AUGUST 9. 1951 rue PAGE ELEVEN Finds sou llo Ilail lever SOBL ELPHIA. Ausw8- (AP) gggtigipkiley. gone from Phila- mpma these 40 years picked out me house where he was born and Md mg wife, Bessie Mac. to snap big picture while he stood on the '”,.",fa so it was that Riley, now 54 ygcutlonlng from his home in 5-Qguharnois. Montreal suburb. (amid the son he'd never seen and had a reunion with two slstsrrs nnd a brother. p M", Harriet Brennan. who lives m mi.-y's old home, asked his mm as he posed for the. photo- 5r.:,';Y,'y," she said. "there's a Riley. 1-1 this block. Joe. He lives right down the street." Mrs. Brennan made the intro- ductions, "Well." the elder Riley related later. "we talked a while and men I knew Joe was my son." Edward Riley explained that he nus. wglkerl off" one day back in mi. because he was "young ma I'ctri1lsh." He joined the navy and wont to the Orient. He said he hoard from a friend later that his first wife and son (Joe). born am” he left. had died. Later the four excited Riley! called Ward's brother. Bill. and his twn sisters. Mrs. Edith Weikel and Mrs. Rebecca Emery- LM0 night. the reunited Rileys had a parli Arm! llslos Monsters After Ilalil Ill llilqts. KINGSTON. Jamaica, Aug. 8- tGP)-Polloo with fixed bayonet: stormed the headquarters of the Bustainanio Labor Union and arrested loo persons on charg- ea of disorderly conduct. The raid followed complaints by citizens that they were molested walking past the headquarters of the Union that is run by W. A Bustamante, commurdcations min- ister and virtual prime minister of this colony. Police went to the building with orders to move away all persons found there. They were met by a barrage oi bricks and broken bot- tles flung from inside the build- ink and from the roof. The law retired for a time but then returned, protected by steel helmets and armed with loaded rifles. fixed bayonets. tear gas bombs and batons. The police arrested everyone in the building and took them in wagons to the central station. Bustamante. pistol-toting. color- fu' leader who has been a fire- brand in Jamaican political and labor circles for years. was not reported to have taken immediate action. No serious injuries were report- td. .The melee followed a long period of unemployment. .. DKILY CROSSWORI5 it III smog v DOWN 2o. Cry of pair I3 . 1. Mountain 1. Children's 21. Pig pen a pools game 23. An un- am 6. Silent 2. People or controlled GE) 11. Sprite Arabia twitching nu (Shakm 3. stand up :5. Permit, an spi-are) 4. Lairs 28. Rudiments Elli i2 Ascended 5. Cunning 21. Nimble ll 3 Full 6. Pad of paper 29. Sailor of gas 7. Part of 32. Coddle mama "EB 14. Reigning "to be" 33. Evening M beauty 8. Youn! ( poet.) Iesmvdors Anne 15. Wager horse :4. Southeast 16. Mulberry 9. Little island iabbr.) 44. A law 17 Evening lo. Abound 37. Work (Jgw, um ' sun god is. Constclla- 39. Mix an. Irish r Egypt.) tion so. subtle I7. salamander 18. River 18. Great emanation 48. Affirmative (Chin) quantity (1. Long nail reply I19. Indamod, painful , I g , .. spots L 22. Latvian cc 1: .. ,, 24. Pleshy naps. as u on fowls 28. A whole 30. Bark E " " :31. Elude: 35. Thricl " " ”' " tmusfp as. Unknit. ” 3 5 ” 38 Belonging to me u ” t 39 American Indian Ii 31 II I6 7 42. Personal pronoun 36 I1 3 4:3. Devoured 45. A newer 39 do At 47 Hard. biaclr. , wood 4; as :1 49. Sultan? decree 50. Loud (mus.l I 61. Cruder 62. A volcamo 5. 3 tr tuff -9 DAILY OBYPTOQUUIE-Hero's how to erupt lt.-- axrnaaaaxr anoxorsnaowx Onefle.tTer'.simply stands for the-r. in this exaiifpl?A'ls aid 'for the three !.'s, X for the two 0's. ate. Single letters. apol- tropbiea. the length and forrnatl Each day the code letters are different. ' Acrutograrnquatauol wxnrfzo usu errors 1'1. rfau IVBLO wrr rvu--i.a-rNo1.1o1'ao. Yesterday's cl-yptoquote: Luca: Moowuci-rrou rm: moo-, em-:n SEA. BRIGHTENING THE storm 11- CANNM cann- MOORE. .4; y-flve years of age. Pete in the To our Youth- T0 sllonsorlng Clubs- Community. Public Speaking competition PIIINDE EDWAIID ISLAND YOUTH at the NNNAL YUNTH IFNIN t3mnLo'1'rm'owN. mnsnsr, snrrmmm lath ' tin.-n to members of Boys' and Glrls' Clubs, Junior rs. and all other Rural Organizations, not over will be held at two points in each County. Eac Youth Organization may select not more than two contest- ants for the County Competitions. Applications for entry must be made on or before August 15th. The two winners in each County will be eligible to com- Provincial Competition, and the winners of the latter who meet age and other requirements will be eligible to compete for the Maritime Championship held at the Maritime Winter Fair. will be awarded County and Provincial Train yourself in the art of Public speaking. 1'0 The Parents and Leaders- Give the boys and girls eve enter this important Coinpeti on. Give your members every encouragement and Wllliort. and help them D0 11' NOW For further lnfomtation apply mm Pin 1. naraarunrcror 's'vgaiour.mas: cannon-nno of the words are all hints. .DIllI'IIIbd I! I1 IIUIQI Ci!!! Elimination Com titions Suitable prizes winners. encouragement to to bring honors to your Strange But True 3) l'.n. Ilseartlur -.-. When fire was hard to come by a continuous flame was usually preserved in some sacred place. After the advent of Christianity, the church bccam . the guardian of this necessary fire. and some ancient cresset stones still exist with cup-like hollows in them where the flame burnt. such a stone was found in the ruins of giiixess Abbey, having live cups The Northern Lights with which we are all' familiar. are seldom seen in England, and their rare appearances are said to foretell war. The most photographed cat in the world and the one that has seen the greatest number of dis- tinguished persona is the black eat of No. 10 Downing Street. Lon- don. This famous tabby brought comfort to many anxious watch- ers during the dark days of the recent world war. Rats are said to have a know- ledge of impending disaster. If all the rats left a house it was a sign that the building would fall. It is still believed by most sailors that rats know when a ship is doomed and will leave her before she sails on her last voyage. In the Second World War a vessel was deserted by her rat crew just. prior to leaving an Eng- lish port. The ship was perfectly sea-worthy, and the usual explan- ation, that the rats were run out by water from unsuspecting leaks, did not hold true in. this case. Nevertheless, it turned out to be her last voyage, for a German sub got her in a part of the sea be- lleved to be free from enemy craft. Maybe the sailors have something there. Modern owners of spring blinds may be surprised to hear that the acom-shaped bobbin at the end of the cord is a charm against light- ning. It does in fact represtnt an acorn, though the manufacturers are probably unaware of the fact. Gypsies are supposed to have peculiar power in that they can read the future. That a lot of people still beliew in the gy1)sies' power in this connection is l'POVel'l by the numbers who have their fortunes told at all County Fairs. Squirrels in the wild bury their nuts. If you give a tame squirrel nuts in your living room it will take them into a corner and go through the motions of burying them, even to the extent of tamp- ing down "earth" on them. In- stinct. eh? If you were in a back field without 3. watch and somebody asked you what time it is how close could you come to it? Can you say "It is 9:20," for instance. and not be more than a few min- utes out? Well, bees can do it. believe it or not. Most everyone knows that certain flowers open and close at definite times of the day while in bloom. Bees know the precise moment when to come for the nectar. Test bees with paint spots on their bodies were used by experimenters to prove their point. . Fish have a line running down each side of their bodies in which are located tiny organs that, re- cord changes in water pressure. When a fish swims towards a rock the pressure of water goes up. and the fish, warned. turns aside. The penguin mother has a pas- sionate love for her young and will fight to the death to protect them. They have been known to keep on feeding their offspring when they had reached the age of two years. Their nests are made of small pebbles-the only material avail- able-and the penguins have to work hard to gather enough for the hatching season. some of the lazy fellows often resort to steal- ing rather than carry their share of stones but eventually they are caught and severely punished by the entire community. Ross Baker. Canadian natural- ist. has trapped and handed scores of birds and one of his reP0l'l5 reads: "Cardinals are the canniest birds I've ever tried to trap. OMB you catch one he will never fall into the same trap Ikain. Whits- throatsd sparrows. on the W1" hand. are so dumb they I3 caught over and over again. Have you ever we hed a moth- er swallow teaching er young to fly? Believe me it's an awe-in- gplrlng sight to see a litter of young ones being pushed out into cornea while alive to anyone baby blrti out of always telling me that g naturalists as reliable prophets. long it means a hard winter; if short, a mild winter. 7 . FAITHFUL 1'0 '1'!!! END-All hairy mutt stood killed by a car on a Pittsburgh street. when the Will Give An Eye For A Workshop VICZPORIA. B. 0.. All8- 8 -(GP) -Clarence P. Allen, 55, today of- fered to sell the cornea of his right eye to establish a fund for a hobby workshop for elderly people here. Mr. Allen. a first World war veteran. iaid he would sell the in need of vision if sufficient money were offered to start the hobby centre. He said he thought someone might be interested in buying the eye for some soldier blinded in Korea. - The We 18 In good condition." he said. "I've had it examined by an uculist." He said he had not yet made up his mind what price he would ask for the eye but indicated the price would have to be to start a hobby centre. the world. taclo many around 310,000 I witnessed this spec- times. One at a. time the mother swallow would push a the nest. Then 5'"! WOUIG 11? ahead leading the awkward flying offspring; to 5 "END! Perch .or. telephone wire. scientists are not agreed pg to whether a worm impaled on 3 11511 hook actually suffers pain or not. The wiggling we see may be no. thins more than a reflex action. "M" the painful or painless "100?! can be proved most of us prefer to follow the opinion ex- Dresled by Heywood Broun: "l"iaherrnen and scientists are fish doesn't mind getting hooked; that it doesn't suffer. well, I don't know. I think I'd like to get an (ti1l'lIll11I'0h on the subject from 3 5 .. One mother possum may pro- duco three Jitters containing a to- tsl of 30 to 35 offsprings in a sin- ' gle year! When fully grown the possum is as large as a small dog but the babies are no longer, at birth. than one's little finger. of- ten the mother will have I new litter in her pouch while an older litter is still riding her back. Thus at one time she may be carrying as many as 15 or 18 passengers. Contra.ry to popular belief. the possum does not pretend' to be dead; it actually faihts at the ap- proach of an enemy. When a coon begins to est la piece of food, he washes it thor- oughly by dipping it into water and M bbing it with his paws. 'Coona are regarded by some weather If the animal's fur is H u m a n- engineers surveying mountain areas for the best pos- sible dam sites have often found -after maps and other information av- ailable-that the best site turns out to be a place where beavers have already built a dsml studying topographical Cancer Blood Test. aci- seek entlss are still seeking a work- ah forycahcer. Such a test could save many thousands of lives a year. Research needs your support. Give blood test as a diagnostic std to the 1951 Cancer Campaign. GUARDIAN. CI-iARIJO1"l'E1'0WN guard over the body of his buddy, night long. this I completed. cross Bay 0F Fuiiily in DIII canoe SAINT JOHN. N..B.. Aug. 8 - (CP) -"Next iim"e I'll do it on s. logl” That's the way Gordon Willdcn of Middleton. N. s., felt about the hub-bub he and his brother John ran into when they arrived here yesterday after crossing the Bay of Fundy in a canoe. The young men. John. 28, and Gordon, 21, couldn't see anything unusual about such a passage. ”The Bay is a highway, and the people who live along it use it as that all the time." Gordon said. The pair had left Margarets- ville, N. S., about 13 miles up the coast from Dlgby. on Sunday even- ing In their zo-foot. canoe. com- plete with inboard motor. for a va- cation in kigleside with their uncle. Geoffrey Oland and family. A simple change in course, caus- ing a delay in their arrival. coupl- cd with the fact that their craft was 43 years old. had evoked some misgivings in their relatives on both sides of the water. , North Tryon Notes Mr. Leroy Dart was a visitor to Summerside recently. Mr. Jack Howatt of Louisville spent a recent weekend in Tryon. Mrs. Norman Wood and daugh- ter were recent viaitors to sum- merside. Miss Ada Jackrnan. North Try- on, spent a few days in summe - side recently. Mr. Art Blanchard of Ti-yon spent a recent weekend at his ,home in New Annan. Miss shsrren Roper has spent a few days with her.g-randparents. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Thomson. Master Douglas Muttart spent a. few days with his aunt anti uncle. Mr. and Mrs. sterling Lord. Tryon. Miss Rhoda Muirhead hasspent a few days with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. William Muirhead. Try- on. Miss Shlrlens Wall of New An- nan has spent a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. ciayion Thomas, Tryon. Miss Nancy Lea of Charlotte- town is spending some time with her grandmother Mrs. Frank Dix- on, and friends. Miss Marie Murray of summer- slde has spent some time with her aunt Miss Mary A. MaoKen- zie, North Ti-yon. Miss Mildred Howatt of 'l'rY0n has returned to her home after spending the past two weeks vis- iting friends in Moncton, NB. Miss Doris Oarruthers has spent a few days with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Vance Dixon. 'l'ryon. Geifle Lcixafive -- Mild Anfacid You I and mild good thing use OVC for Tlllll SAL I To millions of families REGIILARITY is a 3-letter word! In the boot and simplest reasons; millions of families rely on ENO to help Nature keep them well and happy. ENO'S "Fruit Salt" rlronugb. ujo laxative they want for both old and young . . . agentle. thorough, safe laxative provides the gentle, combi ned. Your family too can depend on BNO ; : : a to have nlwa I in the home, for ' ay when need family s o today-at your favourite sforo. ed. Buy the -large dos-pound men removed the body, the other pup walked off slowly down the street, his death watch "so we arrived to find that not only had the R. C. M. P. been noti- fied and had a boat and four "Mom had even notified Green- wood Air Base." planes standing by, but that resi- yen;-3. denis all along the coast were m....... looking out for us." they said. DOROTHY DIX cannot reply personally to readers, but will au- of . . . . .- . llorstly lllx Sm- Oontiauod from page I women who have spare time now, after dolnt I 10b of raisin! I illi- ily and doing the million odd Jobs that go with it? h to My husband gets sarcastic because I have a few ours ll!" self in the afternoon. I'm 55 and in the early dlvl Of MIVTIIIG '55 no leisure time-no diaper service. M bib!-Imerl. 910- My hlllbl” thinks all women should stay in an apron; I have five succeufd children out in the world and I feel I deserve a littl: free tibiae nova : or all in heart. I say "Amen" to that! I wom'hlrYsvv:hEc::RhasA:I:entit:-duous gears rearing creditable children had certainly earned the right to a little leisure in her middle age. II fact. if it were not for the free time such women have. them W011" be much less charity in the world, for these are the groups that keep church and civic organizations going; they are the leaders ll most fund-railing enterprises. It is the women who do not know how to use this spare time tl good advantage who are the uouble-makers of the world. The neurotid middle-aged. who sit around worrying and fretting over every detail checking on hubby's every move and constantly nagging at growl children for fancied neglect. Your husband has gotten so used to seeing you in an apron all these years that your new role II a little incomprehensible to him. Employ your time usefully and he'll soon be proud of your new ac- complilshments. DEAR MISS DIX: Are all men dishonest and untrue to the one they love? I am very much in love with a man who is constantly, out with other women yet he says he loves me and wants to marry. me. I am six inches taller than be. which is another reason I'm afraid to marry him. I have another friend who cares a lot for me but I don't like lain: because he's irresponsible and careless. I am 15. ODELL ANSWER: Just forget the whole thing. Odell. and settle down 91 a social life. more befitting your fender years. Worfien much. much older than you rack their brains trying to solve the problem of man'l inconsistency. You're too young to be serious about any one lad. Have your dates. have fun; let the question of marriage wait a few her wer pa Prices many cases I MEN'S l 44 Gt. George G IT OPENS TODAY The Greatest Merchandise Upheaval In Charlottetown History Is Now On CUP OF FURY! Yes. seemingly impossible prices sweep two Great Stocks! DAL Sale will .lii-erally stagger the Island . .; You'll see crowds from for and near. That Drain The V: Brand new stocks in many. ess than Half Price. This GREEN- LADlES' I so REENDAUS Youarelavltodtod into ooacetbe lataottaodolsofthe Westing- t g at iatlguator. You'll be dellggtrd wnh 9. u own. I roomy storage space as FIECICI": govered qlllalt-Kagsee; Glau- opped IIWWH Convenient .r NJ luv-Qu ' -gkcpt cafe with VVestingh0use TRUE-TEMP Only the Woods ouso TRUE-TIM? Ref:-lgerztne IIVBI your food t positive protection of constant cold which is necessary for the men emdent pg-Q. aervatlon ofyour fooct 'k 1 Food is the big item In your, bullget todsy.l yven a small pro-j portion of epoiiagol or waste is of serious drain out yovurincome.'l'hat' I why it's so Import- ant to have your; Westinghouse Ret'rlgeratorNOW.l That's why It's a; better Investment? today then ever bafrse.