TIL ' I - ' um! SANDS Will Excavate sire oii7 th Go Ue So There were several Homecom- Century French Fort La-I-our ried ships' passengers to pro ers to Little Sands during the first (CP)-Dep- Monday. Aug 13. 1956 The Guardian. Page 5 rurr 1-or Uunnnsu MOUNTAINS Because the earth in not a Two undersea mountain ranges. k 1 tected landings. wee n August. Among the num- sphere. the poles are about 70.000 rhing up to 15,000 feet. have been Three of five copper coins dis- be' were Mrs mid Mr! Buddy covered recently were apparently ii'.tSiil.vJ'i'0N IAP!-Clcii. Na- ,IlZ'll F. Twining says Russia has ''l I) o u s and s more jot combat 3I.m':s in operation units" than 1i- U.S. air force and navy com- billed. 'l'lic Air Force Chief of Staff re- ports. however. the United States. ilill iiolds an advantage in aerial -5”-jking power," but could lose 'Il2li cdge unless it year the stepped up mulli-billion ioliar research and production Rmgrnm he had advocateit be- are. (in appi-aising Soviet ability to icsizn and mass produce top ziiality planes and other weapons, ririniiig told a Senate arnicd scr- vit-cs subcommittee July it) "we ihould iiol ever downgrade them" the testimony was taken at a sec- rot session and a censored ver- sion made public Saturday. "SIIOCKED" BY PRODUCTION Twining said "I was quite ihocked" by the speed with which Russia has produced MiG fighter planes. He said he has not changed his estimate that they produce 10 times as many all- ueather figllters a month as the United States. . starts next. 0n the subject of plane num- bers Twining stressed one poini- a belief than if war should come Russia would need more bombers than the United States b there are more target areas in the U.S. than in the Soviet un- ion. His words and those of Lt.-Gen. l)oiiald L. Putt. Chief of Air Force Research and Development. were' spoken from the background of their recent trip to Russia, where they were allowed a restricted look at Soviet air power. Putt told the senators he was "astounded" by what he saw there of the scope of the Russian air force training program. particu. larly in the fields of science and technology. Their testimony marked the windup of the sub-committeeis in- vestigation of U.S. air force as compared with Russia's. Chairman S t u a rt Symington (Dem. Mo.I has announced the sub-committee will not try to write a report until after the No- vcniber elections. OVERLOOK NAVAL FORCE? Twining testified: "The U.S.S.R. has thousands faysRussia Leads In Jeis more jet combat planes in opera- tional units than the United States Air Force and the United States Navy combined. This is fighters, light h L s. T h h n. and heay bombers." Defence Secretary Wilson and the White House have said that critics of U.S. air force power were overlooking the punch packed by the Naval Air Force. Twining had told a senate ap- propriations committee earlier in the year that the navy's aerial striking power "is small." He did not budge from that stand before the Symlngton group. Twining stuck to his prior esti- mates that the air force budget next year would skyrocket to be tween 520.000.000.000 and 322.000.- 000.000. a boost of five or six hil- lions compared with this year's. He said he believes the program under this year's budget "is a sound one." and will keep the U.S. ahead. But he said the Rue- sians are catching up in quality of aircraft at a rate that "will close the gap" in perhaps three years unless the United States launches the program he has ec- poused. EASTERN LOCALS KING'S MILL. Montai.',ue. in itock: Galviuizcd gutter and titt- lngs. B.C. shini:lesA24 inch No. I and No. 3 Royals. Mouldings. doors, plywood, etc. AUGUST CLEARANCE sale H.L. MacGregcr and Co. Monta- gue. are offering 20 per cent dis- rount on the foiowing ladies, IVIISS es and childrens dresses. skirts, alouses and T shirts: mcns and Joya sport shirts and T shirts. Also other specials in girdles zrassiers. hosiery and underwear PERSONALS Flight Sergeant .l.W. Butler and Mrs. Butler. Clinton. Ontario, are the guests of Mrs. Butler's moth- er. Mrs. John Stewart. Murray Harbor. Their daughter, Miss Pat- iy Butler. is the guest of Miss Heather Jamicson. in Brudenell. Their son Ronald, is the guest of his cousin. Barry White. Lower Montague. Mr. Ind Mrs. Byron Stewart. Montague, have as their guests. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Thompson. Tlmberlea. N.S. also, Miss Etta MacLean, Quincy. Mass. Rev. A.M. Rogerson mand Mrs. Rogerson, Montague, are spend- ing their vacation in Saint John, NB. where they are the guests of their daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hansen and young son. Gary David, of Win- nipeg. Manitoba are guests 0 Mrs. Hansenls parents, Mr. and Mrs. Spurgepn MacDonald, Montague. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Douglas and faintly. Montreal, are guests of Mrs. Douglas' mother. Mrs. L.H. Coffin, Montague. Mrs. Minnie MacDonald. Mon- tague. left last week on a visit to Ottawa where she will be the guest of her so-n-in-law and daugh- ter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Kennedy. Miss Gail MacLean returned to her home in Pictou. N.S.. after visiting in Montague. guest of her aunt and uncle. Mr. and Mrs. J.A. lliacLean. On her return she was accompanied by her cousin, Miss Margaret MacLean. who will spend a week in Pictou. Mrs. Malcolm Clair and family. Toronto. Ontario. are visitingtrel- atives in Montague and are the The RCAF Mobile Recruiting Unit ' WILL an IN MONTAGUE AT THE f'ANADIltN LEGION HALL. THURSDAY, 16 AUGUST, 1 P.M. T0 5 P.M. SOUR” lTEXAS ROSE AT THE COURT HOUSE ON FRIDAY. I7 AUGUST. 1 P.M. TO 5 P.M. For full inlormalion without obligation visit this unit, or writc:- THE R.C.A.F. RECRUITING UNIT. R.C.A.ll'. STATION. sumiunnsion l FOR centrally located, suitable has full buildings. some in wood. Apply- AT MURRAY HARBOUR Large 15 room house in excellent condition, Also large room for store or other business. House basement, running hot and cold water, wired throughout, hardwood floors. ALSOeBarn 25' by 75'; Double deck poultry house 25' by 60', mostly insulated; Garage and other H Also offered, if interested, is 100 acres. of land, L. J. BUELL, Murray Harbour SALE 1 LL for hotel or tourist home. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Clair. Among those attending the Reb- ekah asscmbly of the Maritime Provinces. in Sydney this week are Mrs. Vera MacDonald, Miss Fiorrie Bcaton, Miss Adah Mac- Gregor. Mrs. Carl Stewart. Mrs. Leon Johnston. Mrs. L.H. Coffin. from Montague. and Mrs. James Dewar. Brudcnell. Superintendent Philip B. Strat- ton, Oxford, N.S., efficiency in- spector. officially visited the Car- digan rcaring ponds last week and was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Berneley Carin. Mr. and Mrs. .loseph Lake. of Toronto. accompariied by Janet. and Patsy Brock, also of Toronto, are spending a week with Mr. Lake's mother, Mrs. George Lake. Montague. BALL GAME FATAL CASPIAN, Mich. (AP)-A high school freshman died Friday of a braln'hcmorrhage after being hit on the head by a ball during a baseball game. Jerome Peretto. 14. was struck in the temple Thursday by a ground ball. ' Nixon bf Brookline. Mass, who are visiting at her unclels. Mr. Harold MacLean. Her mother, Mrs. Edward MacLean and sta- ter. Mrs. James Lewis, all of Brookline. accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Nixon home. Mr. Hamid and Mr. Edward MacLean arrived with their sister. Mrs. Harold Bower and her husband, all from Brookline. during the week. Har- old and Edward MacLean are brothers of Mr. Lemmie MacLean. All their family. except Victoria, Mrs. Reynolds have been or are home visiting relatives in Little Sands and High Bank. Mrs. Mack Stewart. another sister was home previously and returned to her home in Massachusetts. Mr. Lyiiimori Blue was at his home in Little Sands over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. William B. Con- rad of Detroit, Mich.. were visit- ing her sister in Little Sands on Sunday. There was a family-get together at the home 0 Mrs. Alex Blue on Sunday. w ere a happy time was spent. Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Conrad ta brother of Will! and three children, Stur- geon, and Mrs. Blue's sister. Mrs. Rowan Sencabough and her hus- band of Oak Valley. arrived at the Blue's also. It was a fare- well gathering for Mr. and Mrs. William B. Conrad. who planned. to leave Sturgeon on Monday mor- ning by bus for Detroit. The Con-j rads enjoyed their trip to P.E.I. very much and were happy to see and visit with many of their relatives and friends. They were sorry that time prevented them from visiting many others. Mrs. Conrad had not been home for eight years while Mr. Conrad had not been home for iii. Word was received by Mrs. Blue that her brother-in-law. Mr. Wil- liam H. Spencer and daughter, Miss Marian Spencer had arrived home safely on August 1. They left Mrs. Sencabough's on Sun- day and drove over 1400 miles to their home in Oberlin. Ohio. A.B. Sandy Blue of the Halifax Naval base, visited his home in Charlottetown over the weekend. Miss Sarah Bayne, Charlotte- town. and Miss Marion Bayne are guests of Miss Eleanor Wheeler. Little Sands. Miss Mary ll.iacPhcrsnn. Little Sands, returned from a visit to Moncton. Her mother and other NORTH BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:45 P.M. SHOW AT DUSK -- RAIN OR. MOON! i TONIGHT (First Showing Thrill Packed Hit! The most. "Wanted" Woman west of the Rockies! The man who tracked her down! . MAVERICK.” i .4 . WIIMEIIL I There never was a low f o r m a II or women in the crime- comp known as "The Hole in the Wall" . . . hideout for the sav- age gong that ruled the Rockies! Featuring the theme song that rocked the nation . . . "THE YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS". RIVER . The thriils - - - coior- - - spectacle of this world famous event rol across our giant Cineinoscopc I screen. 2 DAYS -- TODAY and TUES. urowmo A! 3:84-1--O CAPITOL r' ' M-G-M rm?!" 4? in Cmsmisoorl J? and com: it "Tue WEDDING IN MONACO” rt-t-&&'TrT col , Miss GRACE KELLY ? helical bi Chi than SAINT JOHN. N.B. uty Minister E. A. Cote of the federal department of natural re- sources is expected here Monday to survey archaniogical discover- ies at the site of the 17th century French Fort La'I'our. . Mr. Cote will be accompanied by Prof. A. G. Bailey of the Uni- veraity of New Brunswick. provin- membera of her family reside there. Mina Dorothy and Eileen Blue returned on Tuesday from a few days vialtt with their sister. M11. Lloyd' Wheeler. Caribou. Mrs. Bovyer and her son Char- lie. Covehead. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Machtiillan, Marshfield. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vesaey. and daught- er. York, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Munn, Lit- tle Sands on Sunday. Messrs John Burhoe, Ivan Gor- don and Archie Gordon were vis- iting in Little Sands recently. Mr. Ralph Balderson, Winsloe. was a business visitor to Little Sands on Wednesday of this wgek. cial member of the historic sites feet nearer the centre of the discovered in the Pacific ocean earth than the equato . 200 miles of! Australia. and monuments board of C dn. minted in France between I639 gaping squares do, lhemgznh and V1643. Date: on two others ends site where the gallant Ma- are "e'"ble' Crockery and glassware have century French origin. A small French cannon found earlier this summer was revealed to be at the top of a flight of stone steps as digging reached deeper into the sandy ground. , Excavations gan last year. Mrs. Harper dscovered an un- cient burial site last July which museum officials toy is the oldest indication of human settlement in the area. The 2,000-year-old grave contained no evidence of a body. but was indicated by red ochre, and stone and wampum buriali goods. Five other graves were found later. one containing the skelton of a teenage Indian girl believed buried between the late 17th and early 18th centuries. 1 dame LaTour defended the bar- bor entrance fortess against French troops dispatched from P01"! Royal. N.S. to take her hus- band back to France to answer Ch-57895 laid by 8 rival lieutenant- governor of Acadia, The fort finally fell in 1645 to . superior force which hanged every man of the garrison. Ma. dame La Tour. says history, died a few weeks later of a broken heart. VARIED RELICS Months of excavations on the km?" .by students wokiiig under the direction of archivist J. Bus- 5l'" "MD?!" of the New Brunswick Museum have turned up such di- verse relics as cannon balls and COINS. Palisades and cannon. Mr. Harper. whose enthusiasm is tinged with caution says "it Mayfair Theatre MURRAY RIVER - AUGUST I3-I4 MONDAY - TUESDAY "NOT AS A STRANGER" Starring -- Robert Mitchum. Olivia DeHaviiland. Frank Sinatra, Broderick Crawford, Charles Bickford. "One of Biggest Bust-Sellers of all time brought to the screen by -a top director-producer. using the best "There has never been entertainment like this. SHOW TIME - 8:” P.M. will take time" to clearly define I the layout of the fort from uncov- ered buildings. , He says it is possible a 15 by 25-foot structure was part of the 0. pears to have been the garrison's original fort. Another building an DANCE Dance io be held at Clark's Feed Mill, Monday evening, August 13. Proceeds to benefit baseball club. Good music. Lunches for sale. the Canadian Legion Mount Stewart Branch. Sponsored by THEATRE MONTAGUE Mon., Tue. Aug. 13A-14-8:30 P.M. Y Adm. 35-so Incl'd prov. Gov. A Tax I "GUYS AND DOLLS" Color; Cinemascope-With Marlon BrandoeJean SimmondseFrank Sinatra-Vivian Blaine-Trained by a man who knows more about horses than horses do. The relay jockeys for this race are unbeatable. A big musical comedy-this is the big oneea chance of your lifetime. STORE HOURS MON. - THURS. 8:30 am. - 5:30 pm. FRI 8:30 a,.m.-9:30 p.m. SAT 8.30 n.m.-12.30 pm. OFIMEN llll Alli. 'S CLOT SALE STARTS MONDAY. Aug 13 Ends SATURDAY. August 25 HING ONE RACK MEN'S SUITS BROKEN SIZES. COLORS. ETC. Reg. Value .' 339.50 to 559.50 CLEARING AT THIS VERY - Low PRICE. MEN'S SPORT COATS Reg. 324.95 to S2735 patterns. SELLING FOR ONLY g l9.95 Choose from a wide selection of CF- 5.95 0” REGULAR STOCK OF PANTS Shifter Hiiimon excepted all selling FINE ENGLISH FLANNELS Expertiy tailored by Shiffor Hillman 25.00 . DRESS PANTS Special Buys in Smart Flannel: 8.95 PR. OUFFS FREE MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS ONE GROUP SELLING AT . on Yes, folks, in order to maintain our high standard of quality merchandise, we must have a summer clearance sale to clear our broken lines, sizes, white olcpI1onis,eic., and consequently be able to show you fresh new stock at all times. Call and see the ac- cumulated bargains, you may find just what you need at a very low price. MEN'S STRAW HATS CLEARING AT V3 orr JACKETS ALL SELLING AT orr . MER LINES. MEN'S SWIM TRUNKS, T- SHIRTS AND OTHER SUM- V3 OFF With a group clearing at V3 arr MEN'S. ASST'D. SUMMER MEN'S VYELLA SPORT SHIRTS, Expcrtiy Tailored by Deacon Bros. Sl3.95 Men's Fine Qualify English FLANNEL BLAZERS Rog. 529.50 and 539.50 NOW SELLING AT 1 arr to-Measure. BUYING THE BEST Bo suroito look over our Shifter-Hillman Suits, and you will agree that there are no better suits, on the market for S79.50 in stock suits or S69.5O to SIl0.00 for Moda- REMEMBER WHEN YOU SHOP AT HOOLEY'S YOU ARE , I39 Kent SI. OOLEY'S MEN'S WEAR MONTAGUE AND CHARLOTTETOWN Dial 7224 ,,,. , M..A...e'.I.-..".x;.. A. 3..., cas't possible ; " .4-J