TELEPHONE 8506 ' Buyer meets seller with Guar- dian Want Ads. Dial 8506 ask fa; classified ad faker, for quick results. "Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew" 16 PAGES . I8TH CHRISTMAS MESSAGE CHARL(Yl'TETOWN, CANADA MONDAY. DECEMBER- 24, ANGlO- FRENCH WITHDRAWAL COMPLETED Dangers Of Appeasement Are Stressed By Pope Pius VATICAN CITY (C? The Pope proclaimed Sunday that de- fensive war is morally lawful and warned the free world against the dangers of appeasement. His lath Christmas message made clear that. in the eyes of the Roman Catholic church. the freedom fighters of Hunargy had the moral right to resist Russian force with force. ..There must be no repetition. he laid. of the events preceding the Second World War "when all the threatened nations. and not merely the smallest. sought their safety at the expense of others." "In the end," the Pope do- elared. "all together were over-' whelmed by the holocaust." CONDEMNS COMMUNISM The 80-year-old Pontlff. frail but vigorous. endorsed the idea of a United Nations police force to protect the peace and delivered the nu .. condemnation he has ever made of Communism and what he called its determina- tion "to impose on all r pies. in one way or another, a special and intolerable way of life." Against this drive. he said. "only the unanimous and cour- ageous behavior of all who love the truth-and the good can pro- serve peace. and will preserve it." The head of the Roman Cath- nlic church was replying to ('lu'istmas greetings of the College of Cardinals. But. as in the past, his words were aimed at man. their lead- t-rs and rulers everywhere. The Vatican Radio and net works of more than a, score ol countribd carried his lions. The pontiff said that: BACKS UN FORCE i. The United Nations should have "the right and power of foresialllng all military interven- llon of one state in another . . . and also the right and power of assuming. by means of s suffi- cient police force. the safeguard- ing oi order in the state which is threatened." 1. Rights of membership in the United Nations yshould be denied to nations which refuse to admit UN observers. This point seemed aimed at Hungary's Communist government. 3. "Only in the ambit oi an in- stitution like the United Nations can promises of nations to reduce armament. especially to abandon production and use of certain arms. be mutually exchanged un der the strict obligation oi inter- national law." 4. Aerial inspection to ensure ob servance oi disarmament pledges has his approval. Apparently re- ferring to potential development oi President Eisenhower's "open skies" plan. he said the UN is in a .. to assume effective con- trol of the armaments of all na- tions and could "assure certain and effective knowledge of the production and military prepared- ness for war" with relative ease through air observation and photography. ADDRESSES PBELATES Regaliy robed in white and gold. the Pontiff spoke from his throne in the consisto y hall oi the Vatican palace. Twelve cardinal princes oi the church and more than a score of bishops and arch- bishops listened to his words. "It is clear that in the present circumstances there can be veri- fied in a nation the situation wherein every effort tuavoidg war VIP-1-TC effective self-defence and with the hope of a favorable outcome against unjust attack-could not be considered unlawful." The pontiff made it clear that his declaration approving defen- sive war did not mean that he had veered from support of the cause of peace. UNITY NEEDED "No one." he said. "can sccuu us of favoring the stiffening oi opposing blocks. and still less d having in sotne fashion abandoned that mission of peace which flows from our apostolic office. . . We remain closely allied to the cues of peace, and God alone knows how much we yearn to be able to announce it in full and happy tones with the angels of Christ- mas." The pontiff ssfd European sol- idarity is "a definite need of this period-a means of ensuring the whole world's peace and a fruit- hil share of its goods." But such unity. he warned. can- not he achieved until all the asso- ciated nations "realize that the political and economic defeats of one can nowhere. in the long run. result in true gains for the others." The Pontiff concluded his 7.000- word message on a note of en- couragement. "Peace is the fruit of men's ef- fort. but also a priceless gift of God." he said. He spoke of the "generous reac- tion towsrd the oppressed Hun- garian nation on the part of all our beloved sons. of charitable or ganizations, of entire nations. and also of fair-minded newspapers." CAB PRODUCTION RISES COLOGNE. Germany (Routers) West Germany has almost caught up wlfrlrttalnas the world? Ne: 1 motor vehicle exporter. accord- ing to figures released by the West German Ford Company. The company said that West Ger- many's exports this year would be about 470,000 vehicles. com- pared with Britain's 4M.il)0. Six Die When Christmas Tree Lights StartFire” MINNEAPOLIS (AP-Six pa- tients. five of them women. died early Sunday when a short cir- eult in Christmas tree lights sent fire and smoke raging through Doctors Memorial Hospital here. working under fioodlights, fire- men helped and carried more than two score patients. several of their: babies. down ladders in safety "pin the five-storey brick structure. All six victims suffocated after the fire flared in the hospital lobby. They were identified at Miss Ella M. Mullins. 82; Mrs. Mary S. Ballelt: Mrs. Lydia Beckett. 66; Mrs. Sarah C. Stone. 59: Miss Caroline Vale, 73, and Clarence 0. Green. 58. all of Min- ncapolis. Ambulance fleets carried mort- than 50 patients. including seven infants. to Minneapolis General Hospital. One of the babies and seven adults were reported in One of them, Dr. Wallace Nel- son. had been staying st the hos- pital overnight because of an early surgery date. TOWER OF FLAME Miss Frances Menefee. night switchboard operator. said she heard a small cracking sound as though a light bulb had popped on the gayly-decked Yule tree in the lobby about 3 a.m. "By the time I turned around. the tree was a tower on fire. Miss Menefee said. "The lobby lights all went out and my board wont dead." Miss Meneiee raced down a corridor to a phone connected directly outside to spread the alarm. When she returned she said the entire lobby was an in- form. 30-DEGREE WEATHER Patients. clad only in the brief- critlcal condition. est attire. were escorted and car- Hali Oi Federal Cabinet To Stay Near Posts On Holidays OTTAWA (CPI-About half of federal cabinet members will be slaying close to their posts in the Capital during the Christmas holi- day season. Only a few of the ministers will be further than a day's trip from Ottawa and all but two are ex- pected to be on hand when the new session of Parliament starts gun. I. a week after New Years 8?. The situation is in contrast with Christmases of recent yt'II'!- WM" only a mlttority of the cabinet was available. Prime Minister St. Laurent was scheduled to leave tonill" '0 spend the holidays with his fam- ily at Quebec City. Until he re- turns shortly after the New leer. Trade Minister Howe will be act- ing prime minister. BACK FOB LEVEE Governor-General M88-'0! Wm spend Christmas in his home at r" 300. but returns I! 1&1 UMIIIOBII jg h the senate chamber. Christmas here at the home of his daughter. Mrs. P. D. Carmen. and VII" visit the family of his son. .lohn. at yloritrcal after New lo.-ir's Day. Social Credit Leader Low plans to remain in Ottawa with his family. The farthest - distant cabinet member is Health Minister Mar- tin, who will be in India through Christmas and New Year's. He is rearing the end of a twtrmonil tour of south and southeast Asia. Australia and New Zenlllld fill!” lng which he attended a meetlod of Colombo plan countries. MISS OPENING Mr, Martin is scheduled to ar- rive bsclt in Canada Jan. 11. I10 will miss the opening of Parlia- ment. as will Fisheries Mloistu Sinclair who plans to stay here for the holidays and then IOIVO 90? I to-day visit to the west coll!- Besides Mr. Martin, five others plan to spend Christmas and New Year: Day awn! MN 0m"- Defence Minister cuisine! It Vancouver. Veeerms Andra Min- t Montreal. Macdonnld at Brstitford and Rev- enue Minister NCCCII If 3." frew ried to nearby apartment build- ings by firemen and bystanders in the 30-degree temperature. Miss Aagot Ramberg. X-ray technician who also lives near the hospital. was awakened by the sirens. punctuated by the screams. "I looked out to see patients at most of the windows. where smoke was pouring out." she said. "some of than were trying to knot bedsheets to drop out of the windows." One large woman came down the ladder with s fireman placing her feet on the descending rungs, one by one. At the third rung from the bottom. she screamed, "I can't go on." collapsed and was caught and carried away by waiting firemcn. 3100.000 LOSS The building had been known as Fiitel Hospital until three years ago. Bodies of several dead were found in their beds on the third noor, described by firemen as tho patient area hit hardest by intense heat and smoke. First fire department estimates placed the financial loss at SIM.- 000 The I25-bed hospital is a non profit institution. It is governed by a board of directors. Mdiher Dies in Rescue Attempt REMO. B. C. (CI!-A mothc who dashed back into a biasing home early Saturday to save one of her five children was burned D death with the child. Dead is Mrs. Mabel Grant ad Jessie. Ii. William Grant. the hue- band and father. escaped with tbs four other children. Police said one of the children had filled a lamp with gasoline and when the father went to light it. it exploded. The village of Retno is four miles southwest of terrace in the Skezna district of north Coastal. ll. . MILAN (Heaters) - Policemen struggled firm It Milan rail- THE LATE MR5. LONGWOBTII Missionary From Freetown Dies In Costa Rica Mrs. Donald Longworth (Nee Jean Lewis. of Freetown). a mem- ber of the Latin American Mis- sion serving in San Jose. Costa Rica. died early Saturday morning. having been stricken with a virus disease only a few days earlier. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Colby C. Ixwis. of Freetown. and had served on the mission field for the past nine years. She was in her 34th year. and is sur- vived by her husband and four young children, her parents and several brothers and sisters. The eldest of , H , Ifean attenurpnule so i in Freetown and later Prince of Wales College before studying in the field of her calling. Following her marriage to Donald Long- worth of Woodstock. Ontario. she served the Iford for nine are at the Central American ocation. She was due home on furlough in June, 1957. death came at 3:30 a.m. AST on Saturday. with bur- ial in San Jose at 5:30 p.m. the same day. ' Survlng relatives. apart from her husband and four children in San Jose. are her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Colby C. Lewis. of Freetown: sisters Mary (Mrs. Garth Link- letterl. of Linkletter Road. P.E.i. and Shirley (the recent bride of Rev. Bruce Moore. Sydney. N.S. Brothers are Ira and Claude Lewis, of York. P.E.I.. and Edwin Lewis of Freetown. G.R. Holmes. Q.C.. of Charlottetown. is an uncle. . A memorial service will be held at the Bedeque Baptist Church this afternoon. beginning at 2:”. In Hospital After Accident Mrs. William Trowsdale of Bor- den was taken to the Prince County Hospital last evening with injuries to her ribs after the car in which she was a passenger skidded off an icy highway at Bedequc. near the I-icrnwood Road. Although confined to hospital her condition is not considered serious. In the car with Mrs. Trowsdale was her husband and two children. Will Live To -: Stand Trial For Murder Of Wife MERItI'l'I'0N. Ont. tCP)-Hos- pital authorities say Elgin Brad- ley, All-year-old paper mill worlicr felled during a 20 - minute lull battle with police Friday night. will live to stand trial on a chafge of murdering his wife. Hospital authorities at St. Cath- arines said Saturday he is in ash lotta but no critical condition. suf- fering a bullet wound-in his neck and jaw and another in his arm. )1. -"Q charged with murder Saturtxy to hours after a inm- MM srked by so shots. Police were called to the Brad- ley home at lo-.30 p-m. Friday by his wife, Eds. ts. When they ar- rlvqj they found her on the floor of her home with a shotgun wound in her stomach. They spotted Bradley I00 yards from the house. standing in the doorway of a school and armed with . i2-gsuge motgua. He was wounded as he ran across the lawn of an adjacent house. m”m' building housing the Bridgewster Ddletta WEATHER Snow changing to intermit- tent rain; much milder; low- high 25 and 40. Outlook for Christmas; Cloudy and mild. 1956 9 V TH FIRS V9 T CHRISTMAS N. B. Mother And I Daughter Burned BATH. N. B. iClKi- A moihcri and her tlaughtcr I)Ul'li(lfI in death ;at Beechwood near this western Ne Brunswick town uhcn fire raced through their frame house. Dead arc Mrs. Eva Post. 35 andl her 12-year-old dziiuthlcr Violet, They were alone in the house. it was tho second time within months that tragedy struck the Post family A atkvcarold son. I)ouglas, was one of the victims of it double drowning in Beech- wood Dam in Scptembcr. No Paper Tomorrow Tomorrow being Christ-i mas Day, the next edition of The Guardian will be Wednesday, December 26. ...J.....j....w Theatre Burns Al Bridgewaier BRIDGEWATER. N S, Will A fire in the business district was, brought under control Sunday after a three-hour battle by fire depart- ments from three towns. The blue is believed to have or- iginated in so overheated oil turn- ace in the (I00-seat Capital theatre. Firemen from Bridgews Lun- enbtlrg and Liverpool con the fire in the one building which was desuibsd as a total loss. A nearby Weekly and a I. mer- cisi school suffered no damage. Dr. R.P. LiIlIlliiTIaI1 of the Ameri- can Cyanamiti Company. Stam- ford, Conn.. has been elected chair I man of the American Chemical; assistant director of Cynamiti's rc- . scat'('ll sorvicc dcpartmcnt. takcs office on January l. 1957. .siii-cectl- ing i)r. Jesse W. Stillman of EI. du Pont de Nemours and Co. Wil- mington. Del. Professor John ii University of Virginia as chosen as chairman-elect an Proicssor Warren W. Brandt of Purdue Uni- versity was names sccrctary-trcaa- urcr. The ncu titairnia), who has in-on I secretary of the Analytical Div- ision. has served on the advisory boar of Analytical Chemistry. an American Chemical Society publi- cation. He was secretary of the analytical section of the Twelfth and Applied Chemistry held in New York in 1951. Dr. Chapman was born in Prince Edward Island. Can- ads. in IE0. He received unda Izrariuate lralnint: at Mount Allison lmivcrsily. Sat-kville, N H . and taught in a preparatory school of his native province for seven years while continuing his studies He earned the MA degree at Teach- er's College. Columbia University, in I928 and the Pit. D. at Columbia in I932. He was an assistant chem- lst at Columbia and an instmctor at st. Stephen's College before join- ing the American Cyanamid Com pany in 1933. Dr. Chapman was put in charge of the company's analytical labors- wrv in last. was names assist- ant director the technical ser- m4.dtrecra'-etthe lyti I nd lesiil! dnsloa in im Yoe of the XUJ There has been no official esti- g Islander To Head American Chemical Society Division DR. R.P. ('II:iPMAN The Division of Analytical Chem- istry is one of the American Chem lcal Society's 2l scientific and tech- nical divisions covering various fields of chemistry and chemical engineering. with 78.000 members. the Society is the world's largest professional association of scient- ists and engineers and has local sections in every state of the Union. Rico and Hawaii PACIFIC DOMINION The two main islands of New Il"P0'intd as his want itioa eerIa'&yeui. W. 7.t-slond were visited amt cg"-mg U Clli-Ila Cool is NO the District of Columbia. Pnetm POHT SAID. Egypt (Reutersr-- The United Nations command an- nounced Sunday that most of its troops will be pulled out of Port Said with in two days and sent to the Sinai Peninsula. British and French forces com- pleted their withdrawal from Eg- ypt Saturday but the Israeli army still occupies Egyptian territory. A UN Emergency Force com- nmnique in Cairo said: "The second phase of the UNEF operation-following up the Is- raeli withdrawal from Sinai -- is expected to proceed with great speed.” A fresh deployment of troops will be made on four roads start- ing today. The UN force now has 2.827 troops in Egypt. Yugoslav troops will concen- trate in the north. along the road running from El Kantsra. near Ismailia. to El Artsh. on the coast. Colombian troops will operate on the central road from Ismailla to Bird Rod Salam. and Danish and Norwegian det hmenta -will ad- vance along the southern road mun Suez to the Mitls Pass. Ind- ian troops will tak tip positions along the cast was of the Gulf of Suez. EGYPTIANS CHEERED A symbolic detachment of the Egyptian army marched into Port Said to the cheers of joyous res- idents. British and French flags were trampled and burned. Cairo Sunday night lifted the blackout which has darkened the capital for seven weeks and the Egyptian Suez Canal authority ad- vised its pilots to stand by to re- sume duty-although the canal is still blocked. The pilots have not worked since the zAnglo-French interven- tion but have received full basic PRICE 5c U N Troops To Leave Port I Said Within Next 2 Days Israeli Army Continues To Occupy Egyptian Territory pay and allowances. Many have been living in villas set aside for them at Port Tewfik. near Sues. MOORHOUSE MISSING An Egyptian liaison officer with the UN Emergency Force head- quarters said he could not give in- formation about the whereabouts of Lieut. Anthony Moorehouse. 21- year-old British officer kidnapped by the Egyptian underground in Port Said before the withdrawal. "The British made efforts to find where Moorhouse is but they failed." he said. "I can give no further information." "Today is a big day in our his- tory. for the sun will rise on a vic- torious Egypt whose territory is p u r g e d of sggressors," com- mented the Cairo newspaper AI Ahram. "Egypt best two big countries" it said in an editorial. "one the mistress of the seas and the other who thought it was mighty as Nero." LAST TROOPS LEAVE The semi-official Al Goumhottrta the Cairo newspaper which re flects the government's views. said the Port Said struggle dem- onstrated that "people cannot live without freedom and independ- ence." An umbrella of night nghtor plsnes provided protective cover for the last few British soldiers and tanks Saturday as they moved aboard a landing craft-and sailed away on the blue Mediterranean. No protection was needed. A few streaks of tracer fire from Egyptian guns lit the sky but none came from the beachhead. The last Frenct units. a bat- talion of infantry and a squsdrol of tanks. Ieft earlier from the eastern banks of the harbor en trance to the Suez Canal. OTTAWA ICPI-Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India avowed Sunday that Hungarian resistance to Soviet domination has shown the way to greater national free dom for many countries. "Passive resistance cannot ulti- mately he crushcd," he said in an interview on the CBC television program "Citizen s' Forum." lhrnadcasi from the Parliament Buildings hcre. liir. Nchru said events in Hun- gnry have moved the Indian people as thcy have otltcr peoples. But nobody could help Hungary with war. i What had impressed him most about thc Hungarian "episode." he said. was the influence of pas- sive and pcaceful resistance. This inllucnce was greater than that of armed rebellion. FLIES T0 LONDON The Indian prime minister, wearing his traditional (ihandi cap. was interviewed by Edgar Mclnnis. president of the Cana- dian lnstitute of International AI- fairs. He later attended a recep- tion givcn by the Indian high com- missioner to Canada before leav- ing by air for London after a two- day visit to Ottawa. Mr. Nehru conferred with Prime Minister St. Laurent Saturday and with External Affairs Minister Pearson Sunday. At a press conference Saturday. Mr. Nehru said his conversations with Mr. St. Laurent were discus- sions of world problems between tiwfl friends and that their only differences were those of em- Nehru Says Events In Hungary Show Way To Greater Freedom phasis. . the interview Sunday. Mr. Nehru said he finds an eiementl of hope in the Hungarian and Egyptian "tragedies" i l The latter had shown that worldy lopinioti is beginning to count and that it is difficult to revive oldl 'oniai methods. CITES ALGERIA Mr. Mt-Innis case of Algeria. where repressios had been worse than in Hunxary. At another point. Mr. Nehru said recent world crises hQ increased tension and "brought us rather near the possibility of war." But those crises hari also served to help clear the air and "if we survive the present. the future might be good." Mr. Nehru said he doubts a step toward an Arab-Israeli set- tlement can be made before two qucslions are solvcd. Those were clearance of the Suez canal and the future of the canal. URGES VISITS He returned to one theme of his Saturday press conference: Relations between the United States and Communist China. lie said it seems inevitable that ihc U.S. and China can't continue to ignore one another. A major step toward some understanding between the two countries would be establishment of facilities for Americans to visit China and for Chinese to visit the US. Mr. Nehru made a spirited defence of India's policy of M53 alignment. No country could take the risk of a major war. Even a minor war could lead to a major war. Therefore minor wars and the "climate of war" must both be avoided. At the Saturday press confer ence.he said the British Com- rnonweaith suffered a seven shock when Britain intervened militarily in Egypt. 'But the Commonwealth had stmrived t& shock. He was convinced that the Commonwealth association should continue despite differettcu Those were so many disruptive tendencies in the world that he was not prepared to hresli up any kind of association ,or bridge now . in i existence. - REBELS WI-ECK TRAIN surlsested that AIHIEIIS (AP) - Natioaalila Britain and France had res-rebels rtppedupssectioaofth Pmlded to moral pressure is male rail line between Egypt whereas there was no Ill- and Oran Friday night and Ida- .dication that the Russian leaders railed a lwnuld do the same in Honsarv. i Mr. Nehru said he has waited lfor the French is respul h the locomotive. two baggag cars and three pauenger can. IPrettch authorities gave 3 ID figura- IIIV . -i-g;.rr-rs an ,;'e -arliI'-Hi? I .