I HOD. WEDNESDAY, Returning Airm Mental, Physical Torture Flagmenl of Peary's Flag Stirs Memories nint owpiors subjected them to mental and physical torture in trying to make them "confess" By Arthur Edaon WASHINGTON, (AP) -- Word that two Canadian explorers have they waged germ warfare. One returned airman said he found a piece of Admiral Robert Peary's flagAone of the most was tortured with Lleut. John Quinn, listed by the Pelping radio celebrated, widely-travelled and torn-up flaga in history-stirred as ”confessing", and declared. Quinn was resisting the last he. saw him despite a broken wrist. I The airman, Lieut. Charles M. Maiiltsby of Manhattan Beach, 0alif., said he and Quinn were thrown into a freezing hole for mu, My. near Lh. North Koren. old memorial at the headquarters upm” at pyongyang ghoruy an” of the National Geographic So- thelr capture in January, 1952, but CNEY h3T9- , , , um they would sign nothing. For lhll ll the third piece Lu”, he mid, Qumn Wu re. the famous flag to be recovered. moved fmm camp 3 yo, omce" The fragment was among relics of three polar expeditions picked up by Geoffrey Haftersley-Smith and Robert Blarkabar during an Arctic expedition. The Geographic helped finance Peary's expeditions, which ex- plains its interest in the flag. and air force men "and that was Peary l'l'ore Flag signed. The Chinese concentrated on torturing air force personnel when the Reds launched their germ war- fare propaganda campaign. said air-man Franklin E. Hall, 26, a B-29 gunner from Pasadena. Calif. The Communist germ warfare propaganda was hotly denied by the last: we saw of him." He said Quinn suffered a broken wrist when his light bom-ber was shot down and was given no medical treatment during iheiiiterrogation. A Chinese who said he worked in a North Korean prison camp , , lw .53: :;:;.';”.:.:: 3:: '.::.i:::...”.:: that Quinn and other officers were . . subjected to ceaseless interiroga-3:l;:"l:l"';ld::)-r :lhEhDrnIlitubiyvrml:la: try): mmom sleep um” may handyfor unfuriing purposes if he ever reached the north pole, and in the meantime it furnished ad- ditional warmth. But Peary had another quaint habit. Whenever he reached in historic spot, he would tear off a piece of the flag and leave it there. United Sub” 1"de”' Jeaup, Greenland, the world's Th," Minute, 1-,, gunk" northernmost tip of land. An- other he left at Cape Thomas Hubbard, on Alex Heiberg island. the westernmost point of land he reached. And the third he left at. Cape Columbia. the northernmost point of land in Canada. The first was fountl by Commo- idore Donald B. MB('Mililln. Pearyis "it got to be a joke," Tuttlelaide and a famous ovplorer in said. The three minutes extendedihis own right A Danish NEW in 15. he said, but "I didn't say a found the Cape Jesilp section. word." And now the ihiril part has Hall said the officers got the been found- "oold room routine”. A prisoner Still Mlsslntt was placed in a. hot room until he Still missing-vand lIls'el.v to stay aweated and then was shoved intollhal. war--are two iileves lelt.in , (Mum; cum out Th; -'m1d.lboIties on the ice. eternally drift- mgml wan." was caning . mun out ing across the sea. One of these in the dead of night for question-lPear.V left when he will 10 Wilh- mg. in 174 nautical miles of the pole, lthe closest anyone ever had come lat that time. The other he left at lihc pole itself. O"h”'5 FM me "miter "9al'l Since the ice drifts from one to ment." Hall said. A wet towel was 30 nm" 3 d”! thpse mg bus wrapped around the face of aypmbahly H, zone for good- prisoner and was saturated dropl . identify Three Lieut, Ward 0. Tuttle of Brem- erton. Wash, an F-80 jet pilot. said. the Reds jerked him from his bed at 2 a.m.. read a "war crim- inal" charge to him, held a revol- ver to his head and gave him three minutes to ”cmless". Water Treatment water treatment in freezing wea- (CPl -Two mem- irated. ther. and passing out. only to be l'PVll'Ei'l by burning cigarettes Stevens said he heard shots and '.be Red questioners told him 'lllS by drop until he was almost suf- l0f Six Men On A pushed into his flesh. Lieut. John G. Stevens. 25, of Yriand had been shot. Stevens wast I . th . it I g ziven three minutes to live unleuiglggfedqhsg Jggdfte" W” " focated. Li-Col. Tliomas D. Harrison oi Clovis. NM.. an earlier returned ng.htei' pilot. told of getting the Missing Plane Tucson, Ariz., and Waxahachle, rox.. said he and another airman were charged with germ wariarel MONTREAL and then the two men were sep-l have re "confessed". Th H 1 h at to to .......:i.. 222.32.. .22:-..... anything and was taken away. a Dmch engineer: ' Later. he met his fellow airmaiil drm engineer ' lgava are believed to he same psychological treatmentl been killed. 1 CANADA PR-OVINCE OF PRINCE EDRVAKD ISLAND y hlghl. IN THE PROBATE COURT 1 more details about the plane. miss The 24th day of August A. D. 1953 y mg since 1”; Tuesday, Th E t h l . v - In in mm or mm 0- JEN-. cS....”l'”.l.”3.....ii.l2.5”.i?f..3.?L KINS late of Charlottetown in opened by the Fem Queens County in the said Prov- ince. Importer. deceased, leelnte. -Dr.-J. A. Retiy of president or the Feiiimore com pany, will leave for Roberval to l 1 in gotiations liron ore concentrates abroad. To the Sheriff of the County of Queen's County or any Constable . or literate person within said cCIIUdI.n5 C t """ ' Another Player GREETINGS gs WHEREAS npon reading the MQNTREATI. Wt"-IOII MI W9 0' 5- wt"-hm Canadians of the National llockcy Gaudet of Charlottetown aforesaid. Lug”; gnnoumed Mondgy that Iurrlltar-at-l.aw. the sole ExecIi- 1.-qoyd C.”-I-y has Signed ml Cunuty tor of ill! IN"! lllmili Eluhs 1'9 tract for the coming season. Curry, I a rl.ghi.-winger. will start his fifth l we log that a citation may be is- uo for W6 purposes hmlnlflcr full season with by nguired to site all persons in- terested in the Illd Estate to he use! appear before the Judge pru- anl gt a frobah Court to be held in an court House in Charlotte- town In Queen's County in the said Province. on Monday the blur day of laptaraba next coming at the hour of Eleven. o'clock foranoon at the name dayyw show cause if nay they can why the account: of the add name should not be puui aaltluutaia aluauluimu-I for "DI and on motion of an Gaunt Inquire, Prea- nu Petitioner. IT IS IIEIIIY ORDERED 0 ' hereof he forth- The others are Doug Bernie (Boom Boom) Geoffrlon. 5 the and that a one car It peeled In t a plane "iv. "the hall at the court alenelil. not of lien Icoua Iltneall mom. oil One he left at Cape Morris. in. been l re, passengers on a missing Norsemani The compahyis '1 V, Abel. was also. :n prison camp. Both had received ; behaved to have been I pauengex, R at f Rob 1 'd t i md each thought the mm" had - plai1e:obi1srrlddunfoiii' ;i::saengs;"Xs agdl l a crew of two. Name of the fourth : ' passenger and names of the crewi were not immediately known here. Montreal. . He said he hoped to have more company seeking to market (cm a Montreal Canadiens this 1 set firth; You are the:-clan here- lyear. lie is the third player to sign. . Harvey and - Discover Ruins. Of Ancient Village .i!'.R.USAI.-IEM. (AP)-An Ameri- can archeologlst reported Monday he has discovered the remains of a village estimated to have been founded in about 4.000 B.C.-pre- datlnx the patriarcr Abraham by perhaps 1,000 years. Dr. Nelson Glueck of Cincinnati and New York, president of the Hebrew Union College and the Jewish Institute . Religion. said -he had found the village and traces of ancient terraces, dams and irrigation canals about (0 mile: from Becrsheba. in the southern Negev desert. , Dr. Glueok said the find was the but known evidence of any large scale agricultural centre in the area. . l ;Princesses Delayed lily Plane Trouble GANDER. Nfldu (CF)-Two iDutch princesses left. for home .Monday after a forced stop at Ithis international airport while their plane was checked for mech- anical trouble. Beatrix and Irene, oldest of iQueen .Juliana's four daughters, ;mixed with the crowds at the air- -,port and attended a movie Sun- lday night, unknown to most of the other 400 attending. y They dined at the Aviation :Room, operated by commercial tcaterers. E WE Mil OUR (Continued from page 2) istand and be interested in trade agreements and international events of importance. Two willing jliands and a strong back, are not enough, generally speaking, to ;ensure success as a farmer. In the business world, of course, tand farming cannot be separated from business) we can see on the -Island. "Co-ops” of all kinds grow- ing steadily. An ambitious young man must be well-educated to ;'start a concern of-his own, or jmusi have at least a. fair educa- .li0ll to hope for much of a future with any organization. 0 U 0 ”But,'' young William may argue, "I want to be an electrician. I don't learn a. thing at school that 'can be of any use to me." Are you so sure of that, William? .You may not learn, directly, a- .bout the work of an electrician, but you have the opportunity to llenrn better how to obtain the skills you want. Through the .medium of books, you can learn :ll0W the use of electricity trans- ilormed the world; what it was like before that; and what other great changes may come; atomic '3 for iiistance, in peace- itime living. It would be fine, if you could have courses in the skills needed by electricians, as well as those that make you aware yo! the iacinatlng past and the 1 thrilling present. and luture, and th s L too will c 0 in e, but why not dig in and take school. or vacation, l I i 1 Combination Models, matic Record Players, Beau. tiful Clock Radios for Kitch- cn, Bedroom, etc., small table THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN By BILL IIOII Canadian Prose Staff Writer IN KOREA, (Of)-Trio armistice is going to mean more active eel. dieting than Canadians have had in Korea for almost. two year; The men for that time were con- fined to front-line bunkere. where they sat and look enemy shelling, from which they went out on raid; and patrols, and from which they escaped once a weak or 10 dgyg for a shower and a. movie in the rear echelons. Now. lays a brigade headquar- ierl training instruction Just is- sued. they're going to get mobile again. The instruction provides in de- tail for basic training at the in- dividual. platoon and company levels during September and Oc- lober. Plan Exeroiue And beginning early November. it says. "the brigade will be pre- pared to do it series of battalion and brigade group exercises in the mobile operations of war," The exercises will begin Just when the Iird Patricias are due to be re- lieved by the 2nd Canadian High- land Battalion, and will continue throughout the winter. Elementary and ceremonial drills, weapons training, fieldpraft. section tactics, physical condition- in: and bayonet fencing will be stressed during the first two months. Brig., Jean Allard. the brigade commander, during the Saturdays of September and October, will do full inspections of each of the major units in turn. beginning Sept. 5 with A squadron of Lord Strathconafs Horse. The Canadians” NGOS' school at Uljongbu. 12 miles north of Seoul, is to be reorganized, Since forma- tion of the 1st Commonwealth Di- vision the school has trained all the division's NOOa. Beginning Sept. 14 the school will be devoted to Oanadian train- ing only. courses to qualify for corporal and sergeant. lasting six weeks. and two-week refresher courses for instructors will be taught. Officers with an eye to promo- with an electrician, If you do your share, you are bound to get more than you now believe possible, out of your years at school. Nor can you underrate, the high school dlinioma itself, or the time you have spent learning to get along with others. . Mary 5333. "What's the use of studying? I expect to be engaged soon, and Bob likes me as I am." sounds all right now. Mary, but Pretty young girls grow to be bor- ing older women, if they stay just the way they are. And unfor. iunaiely. wives are sometimes fore. ed to gel: a Job. Next week. we shall consider mm. leases that alter real obutulga bars of I technical mission from advantage of what you can getlto a high school education, and iliurope inspecting are properties Ollat school? Pei'haps you can takslalso the experiences of a num. ltbe Fenimore iron mines in Un- in short course, or find work aruiber of young people who dropped during ;out. of school and regretted it liate i it FIRESTONE RADIOS FOR THE CAR TO FIT ANY MODEL FOR THE HOME We have beautiful Console Auto- modeis for any color scheme. See Our Display Today. FIRESTONE BRYENTON 8. McKAY ' CO. We Trade Radios Canadians In Korea To Become Mobile Now That FightingHas Ended tien or staff college entrance will begin oouieu st brigade bead- eum-otl the following day. Iy Nov, 1 it ll planned to have WI?! loldier in the brigade checked of! II having reached the standard of training pram-iuui by Ottawa): standing raquli-cinema for the lmlina infantrwiui. All the While battalions will be oqnduatlng their own em-aim. amiabuialng the withdrawal and attach phone of warfare, If llaettlltiaa Resume Should hoatllitiga be resumed it is antldllwidd that a withdrawal to regroup would be noognary under the force of the enemy's initial uuult, after which the di- vision would counter-attack. The training is intended to guarantee that the troops will be fully re- hearlld in those role!- During Sspiembo, October and November, all captain! and majora in the brigade will participate in syndicate discussions on pioblams that havt confronted the brigade since its inception. Not only will its method of orig- inal organization be gone over, but recruitment. trainlnl. Willi)- lil I merit and fighting problem! will be dlndll o algnlficglily. the topic for Fri- day sept. 4 is "the training and pmvhion of reinforcements. ...ss------ Tliat Body of tours Continued from page 2 prove that no patient it 100 015- by ation. care alone, to have an over gglgcted older individual! surg- ery can add years OI life and CBl'l inc:-eggs comfort in thl Y33" that are ahead." while physicians and surtllom have been studying the effects of disease and how to prevent dis- eased or dangerous condition! of the body, our phyllologista have been studying the normal human body and its workhig processes. Be- cause of this study. old patients are carefully examined. unless it is u, emergency. and then are built up physically till they become sale for surgery. Also, with more recent advances in surgical technique. an- umuu, and care after operation. operations are now safer than ever before. with the number of person! oV61' 85 increased fourfold since 1900, de- mand alone has forced the phy- sician to provide active surgical treatment for older persons. In a two-year Period. 1926-21. only 41. or 2,: per cent. of 1,724! operations at Vanderbilt University Hospital were performed on persons over 69 years of age. whereas 24!, or 7.42 per cent. of 3.126 operations in the year beginning July 1, 1050, were evening. Janna must hear of :u.:ii's uuiv (Continued from page I) l'!lurE7n"' -- mush Ellen is to hm. to iura. in familiar mm inlaafuui blade and the pots! of a me: in the xleiiii of wile. the sliver of a uindmp. the veil of "still down" . . . in aawinn and metals. - ' "lohold than not out I sewer to now"; -Juan. we thought. with the aoauwlau quaint uelllr 0! our: on a m-ing afternoon. sweet we aim: in its fmhmu; barn: 0! the tlim little kitten! mi.-sin: from their brunt: in re- oent days that had been found and returned from visiting at a not li- borlna fuinateatl: that Cl: ti added I Spoiler to his list a Itudw in which brought mun encoura- lng words. And "the both: you ap- ply yourself to your boon. why. th aoonei-youtndlwlllhuhletu go: to ourfarmingi he a former has to know a great number of saggicmnax 2. 1953 the thing: . . . no or mean: on "f " bu , thine takzn up quarters ni.il':.l"i'n old N M 1” 305 Just this and cl when youtvemmg lhtut." Valli e' uullo, it :3 '.l::";.l.- ..'..l":":.l:." shall we build you s houaei 39,, place where you can 1.... m "hf den-ground stable in Your am. . . Idle worda? only the ym. M Q .. Wit then WW and stain the moon. the W. in their course: take om ,1, ulam-watch. ' Until! tomorrow - - - Dlu-y. , Good-night . . . . . ' I the team - for what dmomlon it would be to bitch to a motor this "final: and blood" machine that had known every turn and for of our aaoiulliuat '!'a plat! . . . but M. James own: to no leddins. llatiua pace at his farm . On the oootury be min off briskly to commence and continue his ritu. Maude. it is usually eiiimaud concern over thing. that cloud above the woodland. "lhll confounded team than bound to go cracked." a I ut of the under "hot but war ng right" irregularities which later are apt to be disclosed by the and- linga with embanumant . . . most of all to himself. it?” -A Osiittunnninist DEKUETEA Even in the sold of thin mora- ing'a scene. hack of it we could see him at the seeding. stopping to re- plenish th hoppers, smoothing down the grain carefully therein, examining a handful closely to aa- aura himself of its potential worth. We saw it fall to be covered in the red of the Island soil. "And some fell on stony ground . . . ” but the heart of Junel' fields and theta of other farmers are zlrcaptivs and good. What in- crease theae gavel We renumber- ed today: even "an hundred" they brought g forth. And the good was good. but what of the rut?" As ye sow . . ." the words that came to mlndl And: "Do "folks "gather grapes of thorns or figs of thiatlea?" How carefully then should this housewife now! On his return from Alderles this for such elderly persons. That. is. more than three times as many of these elderly people are undellv going operation than in previous years. This increase in the per- centage of elderly people under- going surgery is not due to the new techniques in surgery. "Benefits aa- tend to all types of surgical oper- ations and more old people have been classified as satisfactory sur- gical risks." These same satisfactory surgical results in elderly women under. going zyneoological operations are obtained. Prior to 1935 only three gynecological oparationl. with one death, were perforated in older woman. whereas from 1950 to 1952!. 3! such operations were Deiiorrn. ed without a single death. A180. or. thopedlc cases (operations on legs and arms) and operations an atom- ach and intestines. were performed without any deaths. 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