II it. . . A 1. I 3 I . : l 3 I "74 hf g ;l :2. I?! A RV ls .. . it 3. ii if li:.. lvli . l: to i "ii, A flit A ltl I. 3 I . ......... -..s .-.-- . A an 22:: ... PAGE EIGHT .. .. . . THE EASTERN GUARDIAN AGENTS:-MONTAGUE: Enrold P. Landry. Mn. Byron SIGWIFK Mil Bruce MncPhee. Min Joyce Wlgginton, Plus Moliinnon, AGENT GEORGETOWN: Weldon Levers. The Guardian may be bought at the following places In Montaxuoi Blue Dome Restaurant. and Guardian Office; In Georgetown: TIC Post Office; in Sourls: The Snack Bar and H. Richards 8 lot -.'SCOTCll tartan china cups. ....'TlRES VIVLCANIZED. Alex Sixteen clnn Lartans. 3l.75 each; .MacDougall, Montague. by mail. S;i0ti. C. R. Eoehner. l 7 - ewellcr. gift shop, Montague, PU .."rhe lnall): friends of Mr. Mark E 1. lMooney of Sourls. will regret 10 -.. learn he is I. patient in the City ..'LlBl-ZRAL naoarxtaslll. Sena-1 Hospital. tor George Barboiir will SPFRIK Fri” ""r's riav evening at 130 over C. F. C. Y .I Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Strouri and on. behalf of T. J. Kickham, Liberal daughter Deborah Ann are spend- Csnrlldnte for KIHRAS. ling t.heir holidays with Mrs. , . ..- .St.rouri's parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. KIFKHAM. Liberallstanford McKay. Murray Harbour. Candidate for Ktni:'s. will broadcast; same 7 over C F C. Y Thursday evenlnat ..'Sl-'.E GEORGETOWN PLAY. at to ocirick. ."His Wnmenfolk" at Cardigan .. V- .hall on August 7th, 8:30 pm. .. 'l.IBF.RAlr RROAl)('AST. Mr. Dance afterward. F. D. Reid will speak on behalf oft yb LEV-'-V h L . d T. J Kicklmm. Liberal Candidate. Mr. Her er.h 1 mg. as re iliined for Kiiir:'s County. it ednesday ex-ito Tornntoiu eret -e is empoiien, 9 9- C R -6 ti i3.22:::.i5u.m;.t..t”..i.”.::. .2..." ..'l EGION 7Al;)CIl.lrlAllY picnic Robert Glover, Gucrnsei' Cove. :i' Mr. and Mrs Atwood M:teDon-i y -ff alrls r'r.tY:lEP. Wetihestliiv alter- h. Miss Hope pairs. FIN. of Hams ”' t..:i:;. 132;. l;::...::.::".::: .'.:i..::: l 4:. . ' r ' 3 m. lwi'h her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Campbelllloliii Dai'ei', Guernsey Cove. h p1p;;5,1ml Em". A. R. Pyke, Mrs. Pyke and: (':liiipIit'r'.is their llllllll). ftloiictuii, N, B” are Mfg R013”-( spviuliiii; ihmr vacation at the (jg;-9. .Rniirke cottage in Brutlenell. py .Tliey recetitly visited Rev, Mr. R.,.h3rd .1,,,,.;. P)'ke's cousin. Mrs. XV. E. Mar- ;.,..t the .x,-itmr Neill. and Mr. 3slncNeill, Mon- xiir.-. ulio tire inane. NFll'.'l'rIi!l ii: iii tit-uigr-triwii. iwiel yr: it-rs ll iJni:i.::iir- Mnnri.w;.gi Mr. and Mrs. John Staii1e)'.Med- 41-). p ..,. W .,m',.,”.,.1 M. 31,3 .'nrti. Mass. have returned to their uniiir ll””ltll1ll, Liciirpr-town. , li'acat;oii llllh M:s.Staiile)"s uncle. .xivtrt.i.-n.x'ovt'x :uis'is'rER Mr. L. J. No ode. Mu:'m.v Harbour. lic'i:'cil after 60 ears ser- It is A3 years since Mrs. Stanley Ih rm Cmigrcga . minulast visited P.E.I. While here the R,.... Jmmrs D3.-tdsuh Dmg.lspent some time vtith her aunt , D.D., is iusitiiig his brother.lMl'5- I'0U153 NICOU9. W110 T135 D555- eld 1'). 'e Bcdeqtie. Hp ed her 91st.-birthcl EIV. 4 lirrttlier. i f;v'1tll'lS. They are uueeh late .l.inics .4; suits of the i h , h )iiigiie'ri of B '. , V. . . 1 Foi'Itir.e. The Rex. Mr Diuuierl. 7('(””1”imd h,mn,1:!fgE.,.....' 1lllI".ll2 34 j i"s at Pautiicket. Eat of Strathniort-.. . R I t- of the Civic 'i'hc:-c was the childrens party 'f'he.it to help new- when she was five at which she limiriizs as first met Albert, sun of King He is nCCOm- Ctettrtze V. There was her 14th lite ti hhome nt'er spcrrdiiig a tv.'LieweektH0n Big Switch". Culmitiatetll lnegotiations during a. staleniatc rm: I(:UARlA)y.l1;CI-IARLOTTETOWN son-in-law. sent birthday wishesl Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, the 8th from Cowea. on the south coast. army commander, was on hand to where he in sailing during rezattalgreet the first repatriates persona- week there. nlly. In a special booklet prepared -e- for the returning men. he had as- sured them that the 8th army Prisoner Exchange would "do everything in its power Continued from page i to speed you on your way back .to your home and families.” being moved into the tents for ”All our resources are at your quick medical check. .disposai to make your stay with us In charge oi the sickbay was.as brief and as comfortable as Cmdr. H. Todde Stradford, Oflp()SSlblE'," he said. Gastonla, N. C. The prisoners were all cautioned The stretcher patients weretto "safeguard military informa- lvlllen Qllmkly into the tent. tron, protect your fellow soldiers, All the inen on stretchers were yourefamily and your countryj" in COVE"-id With lisht blue blanketsltnlkiiig to persons after their re- with Chinese let.t.erin(z. M359. The second contingent contained The first group of returning "0 Am9””"5- iPl'lSOllPiS reached Kacsong. the Kxgngi M "1059 mm W9" 50U3hlRed truce base six miles west of A lPr'illITlutlJOln Monday night. By besligle 2”,” 5” W:3ktIh95' had WlTuesday possibly 2,000 were there.l. The l:;mdJ'ttlf'llm:' em fills: mend On the Allied side. the UN com-i South Korean soldiers who were (fun . , .' V k .' p near Panmuntom from :35” doll" by m: big U5" Ma" stuckadcs mi Koje and Chain is-I ' lands off South Korea. 4 3”” 1'''P”'5I" At last reports there had l The HDKH showed little expres- been no major demonstrations sion. Their attitude was in con-E by the Communist prisoners trast to the demonstrativeness of although many of the Chinese the American and other Allied ripped and tore their newly sci: and wounded who managed issued exchange uniforms. smiles. A team of 30 Communist Red As the American and other UN.Ci-oss represeiitaitives. who crossed. l Falling Were taken into the medical south of the demarcation line at. his Mzlmne officer toldnugsciay for the first time, was back" We” BN1 7-0 .hEVO Youwliiskcrl to Seoul and Pusan by whhl th V dtclictipier; and transport planes to " 9 M” 5”? WFPKS R1- visit Hod prisoners. most 87.000 men-12,763 Allied. lli- I eluding 14 Canadians, and 74.000 Communists-will be exchanged. I o 4 .1 . ....5 :23”...Z?iy..ifl?..”i.i..'?.?35il is ""3. Commune Mir for some 8300 Others mu bye: (.i-oss men arrived ,in the south,1 as missing in amen M .Chiiicse Nationalist headquarters ' llUi'ill05r'1 (llSCl0S6d that Gen- ,h ,. , h . tun F 3 Hwmge' knoll" " 0p9m'lci;ilissiiii(i Chiang Kai-shek had l Offer From Gen. Chiang . l mow than 20 t .seni a letter to 14.500 Chinesci mo” M M bmeg prisoners in Korea who have 112-; mu. that W” halted nine ,5 .1u.sed rcpziti-ration. Chiang proms Among the other naHdOalfahaLI1Z:S:l5C(l to see that they are admitted. which the Reds were turning owrjto FOTITTUSII. if they refused to re-I (hr, mg day were 250 soumltiir-ii to thcirhoinolands. l Korean; 35 Bmishi 23 Turki 12- Red pcrsiiation teams will in-l Flhpmoa sewn Colombians, Sewn IPiVlPii' tiicse rcluciniit Chineseh French mid one each from Gmeep and 7.800 North Koreiins who also. Australia. Beigmml and Sou”) M: do not uaiit to go home underl nca, lterins of the truce agreenient. h Tm United Nation, mmhund In The reluctant 122,300 will be, tum ta ham,-mg M91. M00 away placcd under the jurisdiction of a bodied North Km-(ran and Chinese five-nation repatriation commis-l Dttitsoners and 360 sick and uouiid- I510” IIEUUNI by Illdmr a. An a(ll'r'lli('C Indian party was. i The exchange point, fn,r5h1yl(lllP to arrive in Korea Aug. 9. l .5 mi;”l:tr:'. Miss L411- " 'I'i.ir) sons are l1l'lllZ in M.'i.xs:icl:irvcl':. hit-iiiclarr. not a vcr.i' happy onelbulldozed, and its four small re-: The ””"li”I5”i-"i'1V9 Said 01 the iiecause it was celebrated on tlrefeption tents was first sight. of the day that Britain entered the Firstllee Word for the returning Allied tiuce was completely overshad-l owed by the dramatic prisoner ex-I prunes: nnwrmn A wmd Wat lprisoners. ' cliange. , l . 'FliVF.RAL Yl-ISTI-ZRIMY -l Tiiere was her wedding in 1923.l Representatives of each countryl Siirtllsli Maj.-Gcn Seven Graf- The tiir.cr:r' of the late Siciiicy the bzrth of her dauahter "llzza-ywere on hand to welcome the rc- 5I””" Said Tuesday he was hope- Mclrarrii iizi-std aw s:trl- octii ill 1936. .Xlart:a1'P'- in 1--V - Turning men and speak to them II” III” f0””""”9” 5Ul39"Vl50llY rlent iv a' Stirrzlay er 'iic ill Erticleii. abdication of Edward VIII. a aim-iiiiis: stroke of fate which '.iii'ii9d hi" "it liiisxiniici Albert iii- tn Kin: (George VI and herself in- . '- P;i'.i!icarri's wore. to 'he Q'lPFn Consort. Henry M Larnn. Eilerv Shaw. Her 5Zllll'l hirtlidny. last yer-rr.was . .i ll .VlaCGi'rr;(ir. her saddest, for her ”Dear Bertie" A. M. Wri i mi.-id wrizht. Mcin- 'riIlS dcad. bers of l-lillsirlc I die. I. O. D. El The smile vziiiishetl. But only for amended this gel , on ,. bpm; 3 w'n.'.e Tuesday it shone out and were in ,e of the coin-':i:1iii. i mittal sci'i'irr- n' the grate. Tiiei Qiierr. Mother Elizabetli return- service was miirl-.:c!ed hy Bi-ntlier ed to London Monday from Sand- J'M8.ICOll1l Nl1CKFll7.lP. assisted by rtiizzham. the royal home in East Brother Hnrrv MncGrcgnr, chnp- Anglia where her husband died. the Chili i Thczz. in 103.3. when she has 35;in their native tongues. as he'd vc.:trr- years rid, tame the seirsatiomll The biggest crowd on lmnd were lartzci (IMO for 501161111)! IHSDECUOTM coinmissioii can meet. its Saturday jtlie i'Epi'CsCnlatlve5 gf me ...m.1d trains into North and South Kor-I press. en. l h Helicopter crews stood by m (1.. The walclidog teams will .be the seriously sick and m,und,.d hi, formed by Swedish, Swiss. Polish; lthe 121st evacuation hospital mm. and Czcch army officers They willl Seoul. ;see what moveinents of men and; I Truck convoys were 5.3; to wit supplies from 10 sea, rail and air ithe able bodied repatriates down ports in North and South Korea special roads 12 miles to Freedom (10 1101 CN('i”Fd Vii"? UINIHIAOHSA I lvillage, near Munsan. where they re” s '-m will be deloused. given a quick A A l imedical check and outfitted ifresh new uniforms. South Koreans will be processed lain. The wnriri hcnrcrs were Broth-iThe Queen was her Erst visitortn nearby Liberty Villa” nnd mo ers C. A. FITTRI A A. Moshcr. rtnrllTllE'i.”l."Il' at Clarence House, fol-i A. M'. W'TI?Il' Tiiw-rim-nr tnok place lowed an hour later by the two in the Montague Commtiniti-.roi'al children. Cemctcrv. The Duke of Edinburgh. her FINAL T0-DAY (adult) "CHOICE OF THE YEAR"..nus MAGAZINE".-0:1, .:'5gU.RT LANCASTER E TERR”;j,m0-ORE 5.3 SHIRLEY BOOTH gmmrscrzr T Wa1lis' no n -it -to -- sm-mm .555 "”"' N." v i la f'C::i1ne Back l "”""4'S"&'?? i. 2 . ' A' M I ” '-jLitt1e Sheba i; . TOMORROW” 2 new under ' flue Musical wliotfyou wlslri.ipon'a star-3 I fO'!VIIIO entertainment you x F! wish for. . .a story V bubbling with guieiy I , with laughter! 9v British will be handled at Camp Britannia. MOSCOW. (Reuters! - Russia has agreed to discuss a Gennan. settlement at a meeting of the Bigl Four foreign ministers in a note; delivered Tticsday to the Unitedl wishing to talk to newspaper mm siatcs, Britain and France. it was; may do so. The 8th army mnde . i . it plain Monday night that no one.nn;;::l:'Nl:;..T(;Iax'h, "X15 of mel will be barred from the interview:An,c;.;Um: British and Ftrmchl 20": "mus hf I5 slck 9" says 1.hntllll(ll('S to the Soviet governnientl e oes not want to see the 13icss.i5.mm.5Hm R memhg of the mu, During the "xchimge M Nck mldiforeitzii ministers, delivered to. May Talk to Press At Munsan American soldiers -Wmmded priwne” la” Al3'i”- P.l'I5'tSovict embassies in Washingtoml 0""? 5"5P9Cl9d 0f h8VlnK been lnsllmndnri and Paris on July 15. and doclnmlud C” bmmwashed by me the Soviet replv note delivered Reds were not allowed to see tliolruesday to ,h, three powers: am. pm” hassles in Moscow. PARADE CAPITOL or "Cosmic Octopus threatens to strangle earth! Scientists refuse to deny earth may be buried into outer space!" I THUR. - rm. - SAT. i " I 'illlllllllll3 iioitsiiit Also Serial and Short. LA8-T SHOWING WEDNESDAY. AtelG:iLt'2xT GK-' , News -2- Cartoon XNostx-adamu: Featurette Shows at 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 ELECTORS c0F.KlNGlS Affer'Augusi l0lh lei us be able to feel proud of this little County of ours. let us be able to boast that our election WAS a clean election. . WILL YOU C0-OPERATE? SURE YOU WILL! The King's County Progressive Conservative Association feels that knowing the offences is probably your best protection against commit- ling any of them. Here. then. in summary form, is a list of offences under "The Canada Election Acl." THE OFFENCES or BRIBERY . p 1. Giving money. etc. to any eleclor to induce him To vote or refrain from voting. 0 2 Receiving money elc.. for voting or refrain- ing from voting. BEFORE. DURING. or AFTER the election. 0 3. Giving or promising employment to elector to induce him to vole. ' A . THE OFFENCES IOE TREATING 1. Providing food. drink, elc.. BEFORE, DURING. or AFTER election for purpose of influencing elector lo vole. . Z ACCEPTING food. drink. elc.. referred lo in the preceding clause. THE OFFENCES OF PERSONATION 1. Having voled once. applying for anoflier bal- lot at the same election. - 7. Voting or ATTEMPTING lo vole knowing that he is disqualified from voting. Electors may pay their own fares to go to vole. but the hiring of cars by the Candidate or his workers is expressly prohibited. REMEMBER:- lhe iierson who lets his car out for pay is subject to a he. I y The Conservative Workers in this County will be following these regulations to the letter and will also be on the alert to see that everyone else does. . Please do not fake a chance on August 10th." Matty of iheaoffences carry with them a maxi- mum penalty of a 32.000 fine or a 2 year prison sentence. or both. plus a loss of voting rights for Tyears. 2 ” vi KNOW vou Tllll C0-OPERATE IIOVIEVER vou VOTE osrv TllE uw hurtedhythokhrncmtyhosnumomemuvesuoaaum. r. .;.Us'r 5. 1953