince (linden sprained ankle in a cast after a tumble at school. follows a fam- ily pet into London's Liverpool rail station for the royal family's animal Git-lotions trek to Sund- rlngham castle. An American youngster. aimi- Pete TOUGH COWBOY OLARESHOIJM, Alta. (GP)— Bud Sonnle, 27-yearold cowboy and rodeo rider, was alone riding herd on 40 cattle when his horse slipped and threw him. With a broken leg. he crawled three miles for help, taking five hours go method of generatin hydro- flireatened her. the hospital’s midnight mass. SHOW N0 CONCERN . A spokesman for St. Justice‘s Hospital said the children—two girls and nine boys ranging in age from l8 months to 13 years~ seemed "very happy." None in— quired about their parents or grandmother. "The children are discreet and have apparently been brought UP very ch‘ rcgarding manncrs," said the spokesman. "They're not Illr‘lf' children in this hospital. cxchnng- sayingv our word about i (‘d «.ir-ztl lr'\‘. :Iurl morvcllcd at mother, faiiim- m- grandmother. ' “"\':‘n to them 1"“? - ‘ Losman said the hospital w .‘l ill-‘i'li‘x‘s firm, A! j "ull‘ (‘l' c ‘or soc children as lung lllIlLllllciIl inc) \H’le awakened furl as: tilt), nch Liz. 'I‘iie itliiiw' .' it. v x , .w»; 5 ,1 I Giselle, mothers the whole group.’ She spent a long while Wednes- day night taking care other sister and brothers and rocking the baby to sleep." Several of the group suffered skin disorders, but all were “com- in; along nicely." FOUND 4 DAYS AGO Mayor James Guerin of sum- ban Cote St. Catherine, collecting for Christmas Charities. found the children four days ago in a ram- :shacklc but near the Lachine Rap- ids. With them was their mother. Mrs. Clifford {\Iaybury. and 60— year-old grandmother. a cripple. "Gucrin said lif‘ had spoken it. to reach the ranch bunkhouse. ~ ’- i 9 .. -.- .-...._._i...._._.f THIS RAMSHACKLE home in Catherine, near Montreal. was the all younger than 13 years. They three frozen bottles of milk and the river-bank town of Cote Ste. refuge for a family of 11 children, Were found shivering inside wilnl five loaves of bread. II Chilled, Undernourished Kiddies Warmed And Fed Traffic Toll In U.S. Mounts CHICAGO (CPI The U.S. Christmas holiday traffic death toll mounted at an alarming clip Thursday and the National Safety Council said the rate was run- CHRISTMAS CAST mm of Kansas City. later caused some cxcltemeu on the train when he approached the loyal car with a toy six-shooter In his band to meet Prince Char- les. A Scotland Yard guard halt- ed Pete's forayf (AP Wirepbofo via radio from London) By Reuters News Agency The Christian world Thursday celebrated Christmas at home, on pilgrimages, in military barracks and great cathedrals. A congregation of 20.000 in Saint Peter's Basilica applauded Pope John XXIII as he was car- ried into the church on his pow able throne to celebrate mass. The pontiff said a low mass over the great altar, unadorned but for six tall candles. It was the first time in the memory of most of the worshippers that a pontiff celebrated this simple daymday rite in public in the Vatican ba- silica. The pontiff appeared later on a balcony high on the facade of the basilica to give his Christmas blessing to a crowd of more than 100,000 gathered in Saint Peter's Square. RESTRICTIONS LIFTED From Jerusalem came repofls that the thousands of pilgrims to the Holy Land from all over the world had spent the day under cloudless skies. The Jordanian military govern- EAR FALLS. Ont. iCPI—Five persons including a police con. stable were slain early Christ~ mas Day in a shooting that erupted from a quarrel in a cabin in this backwoods hamlet. 75 miles northeast of Kcnora. Shortly after dawn an Ontario Provincial Police posse used tear gas to flush Tom Young. 27, from a shack near the cabin. He was taken ho Red Lake and police said he will be charged with murder. The victims Were: Constable Calvin Russell Ful— ning even with the pace that set a record foil for any holiday pe- riod. Deaths resulting from traffic accidents were happening at about the same rate as during a similar four - day Christmas The 11 tots were bundled off to the hospital and the mother and grandmother (IISHDDCW‘W‘I’ X .10 father earlier about condition. in the :"n ~k but l"c:‘ had bccn un- l"l\' lllfil‘ again u..e to locale; ins ‘ilt'.' weekend in 1956 when a record 706 persons died on the highways. \l 7 pm. EST thurda), the uni wwi at 1.31 dcaihs in traffic laf‘-"'"“‘-. ?"» :’l fins 'nvl ‘3 by \m to! my, lord 23. of limo. ()nt.; Albert Young. 47, father of Tom Young: James Gordon. 20'. Clara Gordon 27. his wife: and George Wil- liams. 47. ~ Police said there was every in- dication that Mrs. Gordon had been raped. North American Continent Would Be Battleground MOSCOW (AP! — The Berlin dispute could touch off a war whose flames "would inevitably spread to the American conti. nenl," Foreign Minister Andrei Gromka said Thursday. Declaring that the Soviet ar- senal has all the modern weapons it needs to meet any aggression. he said a new war would bring death "to millions upon millions of people" At the same time, he told the closing session of the Supreme So- viet the Soviet Union ll ready "even tomorrow“ to sign an agreement to end nuclear weap- ons tests. But he heaped scorn on Western insistence that such a pact be sealed by a foolproof in- spection system. Gromka reserved his toughest words for the situation in West Berlin. He said the Soviet Union hoped wise salesmanship would accept Soviet proposals for West Berlin as I foundation for a solu- tion to the crisis. MUST BE SOLVE!) The West has rejected the So- viet plan to end next spring the U.S.S.R., U.S.. British and French occupation of Berlin. West Ber- lin would become an unarmed free city. Gromka said the So- viet Union is ready to consider any Western counter-proposal. But he said the West Berlin question must be solved, and added: “If an end is not put u: it. the threat will further increasn of West Berlin becoming a sec- ond Sarajevo which kindled the flames of the First World War. (This was I reference to the assassination of Archduke Ferdi- hand of Austria-Hungary at Sara- jevo in 1914) “Any provocation here. any at- tempt at aggression against the G e r m a 1: Democratic Republic (East Gcrmanyl may start a new big war in which millions upon millions of people would find their death. “The flame of war would inev- itably spread to the American continent for today's military techniques have virtually elimin- ated the difference between dist- ant theatres of war and those close at hand." Gromyko said the Soviet Union will hand over its occupation rights ln West Berlin to the East German government if no agree- ment with the West is reached. Former S’Side Man Fatally Iniured In Highway Accident HALIFAX (wt—WWW Huestis.38.ol nearby White's Wdledhhoqftnlha‘e'fiun- daytwohotltlfi a highway aocidematludlay.N.s.,wout wmlbcmm. Plum mmhdmd.MW Survivors Iodide his father Frank fluent: and W. Mm. Frank Harms" ' of Summer- Iide: (three sisters, Georgie. Mrs. Emmett Randal, Summemde. Mildred. Mrs. Earle Arsenault‘ We. Cami. Mn. Frank W. North Bay. 011.. also nmtlwofanmietdde.P.E.l. mdfldren. meat W for Christine only all rem-lotions normally lmpooed on movement in and out of Nbu- rcth so that they could take part in the pilgrimage to the Church of the Annunciation. In Bethlehem. birthplace of Jesus. thousands ofpilgrims crowded into the Church of the Nativity for midnight high mass and to offer prayers in the Grotto. United Nations Secretary-Geo- eral Dag Hmnarsldold ment the day with a frontier patrol of the UN Emergency Force on the Gaza Strip between the Israel- Egypt border. West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt said in his Christmas Eve broad- cast to Berliners and East Ger- many that “no power on earth will be able to take from us the hope and confidence which come from the Christmas message." SURPRISE PARTY M the Curie Foundation in Paris. doctors and nurses gave a surprise party for five young Yu- goslav scientists recovering after bone marrow transfusions. They were subjected to an overdose of tion fluctuates from a couple of dozen men to 100. Inspector Tom Corsie said that shortly before 1 a. m. Williams arrived at the home of Coast. Fulford asking for help to quell a disturbance in a shack 300 yards from the hydro transfor- mer s t a t i o n. The constables home. where he and his wife were preparing to celebrate Christmas with their three small children. is on the south side of a power dam here. The constable and Williams went north across the dam and waikel up a path to within 57 feet of the shack. They were met by a fusillade of shots from a high-powered rifle. The constable World PulsAside Problems To Observe Christmas Day radium in I m Accidmt In Yugoslavia. Mllhom' of persons saw an! heard Queen Elizabeth deliver her Christmas message in a televiy ton and radio broadcast from the traditional Royal Family Cir-ist- mas residence of Sandringham. About 55,000 British servicemen and their families heard the Queen's broadcast in canteens and homes across the troubles in- land colony of Cyprus. BM Cyprue' Clo-lemma fedvib lee were marked by an “moo phere d general relaxation. Cyp- riots and security forces enjoyed the most cheerful holiday since and - British guerrilla activities more than 3% years ago. The good cheer was prompted by a peace offer Wednesday by the Greek Cypriot EOKA tenor- lst organization. YOUNG SANTA INGERSOLL. Ont. (CPL—Four year-old Freddie Milton tried to emulate Santa Claus by climb ing down a neighbor's chimney. He got stuck near the bottom and was rescued by his mother. 5 Slain During Quarrel In Ont. Backwoods Hamlet 0n orders from Inspector Cob 512 no attempt was made to en- ter the building immediately. Constables R. J. Macgarva and Herb Roller from Kendra and two officers from Dryden. Ont, rushed to the scene. At daybreak, police entered the shack which was the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon. Police found their bodies along with those of Williams who had attempted to enter the shack in the face of rifle fire, and Tom Young's fa- ther. Police said they knew they were looking for Tom Young who was suspected of being in posses. sion of Const. Fulford‘s revolver which had been taken as well as fell. fatally wounded. Williams raced on to the shack. Meanwhile, when her husband did not return within the expec‘ ted time. Mrs. Fulford called the OPP at Red Lake. SPARSEI.Y POPI'LATED Ear Falls is a new lieu u out of the northwestern On- w'. (I..C\rlls causes for a total lario bush around an Ontario hy- .|dru power project. T h 0 popular hamlet ‘FIND BODY IN SNOW Cpl. Dick Bender and a second officer drove to the scene and found the body of Const. Fult'm‘d ilying on a path in the snow. 1 .3060 rifle which was missing from the Gordon's dwelling. The posse surrounded a nearby shack and filled it. with tear gas. Tom Young was flushed out. They s aid he offered no resist once. A native of Ema. Ont.. 144 miles south of here. Const. Pul- fiord joined the police force ll March, 1954. He was transfer to Ear Falls one month ago. i - .Wn.. an“... . .a ti H-tl “WI-q. mm". 't k l' i I l ,