MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN l-M-u-. fools would say. wise men may think what hardy Kill. The Pe Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew. of men? MAXI MS OIA MERE MAN is not Precedent indeed I mug Morning mu; Founded I881: .'3,'.f”:i””r'l.l?.l1P'I"fir'i.':i!"i'..'i"..f'f.':?"J.?: '.i.”: i:'.::3:'".;.E":.:.';:: A CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1952 14 APAGES ..,. .,.,,,,,..,. ,..,, C... D FEAT OF B. C. LIBERAL GOVCT APPEARS Ciange OF Climate Shown In Marine Lille Island Men On Executive Fisheriesdixperis Of Federation Of Mayors By BRUCE PHILLIPS CALGARY, July 3 - (OP) - Mayor A.J. Mason of Springhili, N. 5.. today was elected president or the Canadian Federation of Mayors and Munripalitics. Delegates at the annual four-day convention also voted to hold an international conference next year at Montreal with the United States Conference of Mayors, invitations Coming Events "Sandy's Drive-In Theatre. ihows Tuesday and Friday's 9 pm. "Come to danc Iona East School every Friday iilght. "Dance in Howe's Hail, Brack- lcy Beach, Friday, July 4. "Barn Dan-cc, Belfast Hall, lluesday, July 8. Eldon W.I. "Dance, Millvicw Hall, Friday, July 4. "Show, Boi'd:.-ii?!-'i'lday, "Hollow IIl'll.Iil1Dl1." "Ice cream. Springton. Monday. July '1. "Lawn Partri; New Haven Monday night. July '1. "Now in stock hay salt and strawberry boxes. Dillon & Spillett. "Reserve August 5 for Kingston United Church Tea. "Dance, l..ittIc Pond Hall, Moli- lily, July 7. "Lot 05 hal:WFr.lday. July 4th. Concert and dance. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Triday night. Music by Robicliaud "Rt-serve Wednesday. July iiiih. for Wcst Covcht-ad Church Tea. "Arrcars of school tax due Point is Roche School must be paid at once. "Amatcur coiilcst, dancing. singing, plays, etc., North Rus- tico. Friday, July 4th, 8.00 p.m. "North Rustibo Regatta, boat 'nces, lobster supper, dancing, etc.. Ncdnesday, July 23. "Mull l.lV& C0 Garnhuiii lottetown. your films and nega- Btudlos, Char- "Come in and talk over. our Purina Finance Plan. for your chicks and hogs. Dillon & Spillett "Indian River players present "Eyes of Love" in St. Mary's Hall. Souris, on Friday. July 4. "Dance every Friday night. south ltifsilco hall. Music by the Ciisrlotteionians. "Burlington Farm Forum pre- senting National Film Board films in Irishtown -Hall July 4th. Every- one welcome. "Unloading Saturday and Mon- day good quality wheat 33.20 at car. Bring bags. E. J. MacDougall. Vernon. "Grand Scottish Iconccrt by the Lads and Laxiies Pipe Band at- Tyrone Hall. Lot 05. Friday night. ii o'clock. Dance altar. "Now in iiioclt-Herbaie 2-4-D for spraying mustard: also milk and cream cans. 5. B and 10 gal- lon size. Dillon 0: Splllett. "Come to the special dance Is- landers Country Club, Travellers Rest. Saturday, July 5. Music by Russell Warren and His Blue Haven Ramblers. "Hear Merry Minstrels of 1952 from st. Dunstan's Basilica" in St. Mary's Hall, souris, on Monday. July 'I. - "Dance, St. Peters Bay Holy Name Hall Friday, July 4. Modern and old time dancing from 9.30 - i am. Obaisson's Orchestra. Ad- mlsslnn 40c. "Pantry Sale by Orwell Ladles' Aid at Stewart 6: Beck's, Mont- Ilue. Saturday, July 5th, from 2 to 5 pm. "Don't fall to attend the annual Dicnic of st. Anthony Branch oi the Canadian Legion Wednesday. July is at Legion Grounds. Bloom- field Corner. "Institute dance, refreshments, bssur beginning 7.30. Wood is- lands West school. Thursday. July 11. "Lobster Carnival in aid of St. Msrgsi-st's Church at Nau- truss Harbour Wednesday. July 9- Bast ssils snd other sinuso- will be extended to overseas mayors. Mayor Mason, a member of the Federation almost since its incep- tion, succeeds Alderman George C. Miller of Vancouver. Mr. Miller iv-as named honorary president. J.0. As- selm, chairman of the executive committee of Montreal (my Coun- cil, was named president-elect. Following the convention close many delegates left on a tour of Eanff and the Rocky Mountains, other officers elected included: Vice-presidents: Mayor Charlotte Witton. Ottawa; Mayor G.E, How- ard. Saint John. N. B.; Mr. Asselin; Mayor H. W. Wccigc, Summcrsidc. P.E.I.; Honorary Secretary; Mayor H.G.R. Mews. bi. John's. Nfld.; Honorary Treasurer. Mayor Edward Wilson. Verdun, Que; Mayor Paul Pratt, Longueuil, Que.: Mayor J.A. Mongrain, Trois Rivieres. Que: Mayor H. E. Harmon. Edniundsion. N.B.; Mayor H.S. Wright, Freder- iCi0n: Mayor E.J. Wright. Livcr- Dool. N. 3.: Mayor J. David Stewart, Charlottetown: Mayor Horace Boi- vin. Granby, Que. Regional chairmen include: Quebec - Mayor Francois Roy, Shawinigan Falls: Mayor A.K. Grimmer, Tcmiscnmiiiizi Mayor Georges Phancuf, Sriliit - Jcan; Mayor J,C. Levcsquc, Baeotvillc. New Brunswick - Mayor A.E. Stone, Moncton. Nova Scotia-Mayor F. C. Wight- man. Amherst; Alderman J. Lloyd, Halifax. Prince Edward Island - Couli- cillor M. A. Farmer, Charlottetown. Newfoundland-To be appointed.iThc Research Board report said that "unusually high temperatures Plan Feed-Grain Assistance On Yearly Basis OTTAWA, July 3 - (GP) -- The Government's feed-grain assistance policy will coniiniic on a year-to-year basis, Agric- ulturc Minisicr Gardiner indic- atcd today in the Commons. He spoke after George Now- lan (PC-Annapolis-Kiiigs) sug- gested the policy be made a permanent instead oi a "hand- to-mouth" basis. Under the program, the Gov- ernment for several years has been paying freight charges on Western feed grain going to Eastern farms. Reds Appear T Be Hoarding Migs TOKYO, July 3 -- rAPi - The Communists no longer throw hun- dreds of Mig-15 jets into the Nortlli Korean skies and apparciitly arc hoarding their air armada of 1.- 800 to 1.000 planes, the Far East Air Force said today. in six days of air fighting last month, the Air Force said, American Sabres outnumbered the Mlgs most of the time. There was no apparent reason for the Cominiin- lst move. Say Atlantic I Growing Warmer ST. ANDREWS. N.B.. July 3 - (CP) Southern marine forms are moving into the nea.r-Arctic waters of: Greenland because of a change in climate since the early 1020's. Birger Rasmussen, director of the Institute of Marine Research oi Norway, reported this today to the second annual meeting of the In- ternational Commission for the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries. Mr. Rasmussen, one of Norway's representatives on the commission. reported great masses 0” cod m Greenland waters and said the de- velopmcnt ”must be viewed on the background of the change of clini- aie and of the natural conditions generally in the Arctic." His statements were supported in a report by Dr. Paul Marlnus Han- son, fisheries biologist for the ad- ministration of Denmark. The findings of the Norwegian and Danish investigators follow ri report of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada which said that last year a number of new or un- usual fish spccies - most of them pelagic southern species associated with high water temperatures were found off the Maritime Prov- I IIICOS. Highest Temperatures Highest water temperatures in 30 years were recorded at the Atlantic Biological Station here during 1951. prevailed on the Scotlan Shelf in 1950 and 1951 and were accompan- ied by unusual distributions of fish which disturbed traditional fishing for groundfish. Surface water tem- peratures at the station (St. An- drews) have shown a. fairly defin- ite upward trend for the put 10 years with temperatures in 1951 the (Contiiiiie'd-dn- Page'57Co1.' '6)- Creamery Butler Stocks Increase orrawa. July 3 (ca) Stocks of creamery butter in nine Canadian cities on July I rose sharply to 29,047,000 lbs. from 16.- 259,000 on June 1. and 163712.000 on the corresponding date last year. the Bureau of Statistics re- ported today. Holdings of cheddar totalled 20,'l39.000 pounds com- pared with l5,00'1,000 a. month earlier, and 12,362,000 on July 1. 1951. while cold storage holdings of eggs were 221,000 cases as against 230,000 on June 1. and 108,000 a year earlier. Stocks of creamery butter by cities on July 1, with totals for the same date last year in brackets: Quebec 2,202,000 (l.225,000i pounds; Moiitlteal l3.55l.000 (6,017,000): To- ronto 5,00'i,000 (2,457,000); Wlnni. new 3.535.000 0.769.000): Rcslnn 959,000 (324.000l: Saskatoon 457.- 000 (631,000l: Edmonton 1,293,000 (169,000): Calgary 278,000 (346,- 000), and Vancouver 2,041,000 (1,- 253,000). Behind Iron (By Tom Ready) BERLIN, Jilly .'l-(AP!--Frncrl from .30 hours of Itussian captiv- ity, ihrcc Cliiciign pricsls lcfi for ilie United States tonight. say- ing ihey had "lcarncd a lcsson" about visits to-Bcrlin. Intending to spend one day sightseeing in this four-powcr city behind the Iron Curtain. the Roman Catholic priests and their CIEITHIHI VNOIIIRI1 KIIICIO tVl'lit'! snatched by Red bordcr police Wednesday. Their tour turned in- toiflve hours of grilling by Sov- iet army agents. "We did not know if we were belng taken to Moscow, to Wash- ington or to Siberia," said Rev. "Mt. Stewart Strawberry Grow- ers Exchange open for business. Monday. July '1 "All unpaid taxes due Emyvcils School will be handed in for col- lection after July 25. By order of trustees. "Dance with Frank Smith and Charlie Munroe at Cliff Peters Barn Dance, Rollo Bay, Monday. July '1. Modern and old time music. Canteen service. Sponsored by Rollo Bay East Women's Institute. "Hog producers attention: Del- mar Adams will be collecting bogs for Swift Canadian Co. Lim- ited every Monday afternoon and Tuesday morning through Soa- vlew and Darnley. For trucking service please list your hogs with Sanford Pickering. pbons Darnley 112-ill. merits. Meals served st 3.00 pm. Seized Priests.Freed From Curtain Brnmislaua Sokolowski. He described the experiences of liimsclf, Rev. George Gorski and ltov. Mnriin Borowczyk. All are Amcricnns of Polish descent. Mrs. Katherine Wlntzler, a Ro- man Caiholic welfare worker. their guide. was released at the same time. The pricsis told this story: Thcy visited the border br- iwecn the Soviet zone and the U. S. sector with Mrs. Wintzler in a borrowed U. S.-licenced car and inadvertently crossed a few yards Into the Soviet zone. Two East German police quick- ly forced them behind the Soviet barrier ill. gunpoint, and ii Rus- sian scnlry with a rifle escorted them to a Soviet command post. The car was confiscated. - The priests were questioned at. the command post for five hours. Then they wore given tea and bread and driven Soviet headquarters, where they sat for 30 minutes without any- one paying any attention to them. Then without explanation they were taken back to the command post. TlIPytlVEl'0 given clean sheet: and blankets for. the night, and a "really good breakfast" this morning. Then. at Soviet orders. they signed A statement that they had not been mistreated. Finally, they were told would be released. Thirty utes later they were piled into their automobile and driven to a muting place with 1.1.5. military they min- police. .Plans cheese 1 local Man Gels to Potsdam.- Kensington Federal Building Practically Completed OTTAWA, July 3-(Special) Plans for the Federal building at Kensingion are practically com- plete, it was learned today from J. Watson MacNiiughi, Liberal member -for Prince and Parlia- mentary assistant to Fisheries Minister Mayhew. The plans for the would have been rcady earlier except for a familiar situation which arises when staffs of more than one Federal Department oc- cupy a building. Each" department sub-chief habitually jockeys for position and fights for the best location in the common building as well as the largest amount of structure floor-space. Hence completed or partially completed plans must be passed around from one de- partment to the other for infor- mation and suggestion. It is regarded as a mark of prestige for the Minister and the Department if it can secure the choicest spot in a new building. The Kensington Federal Building will furnish accommodation for the Post Office, the Department of Agriculture and the R,C.M.P. Tenders for the new struciuie at Kenslngtori will be called this Loses To C.C.F.; VANCOUVER. July 3 --(CP) The Social Credit British Columbia's 12 general election. minster at the hands oi the C. I-".'s Rae Eddie. who Social Crediters threw their Liberal J. .l. Giliis of C. C. 1-2 second choices candidate Irvine Corbett. Second Count Slow Stepped Up and C. C. F Parties helped each other to make new inroads on Liberal strength today as counting continued from hangfire June Liberal Premier Byron Johnson went down to defeat in New West- won whacfiwthe cloak of secrecy in the drive to ternative choices to the C. C. F. In Yale, the opposite happenedl was leadliigysfcreh t'l ii f' 21 t 1 fl " uni W H” mun wmn Big yflrcltlic Council's No. 1 irisirunicm - Social Credit electcd Social Crcditl ERTAIN premiefghm Research On Problems ,Of Super-sonic Planes OTTAWA, July 3 - (CF) -Can- Mada is stepping up efforts to lick Ilhe problems of flying planes and guided missiles faster than sound. the National Research Council re- ported today. The Council's annual report. tabled in the Conunons, made char that more of the Government lsciciitisis work is falling under C. keep up with the world arms race. some divi.-ions are completely The main wind iulincl, probably sui:crsor.ic aviation, rcscaich in l two-shifts-a-day yhas been put on "mum" "mi Mrs MPCNWEM ls Agricultiire Minister llarrv 133515 and the 5UD9r50n1C5 15h9m' hopeful that at least is beginning Bownmn was defeated by Lm'v'm,.V is hem: expanded. ”" be "wide 0" ”” "Wk W5 King, social Credit. in Fort oeoi-gel rm i-scorn. labled by Georg: ”'"' But there was no definite trend Blcllixiilli. parl:'.imeniai1l' BS-1513111 Si. lllargaietis Man ,Victim In Road Accident Yesterday Maccormack, age 41. was fatally injured yesterday morning when the car which he was driving left the road near St. Margaret's and plunged into the ditch. Mr. A. J. Gallant and Mary Fcehon, St. Margaret's, other oc- cupants of the car. were taken to the souris llospitai, Mr. Gallant suffered from a broken arm. and Miss Feehan from shock. The three were returning from attending a wedding celebration at St. Charles when the car left the road. plunged into the ditch, and wrecking the vehicle. The souris detachment R. C. M. P. was immediately notified, and Dr. M. N. Beck, St. Peters, cor- one " panelled a jury. The deceased is survived by his mother, Mrs. Archie Maccormack. aged 82. He was unmarried and an only child. ills father was killed several years ago in a fall from a load of hay while working on his farm. The inquest has been adjourned until Monday. July 7th, at souris. Members of the jury are Messrs. Peter B. MacDonald. foreman, Souris; John J. Burke. St. Charles; Edward Eugene Gallant, St. Char- les; Albert Arthur Maocormack, St. Margarets; Robert Archie Mac- Cormack, St. Margarets; Francis Walter Gallant. St, Charles. and Plus Joseph MacKlnnon, St. Mar- garets. 0 Allan J nines Two-Year Term SYDNEY, N. S.. July 3 -(CF) - Walter I-iudko, 23, was sentenced today to nine years in Dorchester Penitentiary following coiivictlon of two charges of breaking. enter- ing and theft. He drew six years for a break at the home of an aunt and uncle and an additional three years, which will be served concurrently, for a. break into a city dairy. An accomplice, John R. MaoKen- zic, 20, was sentenced to eight years in penitentiary. -Ralph Coulson. 36. of Charlotte- town, receivced a two-year sent- once for fraud. Truck Smashes Inio Dwelling N, S.. July 3 NEW GLASGOW. -(CF)-A tlirce-ton truck smash- ed through the side of a house here today and stopped in the liv- ing room. Mrs. A. l.. Home, who has I heart ailment, was in the kitchen. Upstairs were her parents, both 84. The roof settled on the truck. Fur- niture was splintered but there were no injuries. Federal Govlr Revenue Continues Favorable OTTAWA. July 3 - (CF) - Plnance Minister Abbott said to- day the Federal Government's rer- enue for the current year "con- tinues satisfactory." He told the Commons that the treasury state- ment for the first two months of the fiscal year-April and May- will be made public later this week. l)Il0WN NG FATALITY HALIFAX. July 3 --(OP) - Hildin'g Williams, 25. drowned at nearby Purceil's Cove todsy when his canoe upset. -marking Halifax County's first drowning fatality this summer. Williams. a votive oi Quecnsport, N. 5.. apparently lost his balance while attempting to reach his paddle, which slipped from his hand. News In Brief WASHINGTON, July .'l-fAPl- The United Steelworkers (C.l.O.) today formally charged six major steel companies with violating the Taft-Hartley labor law by refus- ing to bargain with the union. OTTAWA, July 3-(CP)-A for- mal investigation into the collis- on how second choiccs were goinglio TFBIIP Milli-5l9l' HOW”- In Nanaimo and the islands, the quick look Liberals gave their second prefer-lirom remote control oi foShDYn5 W ran-----. development oi enccs to the Pro'1ressive and elcci. Dr. Larry Gioianuo. istration seemed certain dications were-as on 48-member Legislature. C. C. F. and Liberal Social Ci'edit remained all tidings wliere election night and kamecn. ion between the liner Scylhla and the coal carrier Wabana last June 5 in the Si. Lawrcnco Rive-r off Mont Joli. Que. has been or-', dcred by Transport Minister Chevrier, it was announced to- day. FREDERICTON. July 74 -(GP) - New Brunswick can fccl confi- (icnt there will be no blackout of electric power services in the Province because of A labor dis- pute, a reliable Informant said tonight, UNITED NATIONS. N. Y, Ju-iv 3-(AP)- Russia's Jakob Malik today vetoed a United States pro- origini-il lead. went formerly held by Liberals. Liberals. The ivoi'.:i. niixups the gity ridings. rbtiirning officer Rohcrl posal for the International Com- mittee of the Red Cross to in- vestigate Communist charges iluil germ warfare has been used the U. N. forces in Korea. vote was 10 for the iiircsiigniion with only Malik opposed. by YARMOUTH. N. S.. July 3 -: (CP)--Laurence R. Goodwin, iv native of Port Elgin, N. 8., mini station agent here for 34 years. died today following a short ill- ness. He came here in 1917 to work for the Dominion Atlantic: Railway after 17 years of service as telegrapher in several Canad- ian centres. He is survived by his widow and three daughters. vatives to upset the C. C. F. lead from The defeat of the Liberal adiiiin- lenge” but in-lhousing. from atmospheric studies electionlrl miles in the air to the quirks of night-that no party would be ableradar. to win a majority of seats in the: Ijnde,-wag" TV sgt While the new counts upsetrbothl Calidldfll.CS.,llSP(I to study , ahead iiilvcy ilic wrecks of warships it took the lead or '1,” T13FC'1v'4,” snatched the on age 0 lead from the C. C .F. in Simil-', 0,, 1., win mzlcovcrnmeiit Kamloops, Peace River and Colum- bia. ridings. The three seats were , '1-he,Miiiistcr Progressive Coiiservative victory inl Nanaimo was also a gain from the occurred inlll9d l)Ql'k- Vaiicouvcr-Eiir-, will-5mm rard completed its first. count but, .VlcGinn gave at various studies - arillicial hearts. underwater televisioni to ef- mcet ”ihe major chal- ol improving Canadian forts to l An underwater TV set has been fish life and to sur- sunk .7 iconfiiiiicd Only about half the i'idingsliadA,Farm been heard from early tonight and nearly all were rural. City rldings were still tabulating absentee vol" before they could swing into ti By Federal iiov't iol main job of tallying alternative, choices. l V ' 0 Social Crcdlt, liolding iii:-F. ”'l"T-WN WY 3 451” ”" Th” is holding 514.65-i,000 .,woi'ih of farm products under its prices-support. policy, Agriculture Gardiner said in the Commons today. lie said the hold- lings consist of 17,000,000 pounds of butter, 37,000,000 pounds oi'can- 15,000,000 pounds of sidcs and 33,000,000 pounds of beef. cstiinatcrl it will iakc 10 days fol, . tally alternative choices. ' V d B. C. Standing Stamp en or 9:00 P.M. r-bfr. - Canadian -I-h,,lPrcss party standing in British Wumml OTTAWA. .iiIiy73 -. roe) - The Elected commons, where the problems of ii 9 nation are aired, tonight was asked -i to do something about the troubles '1 or a Charlottetown postage-stamp 1 vendor. W. Chcsler S. Mciuure (PC - Raging. Queens) said the vendor is beins: C011: 1-; put out of business by the stamp- .c:u, & vending machine after 52 years at (5 scrv ce. 3 Mr. McLiire said during discus- esiimaics that the Charlottetown Five Dead Id WINNIPEG, July 3 - (CP) Eight dozing passengers died andi a night bus sliced into the rear of a stationary truck near St. Nor- bert. 11 miles south of here. Late today only five of the dead were identified. They were Bert Miller, 55, and his wife. Esther. 54, both of Winnipesi Mrs. Dorothy Buddy and her 12-year-old daugh- ter, Zena, of Troy, Ohio, and Louis Nathan Roseman, Minneap- olis. Minn. R. C. M. P. said identification of three other women killed in the crash would have to wait until a; Greyhound bus is forwarded from Minneapolis. Another person was not expected to live. (Mrs. Bunday was at first or- roneously identified as a Scottish immigrant. She moved to the United States from England four years ago and was en route in Winnipeg to visit a daughter when killed.) The bus. 45 minutes bvhind schedule. crashed into the seven- ton semi-trailer on a straight stretch of Pembina Highway. Tho impsct sheared off the right front side of the bus and hurled the truck and its 10-ton load 78 feet. Passengers and machinery equip- ment were strewn along the road. .- The Bundy girl was rocketcd' through the windshield. Many passengers, some of them Canadian soldiers going home on leave from Valcartier. Que., cs- oaped with cuts and bruises. Eight were released from hospital. Neither the truck driver. 28- yesr-old Joseph Sobko of st. char- les. a Winnipeg suburb, nor bus driver Robert Stsvos of Crooks- ton. Minn., was injured seriously. Occupants of the bus were sleepy after a 13-hour run from Minneapolis to Winnipeg. Borne passenger list of the Nori.hlands1dm,h entified In Winnipeg Bus Accident ersA desc r ibcdnihe-.?r;shv-as nightmare. , Walter Bic idick, 23, of T to t ,' 27 were Injured "my today Phennvas sitting ilchind the bus ollrl)ve0r:Ul5 V9”d01'- vehicle struck Coni-lworlicd 11! hours fl day for 52 years asleep winch adds up to 76 years of service when ilie ll-ton the Royal Transportation pany truck. He said he was and heard a noise. years to receive a two-per-cent commission on all stamps sold in the post office. "l-le could make a fair living un- ill the Post Office Department put in motor machines which chisel this vendor out of his living." hc said. People are buying their stamps from the machine and by-passing He said hc doesn't think hccnusc the vcnrior has 8 ihalfs fair -on tho basis of an eight-hour day "The Next thins T KNEW I WB5l Mr. McLui'e said no court in the lying on the pavement." Blcndick aid. ”I heard screams. country would rule that the vendor I 50" should get a coinmisslon on the me "me gm I-Vmg M” men She stamps sold bv the machine. so he was dead." Sopko said he stopped the truck hc noticed trouble with a rear wheel, and put out flai-cs when Afterward, he slept for ll while the cab. He was thrown in the crash. R. C. M. P. said no charges wcrcl 0'-I3-Wlc ill” llml-SP planncd. .hac anpllcd to the Postal Depart- ment for a ihrcc-per-cent commis- sion on stamps sold at the wicket. Mr. McLure appealed to Post- liil mm Alniastr-i'-Gcncral Cole to do some- thing about the matter. he identified i the vcndor as Aubrey F, Brown. Men In Canada 5,000 Years Ago lIlAuaIspr1Vi:idchCby Thomas Lee of slon ol the Post Office Department! vcndor has had a contract for 521 By Canada lliochford Square lPupiIs "Tops" in ' ltlaiional Coniesi l TORONTO, Jilly 3 -When the icanadian National Exhibition gets under way here Aug. 22. four lit- ltle Charlottetown girls will have a hand in the grcat show. Winners ,in a nation-wide competition in line school art and handicraft dir- lision. the girls' clcver needlework owl weaving will be displayed in t Women's Section of the Biz Fair. : winners are from Rochford. 3 Square School. which sent prizc- winning entries last year, too. lGrade VIII pupils, they are Naomi l'McGulgan, who submitted a woven lknitting bag: Priscilla Walker. a. :woven towel and apron; Sheila rDoii'on, who sent fl. woven plastic ibclt and a woven scarf. and Gloria lDarte, who won with a finely-in- iltlillled lace-edged handkerchief. The cash prize will go to their school, but the honor of beliig "best. ',in Canada" in their division is all ltheir own. liiusiico-Bom Founder of C.W.i. yin Canada Dies i OTTAWA, July 3 (cm Funeral services were held here in- day for Mrs. Robert H. Kneil, llii, founder of the Catholic Womi-his iLi!ague in Canada. she formed the lflrst unit of the organization in Edmonton about 45 years ago. Born at Rustico, P.E.I., she serv- ed as a nursing sister in the Span- ish-American War and also formed the School of Nursing at the Ot- lawa General Hospital. She died in Ottawa Tuesday. Mrs. Knell was the former Laur- otta. Hughes. daughter of the law- Mr. and Mrs. John Wellington Hughes. I-BOY DROWNED MINTO, N. B.. July fl -(CPl - Gerald Briggs. ll. of New Zion, was drowned tonight in ii. lakn ncar here. He had been swinimini: with an uncle, Lorne Briggs. The" struck out for shore when their boat drifted away. and Gerald sank. Mosf ' Stir MADE MEN HAVE HA0 THE HELP 1 OF 'fHEi.u WIVES) ,7- ' I HALIFAX, July 3 - (OPl - Of- ficial forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Oi- fice here and valid until midnlghli Friday. Synopsis: In mid-afternoon on Thursday the mercury at Fredericton stood at 9:4 degrees which was just 30 dcgrecs above Sydney's reading at the same! time. This dcclded contrast. was caused by cool air pressing down from Labrador into Prince Edward island, Eastern Nova Scans and Eastern New Brunswick, while hot: air from the United States flowed into the Western regions. On Friday the heat wave will spread over tho entire district once OTTAWA, July fl - fill” The Ihc hlllF4"illll staff who now is National lilusciim is cxcilcrl nvcr riircciing lhc scientific rccovcry discovery of "quiic unique" cvi- of any other traces of ancient dance that man lived in (Tana-t;i.ni7in at Shcdulandah Bay. HEAT 5,000 ycars ago and possibly cvcn Lliilc Currcnt. hcforc lhc 7,000 ycnrs established by United States discovcrlcs. Dr. F. J. Alcock. chief ancicnt. vriiilcly-ix orked the biggest thiniza cvcr The sioncs wore tario. The discovcry was and it was fclt publicity never kf.CW what hnppcncd. Oth-linicricre with the work. curator of thc niiiscuni. said hiindrcds of, sioncs linvc hr-on sliippcd hero for stud.-'5 and called llicir rlisr-ow-ryl "non of turned up In Canada" by archacologists. found last year over It 50-acrc nrca on Manl- toulin Island in Northwcsicrn Ou- kept sccrct mainly because the stems wcrc found ncar a main highway would More than 800 hand-worked sinncs taken off the surface of the land nr.l'lown to l depth of SIV lmlics have born shippcil hcro. Tlio Now York Slate Museum has tr.-iced North American man rrics that have extended Sonthcrn Ontario. llrmcvcr, the liinnltoulln nrc indications that. back fnrthcr than 7,000 years, Dr Alcock said. llc said no one knows how far back the discovery dates back 7.000 ycars through discov- into i is- lnnd rocks are different and ihcre um. may ,5 town at 6.26 A. M. and 8. as P. M. Just more, but it. will be broken later ill the day as it hand of showers and thiindcrstcrins moves eastward across the Marltimcs. Pleasant summer wcnthcr will re- turn in all regions Friday night and the weekend is forecast to begin with ideal conditions on Saturday. Forecasts: Prince Edward Island -- Variable cloudiness. Showers or thunder. storms and much warmer Friday. Light winds. Low and high Friday lat Charlottetown 35 and Ho. High tide today at Charlotte- High tide on the North Shore as 1.54 A. M. and 3.44 P. M. Sun rises today at 4.31 A. M. and . sets at. 8.03 P. M.