Nineteen foreign military at- taches and their three guid- ance officers from the Cana-' dian armed forces, during their weekend visit to Charlot- tciown, were the guests the City of Charlotteown a re- copion and dinner at the Char- ____._.Z Ntli.|TARY ATl'ACH;ES C"l'OWN lottetown Hotel. Above, three of the .visiting high ranking officers are given a warm welcome by their host Mayor A. Walthen Gaudet. Shown above are, left to right: Lt.- Cmdr. R. H. Sylvester. Ot- tawa. liaison officer, Royal Ca- »House, Barn Destroyed Fire of undetermined origin about 1 o'clock, Saturday morn- ing levelled a house and barn, the property of Paul Larldn, at Farmington, about six miles east of St. Peter's. Ocmpauts of the home, Mr. Larkin and his parents, Mr. and itirs John Larkin. were away at the time. St. Peter's firefighting equipment, called to the scene. Iiouse from the blaze. Lord Gordon Nvins Classic WESTBURY. N.Y. (AP) Lord Gordon from Leonard J. Bin-k's Allwood Stable or Far Hills, N.J. put a crimp in A. C. l'iking’s bid for the three-year- old trotting championship with a one-half length victory satur- day night in the $89,700 Dexter Cup at Roosevelt Raceway. Charging through the’ stretch under the hand of John Patter- was able to save only a chicken‘ n Blaze At Farmington Nothing was salvaged from the house. A few animals were rescued from the barn and the fields. A passerby, Raymond Mac- Kinnon, of St. Peter's. first spot- ted the blaze. He attempted to arouse a neighbor, Vernon Wood, who had a phone, but was un- successful. After taking the act the fire chief. Henry Mac- Dougnli. Fire had levelled the house and was working its way through the barn when Mr. MacDougall arrived about 1.30 a.m. The ef- forts of the fire chief and net- ghbours were ineffective in sav- ing the building. The fire apparently began in the kitchen of the farmhouse. Mr. MacDougall said, but the cause is not known. Mrs. Lar- 7 o'clock itchen fire left the house aroun Friday evening the was out. The buildings were partly co- vered by insurance. rest of the livestock was in the / kin said later that when she at nadlan Navy; Mayor Gaudet: Rear Admiral R. A. T . naval attache, Norway; and Commodore A. G. Nllson, Swo- den. Lt.-Cmdr. Sylvester, is I former resident of Charlotte- town. at; ANNE VERA MacKAY Ch'town Girl Dies At Home Anne Vera Maclfay, 20-year- old daughter of Mr and Mrs. L.D. MacKay, died Saturday or ome - wood Drive. Charlottetown, af- ter a short illness. - Born in Bridgewater; N.S., Miss Maclfay attended school in Kentville, Dartmouth. alifax, ' Charlottetown. son. the son of Darnley barged o the front with less than 30 yards remaining and was pull- int: away at the finish. A. C.'s Viking, the odds-on- favorite from the A. C. Peter- sen Stables of West Hartford, Conn., held on for second. ‘three-quarters of a length in from of the lightly - regarded Happy Newport from the New- port Stock Farm of South Plain- iicid, N.J. The victory was worth 3A4,- 860.87 and boosted Lord Gor- don‘: earnings to $79.4-73.87. Tim the 1 3-16 mile-race track and world record for the seldom - raced distance. Rooney Hanover was fourth and Safe Mission. driven by Joe i0'Brien of Alberton. P.E.l. was fifth in the field of nine. i Rhythm Time Has Best Time SACKVXLLE DOWNS, _.‘I.S. (CP) — There were eight single dash winners in harness racing here Saturday night. were Armbro Barney. Rysedyke. Rhythm Time. Rice Harris. Yankee Fire, Mary Leah, Edge- wood Scott and Counsellor Bay. Best time for the night came in the third race. first heat of the 31.0000 junior free-for-all with Rhythm Time clocking the mile in 2:07. ‘ Heading their respective fields w of Wales C lege. Active in Trinity United er of the senior girls’ choir I teacher in Sunday school. She was a member of the junior and senior Hi-Y Clubs of the YMCA. For the past three months she as a member of the office staff of the Polyclinic in Char- lottetown. She leaves to mourn, in this city. her parents and a sister, The funeral will be held this afternoon» from United Church with service at 2 o'clock. Interment will be in Sherwood» oemetery. " Coffey Holds Motorists were happy to the lights gleaming on the Hills- ro Bridge last night. After e.v were out for two nights we . v It was not possible last’ night what the defect was e WFC Lead By THE CANADIAN PRESS Tommy-Joe Coffey. Edmon- ton Eskimo end ‘- halfback held lead Western Football Conference scoring despite a 17 7 win Saturday ga over Coffey has by Winnipeg's, Gem?‘ Jame! with 80 and calsarvs E3?‘ Lunsford with 42. e leaders: T E Coffey. E James. W Lunsford. C W Buchahan. ‘C N onaaoooaaquqg nooccwfiocofia meoooumoeoqofi Hoooemeceouu DEREEESSSSSZI d r Whltehoule. 8 Horses Take New Marks TRURO (CP) — Two horse: set new career marks in identi- cal times durhli ' ing at the Raceway here Satur- day night. night by Cal- 3 ontreal. E 77 points followed FOOTBALL RESULTS THE CANADIAN PRESS Washington 35 Dallas. Chicago no San Francisco 14 American hallo (SUNDAY) Denver 23 Buffalo E Houston 11 Boston 34 New York 14 San Diego 40 EAST ' Miami 23 Pitt 14 Viilanova 81 Wed emu: 8 wm Ind Mary 3 virslnlu 0 Florida State D Citadel 0 Louisville 2l,Wichita It Tulsa O Hardin Simmons 0 Col State 35 S Dakota 26 Iowa State it Drab . FAR Wyoming 18 Montana State 0 Pacific M Brigham Yonnl 7 Utah State 29 San Jose 10 Eastern IOIK W LT F AP‘ _l-lamiltoo 41 181% I Ottawa 430156138 Montreal 2 4 11!) IN S . Toronto I 5 0 90161 I Minister, Deputy Leave For Edmonton ofedu t for arr - . stration by two grade three pup- from Annan minlsteranddeputymin-u ISLAND NEWS PAGE Kings, Queens and City is Stressed SOURIS — Example and pre- cept as the two essentials ki teacher convention in Souris. H.J. liynes. the supervisor, stressed the of fol- lowing the course of studies and be time table, also the need a library in every school. He or a‘ reading demon lid. Di Norton dal rres ce attendance division brought to the attention of the tea the correspon dence study courses for grades nine and 10 available. He also gave some Information on Kenny Lane Wins By TKO P HI L A DELPHIA (AP) ~ phia's Len Matthews in the th round of a scheduled 10- round fight Saturday night. Referee Joe Sweeney halted the round at two minutes, 54 eeoo when lit ed Mat- thews could no longer defend himself. There were no knock- us. Lane from Muskegon,- Mich., is the second - ranked light- weight contender. Matthews is unranked "Never Bend 9. o S 1 lniurecl Man Still Critical HALIFAX (CP) — Robert White, 25, of Charlottetown, was ' stilll in critical condition here Sunday night with injuries re- ceived in a car accident Wed- nesday. He was injured when his car leiit the highway ne Ch ar arlot- tebown_ He was flown her Thursday. - e lah from Cain Hoy Stable was Wins Futurity At Aqueduct NEW YORK (AP) — Never race, barged back into the two- year-old championship picture Saturday with a come-from-be hind victory in the $152,150 Fu- turity at Aqueduct But before the son of Nana!- made the official winner, he had Stampeders Defeat Als CALGARY (OP) - Calgary Stampeders came up with sev- eral crucial. defensive moves, and defeated Montreal Alou- ettes 17-7 Saturday night in a Canadian Football League inter- lock ame Stampeders moved two points ahead of Saskatchewan Rough- riders into second place in the Western Conference. The loss left Montreal in third place in the Eastern Conference with five points. Fullback Lovell Coleman. ter touchdown for Calgary to clinch victory after halfback Ed Buchanan counted a touchdown. in the second quarter. Larry Robinson converted both and kicked a 24-yar¢ field goal. Montreal's lone touchdown was scored by workhorse George Dixon early the game. Bobby Jack Oliver con- a s a e s from quarterbacks Sandy Stephens and Joe Fran- cis deep in the Calgary end and on another three occasions threw the quarterbacks for Iarge losses. A crowd of about 18.000 watched Montreal take advan- tageof a poor first-quarter punt totake possession on the Cal- gary 10. Ste Luster, who was dropped in his trac three-yard line. Dixon embed over on the next After Montreal finrbled a punt, Calgary quarterback Eagle Day pitched to and Pete Manning to the Als’ line. over from there and in two carrrlas tied the score. ‘. With less than a minute to go in the half. Day completed to Buchanan e31-yardpass and blnson was good on his 24- am field coal.- way through the final 11 If! 7 Western Mich Iocentralhllchd - --~- ~ substituting for injured Earl 87750 Lunsford. scored a fourth-quan WIN verted. , 1- C a l g a r y intercepted four fromscoredtbeothei-Chicegogoala to withstand a foul claim. N 's' UN ’CAP At Atlantic City, N.J., Mont- Farm's M of older horses, took the lead on the outside leaving the back- stretch and outgamed T.V. Lark k to win the Jockey Carley Burr, moving —Mongo into contention rounding the first turn of the 1 3-16-mile f Preston Madden’s T.V. Lark to earn , money for Mrs. Marlon Dupont Scott of Orange. Va. Wise Ship, owned by Milton Rltzenberg. was a half-length behind T.V. Lark. Mongo’s time over a fast track was 1:56 I-5. T.V. Lark earned $20,000 sec- ond inoney, Wise Ship $10,000 for third. and Art Market 15,000 for The ouuahui, Charlottetown, Mon. sept. 17.1902. 5 leaching Of language - laliy, Mrs. Leah Kermed Y At Souris tgirade eight prvincial examina- ns. Junior Red Cross director, Mrs, W.W. Reid, pointed out the value of integrating Junior Red Cross activities with tire school program. and of using the Red roes magazine. Christopher Gladhiil, p r o vincial r of c dis . - Driver Of Car Said Involved ~ In Crash Appears In Court DRIVER OF CAR maged in an accident early Saturday morning near the cor- Streets. According to driven by Ralph Wotton, City and a car driven by Conrad Mc- a.m. No one was injured. ner or weymouth and sydney lugs\l'lt1lTguE2gu:n‘da$‘ceSt:nli)ral:itldld- reports. a taxi t V against Lloyd Harry Shaw, Char- Isnc’ Cm,_ collided about ‘ lottetown, was dismissed with at I stern warning given the accused by Magistrate I-laslam. One man was fined $10 and costs for driving an insufficient- ly equipped vehicle. Two drunk sand incapables completed the VM milk bottle. was adjourned tofdocket Two cars were extensively da- Sept. 22. FAMOUS FOR BRANDED INSPECTED STEAKS “' I Wayne Gallant. Charlottetown, , ion. A charge of trespassing laid MONEY BACK AsaresultofthecrashMc-¥ * * * * # ¥. ¥ ¥ ¥ Isaac. appeared in city police court Saturday morning before ra James l-laslarn, charged with leaving the scene of an accident. The case was remanded un- til Tuesday after three witnesses were heard. Mr. Mclsaac is represented by L. P. O'Donnell. The case of Boyd Wilson, Charlottetown, charged with assaulting Michael Duffy by striking him on the head with a s 62?. ud possibility of holding a music workshop for this local. COMMITTEES NAMED Appointed to the following committees are: press. Eleanor Clinton and Mrs. Anna MacCor- mack; resolutions, George Mul- y, Sis- ter Mary Isable; nominations, Marjorie Stead rite MacMahon; question box, Mrs. Ethel Francis. During the afternoon session John MacDonald ‘from the c ask-zd teachers to refer any pupils gfiedinl HPBCM help to the n . Mrs. Etta MacDonald from the vocational guidance staff stated that their services are available for pupils of grades nine-12 inclusive. Miss Anna Riley. general sec- ret of the P.E.I. Teachers Federation in her address on federation affairs stated that In year seven school districts paid no supplement to teachers. Depuy Minister of Education Malcolm Maclfenzie discussed departmental affairs and ex- pressed his pleasure in the large number of teachers who attend- ed summer school. OVERHAUL NEEDED In his address, the president, Daniel MacDonald, asserted that educational programs need ov- erhauling. "We should remem- ber the thoughtful pupil whose curiosity is not yet killed. Edu- cational research and the use of the good that has been discard- ed is necessary. 11," said Mr. MacDonald. “what your school teaches is not adding to the health, happiness social advancement and f an- cial standing of your commun- ity, it upkeep is an expenditure rather than an investment." The new slate of officers for the Souris local are: president, Mervin Maclnnis; vice - presi- dent. Mrs. Mary Maccallum, and secretary, Mrs. Martha Bruce. VIIIIIJIIIICI Patterson: \ Watch Repairs \ FAST EFFICIENT ~ ’ Bob Harrison fourth 8it2§g9, and Black Hawks Defeat Leafs 8'1‘. CATHABINES. Ont. (OP) ull and Ab McDonald Tim Horton and Carl Nicklaus Wins Seattle Open . SEATTLE (AP)-—Jack Nick- laus stood off the closing charge of slender Tony Lema win the $30,000 Seattle Open golf tournament Sundaywith a 15- under par 265 for the 72 holes. Nicklaus had a 68 in Sunday's final round. Leina. who started the day seven strokes behind him, wound up second at 267. Art Wall Jr. was third at 268 a VIIIIIICII THE CARD SHOP O Greeting Cards O Art Supplies O Games O Good Books For Children do 103 Grafton St. Adult! Dial 4-0974 Gary Player fifth at Tanton Tire Service Phone 4-3574 coon,-‘tun TO CLEAR DOROTHY GRAY COSMETICS ‘/3 OFF RETAIL! GlGGEY’S PHARMACY 108 Kent 4-3170 uywhero In P. the rush. and save . Siding.-and Clapboard with iron Irina rurnrnr -mourners llea..'l‘aes.-Sept.l7-ll sssr.. ruumruusq mo nu. jam aim for drama. “SACK SIRIT"--in Color SUSAN HAYWARD - JOIN GAVIN - VERA MILES anuuunwnauaeeauneouauop. ' bdahecoaIdn’tmarryhlm. amaasheesaldaoteallherewa. Terrlflic heart Slelenl A woman's aldrlng love hisb tusiaa 09 "dress as you llko—-but please dross” . marble and bronze memorials. - ._ NOW IS THE ’ TIME EENSULAT- Wehavetwoofthe ’iv“" ~ '“.i’‘‘ am: .."':.". g QQQGIH1 :,,‘:,1 gen“ “gym L [nu your Insulation done now before if tors for Johns-Manvtlle Asbestos “mud ‘W 0. Insulated backer hoard. ESTIMATES CALL Atlantic Roofing and Insulation 30- A NAME YOU CAN TRUST II ffl Pltl load Dill 4-C73 Charlottetown Curling Club HARD TIME DANCE and CORN BOIL Wednesday, September 19th $1.50 per pernsnonci. members and 99"‘ FOR... ALL YOUR CAR NEEDS! RESTRICTED No One Under 18 Years of Age Admitted AN INNOCENT GIRL... A LONELY PLACE A STORY LIKE THE SCREEN HAS NEVER KNOWN BEFORE! STARTING ‘G TODAY IN‘ “TOWN wmrour Pl‘l'V" $III¢¢I(ER NO ONE . . . POSITIVELY NO ONE UNDER 18 WILL BE - ADMITTED On-alum E. 6. MARSHALI. .. ROBERl'BtlK£ mciuno JAECKEL mu Suilolt mi SONDOCK tun em Wlmfllllilllfig-_s u_.q.y..CHRiSIi[E KA_lJ_FijANll_ll°.1ifi§'»l"°il0TlFRlED llElNl'lAll Shows Daily ébm 3:30 - 7 - 9 ***ik*¥¥¥¥¥ Rebuilt Engines, Automatics, Starters Fuel greater tribute than to memor- ialize their names in enduring natural stone. We carry the largest stock d granite and marble monuments east of Montreal. Phone 4-6935. or Montague 40-3- for our catalogue of annih- liero Beck & Son Ltd. Montague and Charlottetown Prince Edward Island Souris Phone Ill '|0tol Special Entertainment Inatlrilg Dick Turpin "Visiting Curlers Welcome" *'k**'k¥¥--V-4 w'th a a % 1 ti: Generators. oiler the ntilrgentree Stable’:n3ut§ HEADQUARTERS "mus. Heads. Cranks’. Water ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ * * * * ing Class. Pack Trip, an out- JUST RECEIVED. Pumps. A complete line at , A. . sider. trailed by another 256 Large Shipment accessories for '52 models. it - ' ~ lengths for third place in the USED TIRES BIG _ C fiell)(ti)n(;ldl?Pierce, riding outing 750-14 Hi"I‘reds $5.00 at up Stewart MOIOIS DAYS ‘ ~ - NORTH glass, giaiéned a foul against $353: :33: ll; ”‘ G‘ “W80 8!» ' 4-ms RIVER ever en and Sh k .He ' ' . ' ' ' « ‘ glgflggfeda b atv h orilldlntarwaa 70045 -79°F TM‘ 00 & P ‘~— - e y ever Bend t the - it s t of the race. But afteiglook-_ man 10 ply 18.00. .3. up Proud Of A1’ 8; DIRHVE-IN ingegittlrnovies. stewards disal- 1100-K) used army tire; 00 _| ‘, ow e c a m. - . f_Ntevesit- Ililendéflchalliling lap $ 12 ply Your Fan“ Y’ Adult 3 mfies from irs a es ump an - - - ‘ fou h ry six starts, some sues Limited Supply . Entertfnment steppcéu title distance $91: 1:17 1 " Chi!-1'l0tl50t0W!| secon s. e earned ,347.50 to ’ run his total earnings to $193.- 0" T""‘5'C”'“”d" to Borden land on the aauii‘ once usmioua t_;lniii'nn_-iiii'tri;i_siut';i;s1ii‘u“iig;i3i_ii“h faith-Anion AdInIssion:- Adults 75:: Children 25: ‘F 1 I