AUGUST. . 7. 1950 .-..-...-. - ..-.....-.... . ...... ... ....- , P'A'GE FIVE ;t gllomen Work For i The United Nations 0 By Adelaide Kerr ' NEW YORK. Aug. 0-(AP)-- women are working for the Unit- ”.d Nations today on tho fringe of -' battle sones. in political hot spots. in- -jjungtss, deserts and remote mount- "gin hamlets. 3' More than 200 of them are scat- ! tered around the-lloba in Jobs that 'osil for fast thinking, courage. mmine. and diplomatic skill. Some handle tough administrative jobs. some distribute emersency supplies P. in disaster areas. , The U. N. does not send women '. where shells are flying or subject 1 them to undue risk .or danger. But (it does dispatch them to some rug- ffged spots. and their bosses have i high praise for the way they handle , their jobs. 3 Ten women now are working with 7 lltc Korean Cotnmieion in the divis- icn stationed in Tokyo. ” "UNlCEF"(the U. N. arm devoted ' to bettering conditions for children) 7 and the world Health organisation -wwhich tights disease around the t world) have corps of women doo- 5 tors, nurses. and administrators "working in many countries. Patricia Palmer of Toronto. UNI- iclazr public relations director for : Europe. travels constantly in Czech- . oslovakia, Yugoslavia. Austria and 3 Poland. 1 In the jungle area of Brunei in Borneo Ida Simmons of Britain is training midwives - whose child- ? birth superstitions go back thous- 'l ands of years-in modern obstetric- al methods. . f "why are these rugged Jobs given '. to women? "These women got them because they are so capable and highly rs- i.s'pccted," says Maurice Pate. dir- t color of UNICEF. "They were chos- "en in some cases instead of avail- able men." The World Health Organization "has added public health nurses to practically all its.t.eams trayelllng far afield to show people new meth- ' -' ads to bombat tuberculosis, malaria, ivencreal disease. and polio. one 'team working in the Term district iof Northern India was frequently 3 menaced by leopards and tigers that ”pr0Wled out of the Jungle. if-Baptist Preacher, "Associates Arrested ya.- VAL D'0R. Que. Aug. a.(cr)- A Baptist preacher and his three Jssoclaics spent the week-end in Jail at this Northern Quebec min. ing town following their arrest Saturday night While holding a street-corner revival meeting. It could not be learned immed- '- lately on what charges the quartet. 'includlng one woman. were held, but it was believed the charge .WRs disturbing the peace. The four arrested were Rev. L. T. Heron. pastor of Evangel Sap. tist Church. Val d'Or: Deacon Mal. W1"! Llllr. a Windsor. 0nt.. youth: Miss Isobel Heron of Tor- .nnio. a sister of the pastor; and a . Mr. Purcell. who has not been tur- l iher identified. The Group was holding a street- cnrner meeting directly across the road from the home of Mayor Ozn Tetreault when town police ap- peared on the scene and urged Mr. Heron to move his group away. The minister refused. and after 16 minutes urging by police tn. pg. ligious group were taken into cus- tody and lodged in the town jail. Late today they were still in gufliodll. awaiting a hearing for al . Dill AT 108 ' SUSSEX. N'.1!., Aug. 0 - (Cl-lid One of New Brunswlck's oldest residents. Mrs. Eliza Jane Crew. ford, of Hammondvale, died at her home Saturday in her losrd year. She was born at nearby Markham- rille 10 years after Queen Victoria -ascended the throne. Her husband died 44 years ago. snarl-ls. MARIIAGES ' osarl-is 50: Per Insertion g BIITHS M.L...M....L..ML, WAIlDuAt Halifax. Atll. 6. to Mr. and Mrs. James W. Ward, 5 son. Mrs. Ward was formerly ,Miss Lorlnne Walker. of Charlottetown. uaanurnzne - At the P. no I. lvosottsi on August sin. 1050, to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur carruthers of this City. I son. Robert Baker. 6 lbs. 14 one. ., GAY-At the P. E. Island Hospital AU8- 5. 1960. to Mr. and Mrs. Gor- doll Gay. Southport. a son. Gordon Alexander. g 7, nsa-rlls Haavsr-At the P. s:. r. Hospital Alli! lilh. Mrs. Ernest Harvey of Crapaud, aged 40 years. Funeral Monday from her late residence. service starting at 2.30 pm. Inter- ment Crspsud Cemetery. GALLANT-At the Prince County Hospital on August ll. 1050. Wil- liam T. Gallant. aged 41. Trans- ferred from the Compton Funeral Home to his late residence on Duke street from where the funeral will take place on Tues- dly morning at nine oiclpclr to St. Paul's church and cemetery- li.ll. Mactean UNDIBTAIEI ' IDIIAIJIII , ,1 us A u . ....ea,.,t.,.vV,MllM: HK a 0Eil'I'illil. Sillilnlhii 3.'”'u..”l'l.".:.1l. l'.1'".:3..'.'.l...'l".Zl a newsy nature may be lsue:-tea as In cents a word. strictly pay- able in advance. --.................:M.. COOK'S for Photographs. KENT BEAUTY SHOPPE will be closed for holidays from Sept. llih to Sept. 23rd inclusive. DEATH YEIL-At 50 Greenfield Avenue. on Sunday. August 6. Herbert W. Yea in his 61st your. Funeral from the Baptist Church tomorrow (Tues- day). service starting at 2 o'clock. Resting at the MacLean Funeral Home. ENGAGEMENT - Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Kelly announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Helen Smallwood. to Mr. Arthur Mac- Callum. son of Mrs. and the late Mr. Ephraim MacCallum. Sourls. The wedding will take place in early September. TllAl"l-'10 ACCIDENT - A Hun- ter River man received head lacer- ations and his automobile, is 1947 Chrysler. was badly damaged when it upset on the Summerside High- way about 100 yards west of Milton School Saturday night. Two other car occupants escaped uninjured. ISLANDEII WINS SCHOLAR- SHIP-Mrs. Fannie I-liltz. Sea View. has received word that her son. Arnold A. lliltz, has been awarded the scholarship value seven hundred and fifty dollars sponsored by the Spruce Falls Power and Paper Corpomtion Ltd. Montreal. This is the second wear that Arnold has won this schol- arship. Last year the award was one thousand dollars. This is his fourth year at McGill University. VISITING CITY-At present vis- iting Charlottetown are Mr. and Mrs. Nell W. Taylor and grand- son Bartiey, of Windsor. Ont. Mr. Taylor is a native of Charlotte- town. a son of the late Mr. James A. Taylor. He served overseas with the Mth Battalion in the First World War and left there in 1920 for Windsor. where he has been employed with the Ford Mulor Company. As a boy he attended West Kent School. among his classmates being Messrs. R. E. Bell and D. L. Mathieson. STORAGE WING COMPLETED --The ground floor of the new 75-32 feet wing of the Government cold storage plant on Eshsr Street has been completed and testing operations of the freezing equip- ment was made on Saturday. The floor has a capacity of 600.000 lbs. of butter and it will be inspected this week by an official of the Dairy Products Division of the Dominion Department of Agricul- lure. IN STORAGE-At present there is between a million and a half and two million pounds of various products stored in the Government cold storage plant including some 350.000 lbs. frozen herring. Last month the plant took in approxi- mately 8S.000 ' lbs. of perishable products. There are now about 223,000 lbs. of frozen strawberries in storage. Fresh mackerel are now coming into the plant and 1.600 arrived Friday night from Rustlco. There is also a small quantity of fresh halibut and sni- mon which came on the "Eskimo" from Newfoundland. Blueberries are also beginning to arrive for storage at the plant. Persosals Mr. and Mrs. John Darrach and Mrs. Seymour Dsrrach of Clyde River also Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Darrach and son Keith of Char- lottetown spent Sunday in Hunter River the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Maol"adyen and family. Miss E. Jean MacEwen B. Sc. R. N. librarian with Aluminium Lab- oratories Limited Arvida. Quebec. left the Island Saturday to return to her employment after spending two weeks with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Macilwen. Morell P. E. I. Mrs. Earl Lavers returned home Saturday night from Columbus. Ohio, where she attended the 21st International convention of the L. A. to B. of R. T. En route home she visited friends at Niagara Falls, Toronto and Montreal. While in Toronto Mrs. Lavers at- tended the -short. funeral cere- mony of tiho late Hon. W. L. Mac- Kcnzle King at Mount Pleasant Cemetery. Polar ice Cap Relreaiing? manure. Aug. e - (OP) - The Toronto Daily Star said Sat- urday in an Ottawa dispatch that a. 1.000-loot tube of aluminum be- ing sunk into the ice on Canada: Baffin island by a semi-Dlillaf-9 Arctic expedition "may provide a post to Canada's future in the Arctic." The two-inch tube was part of r;e:,ff-ly 20 tons of supplies takers to in Island. some 1.400 mil!" north of here. by In expedition handed by col. D. P. Baird of the Arctic Institute of North America. m&:V':fll.lO.;'lyl- of the tube would confirm reports that the polar ice cap is retreating. causing increas- ingly warlner weather in the Arc- tic. The expedition was sent. out after receipt of posting informa- tion Nllrdlng weather and ice conditions in the north, the paper says. llnaws Fail-sou -run mcutaucro. N. 3., AuK- 0- 4cP)-Cecil E. Finley was senten- ced Saturday to two years in penitentiary after conviction on an or-son charge. The trial in the Kane County court followed the burning of a truck. owned by Eli Ruch. while it was under Finley: WIN a- ..,m.--..- i-., , ii0ll'l'.”!g.i.ll8l0lt H Continued from page 1 North Atlantic countries and prob- ably wlll give the Government nrst-hand information on the in- ternstional situation as seen from Europe. AQI Program Canada's program for arms pro- duction probably will be shaped following .a meeting here Tuesday ' with American arms experts. It is known that the Govern- ment has ready a blueprint for reviving the wartime ,Munitlons and Supply Department which di- rected producilon and purchasing of equipment for the forces .dur- ing the Second World War. It is not expected there will be any immediate return to wartime controls and mobilization unless the international picture darkens considerably. The international situation and trouble on the labor front have led to predictions that Mr. .St. Laurent will reshunle his Cabinet without delay to fill the vacancy caused by Mr. Mitchell's death. MARINES. ARMY Continued from base 1 Sunday. But 5 counter-attack by elements of the 1st and 2nd Battal- ions regalned the ground. The Reds made other river cross- ings of the Nuktong line and forced one regiment of the 24th Division to withdraw. but a counter-attack "contained" the enemy. the Eighth Army said. In the south. as a prelude to Monday's action, Marine artillery roared into action Sunday in the Chinju area. The actual front is less than 35 miles from Pusan. Steaming boldly ,up the west coast of Korea Saturday, Brill:-h cruisers pounded lnchon. the port of Seoul, in a devastating two- hour bombardment. Warships In Action They struck oil installations. fac- tories. warehouses. gun emplace- ments. a railway station and an electric plant. American mat-inc pilots support- ed the British warships with co- ordinated air strikes on Inchon's tank assembly plant. A camou- flaged oil tanker was blasted into flames. The attack marked the heaviest British naval action thus far in the Korean war. It was designed lo neutralize lnchon as a staging area for Communist troop rein- forcements along the west coast. Along the front. MacArthur's headquarters sold, the North Ko- reans probed on the south. ai- tcmpied to cut vital communicat- ion lines along the central west- cm front. and threw "heavy pressure" on South Korean troops along the northern rim. Beds Using Boys - lnteiligence reports said the Reds have resorted to using 12- year-old boys to carry arms and ammunition to the front. Child- ren also were being used as de- coys. One captured lad said he was one of hundreds whom Lhe Reds moved along hillsides equip- ped with dummy guns to make American and South Korean troops believe they were being flanked by heavy forces. The South Korean lat Division. holding high ground on a ridge east of an unidentified stretch of the Naktong River on the north- ern front. allowed two Red bat- ialions totalling possibly 1.800 men to walk "into a trap. The Reds crossed the stream and marched into deadly cross-nre from the South Koreans. Front dispatches said the invader! were "annihilated." This was north of Wacgwon. which is 12 miles northwest of Taegu. MacArthur also noted that en- emy pressure south of Commun- ist-held Andong was "heavy." More attacks along this front could be expected. Andong is 50 miles north of Tacgu. At the extreme northeast anch- or of the line. bitter lighting raged at Yongdolr. on the coast 90 miles north of Pusan. The South Koreans. carrying the brunt of the ground lighting in this sector. have the powerful support of British and American warships which are pounding Red positions with shellilre. Battle lines at Yongdok were unchanged early Monday. MacArthur said. A second U.S. aircraft carrier cf the 27,000-ion Essex class join- ed the growing seventh flcet off Korea in its first combat operat- ion. From its flight deck roared a steady stream of fighters and light bombers flying in close sup- port, of ground troops. Women Weather Forecasters '10ltON'lfO. Aul- 5 -- (OP) - Women weather forecasters are calling the shots in some parts of Canada this summer. . Mrs. Gloria lllenton. til. former- ly of London. out. has taken over holiday foreoastirrttg duties at Mal- ton. is miles no west of Toronto. and Lillian Dunn of ldnsonton is assigned to the weather Bureau in her hometown. Until recently. Armalda Ann Mc- cullooh of Vancouver. a science graduata of University of n-itlsh Columbia was forecasting at Mone- ton, NJ. Now she has resigned to get married. Mrs. lllenton found" a way to combine marriage and 'a career. Her husband, Harold Ellenton, is on the staff of the same Weather Bureau at Maltsln. P. D. Metaggsrt-Oowan. head of the Canadian Meteorological Div- lsionis Forecasts Service. said the women are considered under field training during tor leaving university wt MA. degrees: After that. they're on their own. , He said women forsosstrs were run GUARDIAN. cuaatxrrrarown t,.,,,, , ....... - ARRESTED BY 1''. 3.1.-Miriam Moskowitz (above). 34-year-old New York businesswoman. has been indicted by a federal grand jury and arrested by F. B. I. agents for attempting to cover up for Harry Gold. confessed Soviet atom spy. Also taken in was Miss Mos- kowltz's business associate. Abra- ham Brothman. Expect Royal Baby To Get Hand-Me-Downs By Edward Curtis LONDON. Aug. 8 - (AP)-Prim cess Elizabeth and Prince Philip are finding that a second royal baby comes a little less expensive- ly. They are waiting for the arrival about next week-end of a sister or brother to 20-month-old Prince Charles. The new prince or princess will succeed to young Prince Charles' hand-me-downs - his outgrown baby clothes and discarded toys. Like many another young married couple. Prince Philip and Princess Elizabeth have saved them all. The best. unofficial guesses put the arrival of the new baby-third in line behind Princess Elizabeth and Prince Charles for the throne --between next Thursday and the following Tuesday. Court circles are picking the middle dates--ncxi Saturday or Sunday. While Charles was born in Buckingham Palace. the Princess expecta'to have the new baby at the lath century Clarence House. A few minutes walk from Buck- ingham Palace. Clarence House has been modernized as the home of Elizabeth and Philip. Queen Mother Mary and Prin- cess Margaret have been making some clothes for the new baby. But little or nothing new actually will be needed. Charles' peramulator. Queen Eliza- beth first bought it for Princess Elizaibcth. Then it was used for Margaret. Before Chat-les' birth it was overhauield and painted. lils old crib also will be taken over by his new brother or sister. Sir William Gllllatt again will attend Princess Elllzabcth. He will be assisted by the royal family doctor. sir John Weir. There has been some talk the young couple hopes for 9. girl this time. Philip is supposed to have told friends he thinks a sister would be good for Charles. Philip returned home from Malta about 10 days ago on a month's leave from the Royal Navy. His arrival home coincided with his promotion from Lieutenant to Lieutenant-Commander. Naiionaiisis Raid Red Shipping TAIPEI. Formosa. Aug. 0 --(CP) .. Destruction of so big iunks and more than too smaller ones in raids on Communist shipping near Quemoy Island was announced to- night by the Chinese Nationalist Air Force. It said the attacks, carried out all day Sunday in fine weather. were directed against 800 Red ves- sels assembled near Quemoy. s. Nationalist outpost island Just Off the Communist mainland. Both bombers and fighters with rockets participated. all returning safely despite anti-aircraft fire. the communique said. The attacks presumably are con- sidered by the United States to fall within a defensive 1 cry. chug escaping President Truman's ban on Nationalist action against the Communist mainland. The Nationalists say Quesnoy is immincntly threatened with Red invasion. Department-Store Salas .O'l'!'AWA. Aug. 3 - (OP)--The buying public kept a tight grip on its pocket-book in the first half of this year. pulling department-store sales down t4.000.000o below the 001'- respondlng 1940 figure. The Bureau of Statistics today re- ported sales in the January-to-June period at e:i'rl.7r1.oo0. compared with 8802.200.000 in 1040. Quebec and Alberta were the only Provinces registering gains in the half year. Quebec department-store sales totalled 361145.000 compared with 561530.000; Alberta sales were o?'.N0.000 compared with :2l4.,'lu,- Ssles in other provinces follow with 1040 figures in brackets: Mari- lfme provinces. 327580.000 (020208.- coo); Ontario. al4.l.400.000 (0144,- somoo); Manitoba, 008,000,000) (O65.M8.000); Saskatchewan. (Oil.- l7S,00i) (SlP.504.000): British Colum- bia. M8.20d.000 iM6.30fi.000.) employed in Great Britain during the second World War "with vary- ing success." Canada's only war- time woman forecaster. Mrs, c.H. Sutherland. worked successfully at Moncton and new is married to a member of the' Weather Bureau staff at Gander, Nfid. N. The new baby also will inherit: Birch liill Sabbath School . Rally Anti Picnic On the evenln til I 1 Hill Sabbath Ecgoolu laid in the church. A large aunt. I Ir of parents and interested .:::'::i.'.';:":'.:” ".2 is W"- a war a bynixhe school. n' one 9 Minilier. Rev. J. H. Bishop :'::"l99d the parents. emphasizing , 1' responsibility for the relig. lous education of the children en. trusted to their care. In his ad. grad to the children and teacher. e stressed the importance of their work. A demonstration of the work was carried out. each pupil per- mfminl 1115 Part in a very com- mendable manner. Star certiflc. ates were presented to May Jenk. i"-'- Nmil Myers. Colin Myers. I-Cm! Myers. George Bruce. Har- Vev Bruce. Hazel Myers. Velma Myers. Lloyd Bruce, Douglas Rob. er!-Ion. Norms Robertson and San- dm Macbesn. Prizes were presented as fol. ws. Perfect attendance: Harvey 311109. Lloyd Bruce. Perfection in memory work: May Jenkins, Alma Myers, Colin My- ers. Leith yers, George Bruce. Harvey Bruc .l-lazel Myers, Velma Myers. Lloyd Bruce, Douglas Rob- ertson. Norma Robertson and San- dra MscLesn. Satisfactory progress: Shirley Myers. Barrie Rankin. Eleanor Ferguson. Bertha Ferguson. Evelyn Myers. Jennie Myers, Warren My- era, Wanda Myers, Leonard My- ers. Laura MacDonald. and Marie Myers. The meeting closed with the Benediction by the minister. On the following Thursday aft- ernoon, July 13th, over seventy people, old and young, gathered at Waterside shore for the Sabbath School picnic. The youngsters had a happy time playing games and racing. Following are the results of the races: Under 6-1. Alfred MscLeari: 2. Judy Myers. 0-S-1. Norma Robertson: 2. Lloyd Bruce: 3. Sandra MacLean. 0-12--1. Douglas Robertson; 2. Harvey Bruce: 3. Marie Myers. l.'i-15-1. John MacDonald: 2. Jennie MacDonald: 3. Sidney My- ers. Over 15-1. Colin Myers: 2. George Myers and Leith Myers. equal. Married Men-l. Irwin Jenkins; 2. Alvin Myers; 3. Albert Bruce. Wheelbarrow Race-i. John Mac- Donald snd George Bruce: 2. Sid Myers and Arnold MacNeill; 3. Lloyd Bruce and Douglas Robert- son. . . Piggie Back Race--l. John Mac- Donald and Sidney Myers: 2. Her- vey and George Bruce: 3. Inglis Macliiachern and Douglas Robert- son. One-Legged Race-- 1. Sidney Myers; 2. John MacDonald; 3. Douglas Robertson. One-Legged Race. married men -1. Irwin Jenkins: 2. Alvin My- ers: 3. Albert Bruce. Piggie Back Race, married men -1. Irwin Jenkins and Inglis Mac- Eachern; 2. Albert Bruce and Warren Myers; 3. Alvin Myers and Lloyd Bruce. A delicious supper topped pby ice cream donated by the Lsdles' Auxiliary was enjoyed by all. Mr. John Rankin led in the singing and an enjoyable Dicnlii was brought to a close. iiicr Melncrial Presbyterian church Annual Picnic The Annual Sunday School pic- nic of Keir Memorial Presby- terian Church was held Wednes- day afternoon, July 20th at Keir Camp French River. A very enjoy- able time was had by all. Swim- ming. racing and Jumping was un- der the supervision of Rev. .1.a. Maoaowan and the superintendent of Sunday School. After the sports a lunch was served by the ladies of the congregation. A vote of thanks was extended to Mrs. Prank Mac- Nutt. Mrs. Sydney Macciougau, for the use of their cars, also to Mr. L. D. MacNutt who loaned his truck for the occasion. Results of the races Boys and girls 4 to 6 years, Neil Macclowan ist. Sylvia Macoowan 2nd. Freddie seairsto 3rd. Garth Macoowan and Isabel MaeNutt tied for 4th. Girls 6 to 9. Georgia Craig ist.. Mary Matthews 2nd. Boys 0 years Dale Pickering lst. Nell Macoowan, 2nd., Percy Mac- Gougan, srd. Girls lo years, Marlena Pickering ist. Georgie Craig and. Boys to to in years. Neil Mat- thews ist.. Ronald Chisholm 2nd., Preston leairsto lrd. i Girls 12 years and over Janet ldacxtnnon ist. Mary Macliuzt and.. Audrey .Sealrsto ard. Girls 14 years and over Janet Macltlnnon ist.. Audrey leairsto, and. Francis Macxlnnon ard. Boys, 10 years. Neil Matthews ist., gtailph Craig 2nd. Clifford leairsto r . , Boys and Girls is years and over. Janet Maoklnnon ist. Mary MacNutt Ind, Audrey Sealraio ard. Boys Sack Race, Preston Beairsto lat. Neil Matthews and. Ralph Craig 3rd. Girls Sack Race. Mary Matthews ist. Georgie Craig 2nd. Betty Gal- lant 3rd. Wheel Darrow ce. Ronald Chisholm and Preston neairsto ist. Ralph and Darrell Dick- isscn and. Neil Matthews and Clif- fml Beairsto Std. Russia Cooking lip Deal With Reds in grins? ly JAMIE! 1!. WHITE (Annotated Press News Analyst) Persistent but unconfirmed re. ports that Russia's Vice-Premier. Molotov is in Chin; cooking up no deal with the Chinese Reds un. derlines the suspicion that in nus.- sls.'s mind the big problem. now is China - not Korea. Korea is small, relatively con- trollable, and apparently expend- able. Russian readiness to plunge the little country into a war that It'll! set it back decades attests to h is. But China is huge and less eas- ily controlled. Russia's need to control China appears to be strong enough to make the Korean risk worth while in the Russian mind. The manoeuvring at Lake Suc- cess lsst week produced no change in the basic position ... that ad- mission of Red china to the Un- ited Nations is still the Soviet price for settling the Korean question, The reason, one must assume, is that Russia's own self-interest. is involved. what makes Chins seem so essential to Russia? It is her uncontrollability. her vast spread across the map. her teeming population and its pitiabie living standard, and the logical consequence to Russia if China is not controlled and kept in the Red orbit. That consequence is Tltoism - on a scale that must be unthink- able to Moscow. Tltoism in China could shatter the vital illusion of Communist world unity and wreck the chances for Comm-unist success in its most promising field -- Asia. The, reason begins in China's hungry, threadbare people, whose unrest cannot be stilled except through a higher living standard. This is unattain- able until China industrialises and modernizes her agriculture. That cannot be done without outside help. Could Russia supply the needed help? Some, yes, but not enough. nor fast enough. But Russia could and did undertake to replace econ- omic aid with political help. and this took the form of plugging for Red China's admission to the Un- itcd Nations. To the Chinese Rods this was important beyond com- mon Western understanding be- cause the prestige U. N. member- ship would bring to the Reds would so a long way toward en- abling the Peiping Government to stay on top in china. staying on top is a real problem to the Reds. because sooner or is- ter more and more Chinese are go- ing to start asking. when do We eat, and when do we get clothes to wear and tools to work with? Jop Creeks Own Swimming Records roxyo, Aug. 7 - (Monday) - (AP) - Japan's Hlronoshin Pur- uhashl cracked three of his own world swimming records and twice heat Australian John Marshall of Yale in a three-day U.S.-Japan swim which the United States team won 46-17. Furuhashi won the 800-metre free-style race in Sunday nishf-'5 wind-up in 9242.0, knocking nelfiy three seconds off his own world mark for the distance. Marshall finished third, four yards behind Furuhashl and one behind Ameri- can Ford Konno of Hawaii. The Japanese ace -won the 400- metre free-style Saturday in 4233.2. or 1.4 seconds better than his own accepted world mark. . Puruhashl captured the 200- metre free-style sprint Friday in 12:00.2. two-tenths of a second bet- ter than the world mark he 563 Ii Lns Angeles last year. Furuhashi did not compete in the 1.500-metre free-style race Pri- day. but Marshall did -- and came in second to Kenna. who won the event, in f8:4'l.3. Furuhashi covered the distance in 13:29.9 at 10! An!- eles last year, a. mark up for con- sideration as a world's record. The listed mark is 19:01.0 set by 1"- Amano of Japan in 1938. cumaxad with is record-breaklnil performance by the American 800- metro relay team Sunday night. The American team victory was , The us. time of i'l:42.8 ,bettered . liaslali Delegates To Rebekah Assenlliy Alpha Rebekah Lodge No. ;0. I. O. 0. 1.. held its regular meet- ing on Tuesday evening, August 1st. with the newly elected Noble Grand Myrtle White prsiding. Mrs. Helen Turner. Junior Past. Ndale Grand and Mrs. 1'-Tances MaoPherson. Past Noble Grand WON Ipbolntld delegates to at- tend the sessions of the Rebekah Assembly to be held in 'n-ulo, NE. on August 9th. 10th. arai filth. Other delegates to represent Alpha Rebdtah Lodge are as follows. Mrs. Ruby I-louie. i Past President Rebekah Assembly; Mrs. Jean Crockett. Marshall Rebekah As- sembly: Mrs. Pearle MacKay. Past Noble Grand; Mrs. Sadie sentner. Past Noble Grand; Miss Ethel Sutherland. Past Noble Grand: Mrs. Helen Maclhchern. 'Past Noble Grand: Mrs. Catherine Smith. Past Noble Grand: Mrs. Lauretta White, Past Noble cirand; Mrs. Adelaide Moore. Past Noble Grind: Miss Myrtle White. Noble Grand: Mrs. Lilla Watson and Miss Minnie Macxsy: Mrs. Mar- iorie Cameron, Past Noble Grand. Beals Wife Wiih Hammer. Then Tailes Ownlife TORONTO, Aug. 6-(CP)-Wil- fred Kingsley beat his wife into unconsciousness with a hammer, then hanged himself Saturday from the frame of a bedroom door. walked 200 yards to a neighbor's home and said: "Mummy and daddy are dead." Kingsley. a 40-year-old market gardener in suburban Etobicoke, left notes for his wife and child- ren. Police said the little girl told them: "Mummy was stirring xpo. tstoes on the stove. Daddy pushed her down. He had a hammer and he pounded her head. Mummy started to cry." There are nve children in the family. Only Dawn, the youngest, was at home. There was no ex- ipdianation of the beating and rule- 8. Woman Editor Fine For Slapping Chief TAMPA. F1311 Aug. 6 - (AP) - A Judge slapped I. 315 fine on a woman editor for slapping a police chief. Mrs. Sadie Weidra, editor of the Gulfport Tribune, drew the fine- saturday in Magistrate Joe 1'. carpenters oourt. she wasn't there. but her lawyer pleaded no defence to a charge of assault. The trouble between Mrs. Weid- ra and Perry Weiss, acting Gulf- port police chief at that time, started over a gold-plated police chief's badge. Mrs. Weidrs. wrote that Weiss had the badge gold-plated at city expense. Weiss visited Mrs. weld- ra, said the story wasn't so and demanded a retraction. He said the Rev. G. F. Kingston. Primate of All Canada today or- dained his "son. Rev. F. Temple Kingston. to the priesthood of Al. Saint's Cathedral here. man was delivered by Rev. C. A. Bis; Aboard " Swedish freighter Al Sailiiilln .2 SAINT JOHN. 30.!-. Aug. C - (CP) - Jrireman battled a boiler room blaze aboard the freighter Mirafjord here Saturday night as crew members wondered if the 5,502-ton ship wasn't jinx-s ed. The fire was the third mishap aboard in two weeks. Swedish Westbound 50 miles off St. John's Nfld.. an oil feed broke and the vessel was towed to the Newfound- land port. Then on route to Saint John the chief Perl. 3!. died instantly when a. . boiler room near him. His body was brought ashore when the freighter arrived here Tuesday. engineer. Hans condenser exploded The fire brought all units of the Saint John Fire Department to the East Long Wharf. where the Mira- fjord was tied up. The boiler room and midships were heavily dam- aged before the bisze was controll- ed after a three-hour battle. For a time it was feared that 400 tons of bunker fuel aboard might explode. The ship's main hold was empty at the time. ready to receive lum-- her cargo. The 31-year-old Mira- fjord is registered at Gotenburg. Sweden, and was built at San- pedro, Cal. Anglican Primate Oreiolns Son 6-(CP)--Most Anglicnr HALIFAX. Aug. The scr- Hu wife. Helen, 35' h In cm. Simpson, sub-deacon of the New in! condition in hospnal. iogk General Theological Scmtn Kinlfaiefs four-year-"old ' daugh- ' tcr. Dawn. saw the beating and SYDNEL Aug. 1 ,., (Reuters)... An aerial "fodder lift" began to- day to bring food to 2.000.000 starv- ing sheep in the 24,000 square miles of flooded country of northwest- em New South Wales. ON! MINUTE NEWS 5; scour f loans-srauvn.Ltr. ', ac: i.ii8E8 rlcllr. Acllllsr llousillc Since man first built his most humble shelter. old age and fire have constantly con- spired to destroy every home he constructed. But today. these vsaboteurs meet a formidable resistance where exterior walls are built of Johns-Manvllle Ced- ' argrains. J-M Cedar-grains are asbestos siding shingles; not one has ever burned - not one has worn out! They have a rich grained appearance and are, available in five attractive colours. They 'prove equal- ly economical in construction of new homes or remodelling. For further details on J-M Cedargrains, write for free booklet to Johns-Manvllle, Sun Life Bldg., Montreal. or see your nearest J-M dealer. badge had been given him by ' I. former acting chief of police. ! Words got hotter and Weiss. claimed Mrs. weidrs slapped his! face twice. . ...M..........M.............M. Knew Your Were Coming I'd Have Baked A Cake.” ' : They didn't. Nor did they play --no M.F. Scllsrlaan co. ltd. Building Material Kenslngton - Sui-nmsrslda - Charlottetown Oil. Build Your Own Ilorne Lona Term Loan I Local Agent - Eastern Trus NATIONAL HOUSING ACT. MORTGAGE mass with a Loan under THE NATIONAL HOUSING ACT -Also- Loans for Commercial Conltructlosa MORTON DEW Low Interest Rates t Bldg. - Charlottetown the world mark by 3.2 lhreefishermen Reported Missing NDCPUAC. N. 13.. Aug. 0-(OP)- Three fishermen from this Nort.t- umberisnd County community at the mouth of Miramlchl Bay were missing tonight. Euhie Forbes, Alcille Breau and Napoleon Sonier had been due bank at Noguac Saturday morning after setting out Friday afternoon in an open, 40-foot boat to "drift" for salmon. They had taken only en- ough food for a lunch. At the request. of R. C. M. P. of- ficials. an R. C. A. 1". Lancaster ar- rived tonight from Greenwood. N. 8.. in search the area. The hunt will continue at dawn. choppy seas pre- vented small craft from venturing out tcday. Rain fell Saturday and a fairly strong wind has prevailed. it was considered likely that the cngln of the missin vessel had failed. The craft carried a small sail -only large enough to keep her in- to the wind drifting for salmon and towing a net. IIARDLY APPBOPRI ATE LONDON. Aug. it - (Reuters)- The last notes of the general salute had ust died away and the Field Mars al”s inspection Ibcgun when some unscheduled music began. Field Marshal Lord Wilson was inspecting anzny cadets at a camp near sundariand when an officer dashed from his party and to the rear of some nearby huts. . A hand there was playing "if 1 We give you fir I am instructed by Lieut. public auction the following:- chairs (walnut), 1 mahogany high boy. 1 whatnot, 2 rugs. chair (fumed. oak), 1 couch 1 occasional chair, 1 small malt hat boxes. 2 over night cases. 3 silver pic re frames, j STEAM BOILERS REPAIRED Acetylene Welding - Bicycles Repaired Steam Valves Reseated and Packed Pipe Fitting - General Repairs CALL OR PHONE 2117-J WESTON W. GARMOIIY & Still 296 Fitzroy Street . -.7 AUCTION SALE OF HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE AND EFFECTS p . 16 BRIGHTON ROAD. FRIDAY. AUGUST 11th AT 2 P. M. 1 combination electric stove tabaret, 1 book shelf, 1 Windsor chair, double bed and spring (walnut). 1 sett ogany table. 1 flower stand, 2 sticks. 1 silver candelabra. silver tea silver sauce boat. 1 silver cake has 1 brass kettle and stand, 2 silver trays (roun and square), 1 flat bottom punt. . W. H. 4 st class work Col. J. R. Paton to sell by, (McClarey). 6 dining room chair. 1 swing mirror. 1 1 rosewood library table, 1 1 bridge lamp, 1 . , 1 rocker. 1 arm buffet, 1 table, 4 chairs, 1 2 trunks. 2 silver candle t, sugar and cream, 1 et, 1 silver pie server.