MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN -T. and to scorn injury and pain. Habit teaches us to bear labour ,7 5, Carrier: Char' in P.E.l. 58.00. Other Provinces II. Silmmenide 315.00 per unnrun. llsowhers Ind U.S.iL 312.00 per annnnu Read by E Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JULY VB 20, 1953 16 PAGES By far the most dangerous foe mm i MAXI MS OFA MERE MAN have to fight is apathy. The Guardian, Fin Cents Morning Daily Founded llI1. KOREAN TRUCE TALKS TERMED iilVl0ST ENCOURAGING” ihiiltov Rey Figure In Battle For Soviet Bower Aeriol.SeurchwFor Missing Aircraft xFtRTH BAY. Ont. tCPl-An '-it-l Muritnrig Illl'Cl'flit wen: A rig Ss!urda:.' from a flight of on the tiny from this base to FiiIr.:'y after Opcrnlioit 'l'nilwind. .i tlcfriricc exercise Ari ricrini search i t ill 'k mung coiiccritrntcri on the Sud- Illif'il. Coming Events "lt1i..1 Picnic. Wcdricsrla: July '.”.ti - ” 'r'invl il:vcr lllIill:". ii".ics(l.'iy, Altl"- 2lsi. t'ltol'ru i-lay Tea. ll”:-driesday. '.ilv 22nd. '-rt. 'l.PiQSCt'S Pifillii". Wednesday A'.i:us'. 5th. l).'l'l Fiat Rizcr llil Thurs- til . .lii'.y ,.rrd "i)aht:e Siirrirricrirlic Fr-liool vvery Tuesday "Dance in l.rtt'.r- Pond Hall. Mo:id.1v, July 20'h. "lfope River Picnic. J'.t'.y 22nd. Li.tlllt'S and Mcnls "Dance South itch: st-t.oo'. "tr d . Wedriesday. Jilly ” ”Corra:i Ban P ic. Wednesday alt 22nd Dance afterwards. "Come 'n the icc crcnm festival 'i films. ill Coi'itunll. July Ztlth. i -1 uw ,3. I 's'u'.v. l l t :jHigh Commissioner for Great Britain Arrives In City l t See I-'o:" Auzus is play in St t it:t:'c.'ir'ct's ll:t.l. 'l'rrcsd.1y. July 21 ' Riimv Morcil flail. Ttrcsday Ztl ; 'l.nvr-rs in a Wom:tri's Life." Don't ill.SS ll. "l".cscrw Scptciiilicr Jlnri to nth. Vlittrloltctoivrt liospital lTt7.arri'. "Regular liniirc. Borisharv inn. l'resds.v night Charlottexoiiians tlrx-liestra. "Rain riaitrc ii? Cliff Peters" ll'P(l2lPSfli1)'. July. 23. following Rollo l Bax" ten partv y ”T” thirrrrg his firsrt visit to thisl "Inna Hall. dzinctriz cvcry ll'ed- . f -. . y . t inc Om O”h"5lm' Great Britain to Canada, had an ' 'tunitv over the week-end of "Reserie ii cdiicstiriy. August "Film ' "vii. Chlrkcn suppti and Bazaar. "ling Island "om" Hshmm .A L-mmh Rustlco Ha” guest of Hon. T. W. L. Prowse, ggggg Lieutenant. Governor. and Mrs. tD:incc MacNeill's tt.'ll'CllOll5P. Prollsej . liensirigton. cancelled this iicek. a "hum "nm Next Tt.iesday as usual. "Fcnricris iczular barn dance F.:ackley Bcncli Tircsd.-iy night. Rt-s' of music Bus lcaviiiz IM.T. it .10. . "ice Cr'c.".m Festival on Ker. 5":ton Call: it" Church grotinds. mines. il'i'.i5lt'. lunrhcs July 22nd. 7 it m. "Progi'r5s:ve Conservatives of Row Haven Poll will meet Tuesday. 3 V Ni. Jilly Bl, :tt Funny-(1 Dgr. itich'.s. "Barn dance W. l. ('ole.s'. lltltnn. llcrlnosdw), .ltil,r '.-'2nrl. Wish" bv Dnirnn Rios. tinntccri setwit-4-, "All unpaid lflkrt-:tliif' linu- tnln St'll()0l nut pnitl liy Augugt ..tlt will he llililtllltl in for col- '"i'll”"- ll: order of trustees. "Don't mm. the rnngrngn. lionnl tr-n llI'ltl on West Cove- iionri church grounds, u'etlnr-s- :l".l'. July 22. Slipper served from 3 om. i"Due to il1F anticipated demand for strawberries Mondaw July 20th. 'l'lPri! will he no further picking in fire Hoivntt berry fields until Fri- (lF.l'. July 24th. ' "Showing at Mount Stewart July zlst. ”The Atomic City" starring Gene Barry. Lydia Clarke. and Michael Moore. The year's big sus- Dense blast. ' "Don't miss the weekly dance Ili Morell Hall tonight. Music hy ihsr-lie Munro and his orchestra. Dancing 9.30 till 100. Sponsored in Morell CY.('7. "Master Feeds-Ariot.hcr riving Arthur A. Campbell. River-also grinding and service. Feeders who keep use Master. car ar- French mixing records "Unloading car hulk wheat at W!” mill, Summersldc, Monday Ind Tuesday, July 20th. 21st. V1-75 per cwt. Bring bags. P. L. MWTIR. feed service mill. "Dance MacNcill'a ivarcliouse. Remington. cancelled this week due to circus coming. Next week Tuesday night as iisiral. Blue Igvu: Ramblers onhesu-g. the weekly Rotary luncheon at The (tharlottetowii today. Accompany- ing the dtslinguislicrl couple on their autonioblle toitr of Ensternl Canada is Mr. K. East, privaici secretary to the High Commission-l, er. 1 l Army (larrerlst t l Entering the armed services in, jlillt, Sir Archibald rose from the rank of private to that of lieuten- llllli-2Ci1El'ill. During the Frrst.' lworld War, he had the distriictioii fut hcing conirnissioned in his ownl icgrrricnt in the field. remaining .ns air officer and winning the Mil-1 iitary Cross. Following the war. hel lcievoted particular attention to: lthe technique of ground and air" ;to-operation in the services. In I928 he took up law imd wits callcdl r10 the Bar in 1932 rind became a lnicnibc of he Inncr Temple. His lflllltll inzci-est, imucvcr. rcniaincdl l'in the army. By 1940 he had be-I -come the director of staff duties .m. the War Office and the follow-l l I ling year. at the age of 45, he was :ilrlDnll'1if'i'i vice-chicf of the imper- 'ial General Staff. ) Shortly afterwards he was ap- pointed to the rnrik of 'l..ieuten- ant-genernl. Following the Second World War. he first held the posit-y ion of Governor of Madras and; ylatcr was Britain's High Cornmir.s- 'ir.ner to the. new Republic oi India. oov.7o.EZF&i"vvii' Be Special Speaker ANTIGONISH. N S tCP)-St. Francis Xavier University an- nounced sunday that Governor- General the main centennial 2. Several prominent. Canadians and Americans will receive hon- orary degrees. the announcement said. but their names were not given. Vincent Massey will be speaker at a special convocation here Sept. STILL MISSING ANNAPOLIS ROYAL. NS, (GP) -Police directed search of a 14- mlle stretch of the Annapolis river over the week-end but found no trace of Percy Gordon nr-ant. Nic- taux, N. 8., truck driver missing Train No. 39, the morning train to Borden. was derailed at Milton on Saturday momlng. causing the passengers. none of whom were in- jured, to be driven to the boat by bits. Railway freight trucks took the baggage and express. . The runoff occurred at the east end of the passing track. about one-quarter of a mile from Milton Station. The train consisted oi two Diesels, s. box-baggage car, a bag- gage car and four coaches. Only the engines remained on the track. it. is fortunate that the accident occurred where the right of way was not built up such as on the big dump a little nearer Charlotte- town. otherwise moreserious dam- age might have resulted. A wrecking train from Charlotte- town with Mr. Wilfred Livingston as foreman had all the cars back on the track at 510 p.m. and the track was passable a half hour later. Other trains were routed through the passing track so that no delay to trains other than the one involved was necessary. scoiiiloihii" For Jamboree SOUTH MARCH. Ont. tCPi- Thousands of young men with bronzcd bare.knees covered Cori- nauxht Ranges near Ottawa today. Exactly 2.412 Boy Scouts from he nnd Lady Nye cmoyedtciieiy province in Canada. the Un- ited States. Cuba, Italy and Au5. He Wm be me Km,” speaker at tralia gathered here Saturday for a week oi outdoor fun at the se- cond Ccuiadian Boy Scout Jam- borer. The boys--nil Qut:ii's and fat. class scouts between the ages of 14 and till-got the janiboree off to a good start Sunday with church services. The big meet will be. officially opened today by Gov- crnor-Gerieral Vincent Canada's No. l scouter. Provincial scout includes: Quebec 84. wick 170. Nova Scotia 151. Prince Edward Island 45, and Newfound- land 76. and three boys from Hap- py Valley. a community in Labra- or. Unsung heroes of the Jamboree are 197 scouters from across Can- ada who are attending the jam- boree on their own time and ex- pense. Close They are canteen workers. inform- ation workers and wives of scoirt- masters. Helped in Butler Detection OTTAWA tCPl-A new form of chemical analysis. developed in the federal health desrtment labora- tories, helped in the detection of large quantities oi adultersted butter in Montreal. federal auth- orities sald Saturday. The seized butter. reported to run into "hundreds of thousands" of pounds. is alleged to have been adultersted with vegetable oils. Charges are to be pressed against several Montreal firms involved. Duke Eiiin WII-on Polo Mount Slips AMBERSHAM. Eng. (Reuters)- The Duke of Edinburgh felt when his horse slipped during a polo match Sunday but. was able con- tlnue the game. The Queen was not present. The crowd applauded as the Duke remountsd. The Duke, who has scored sev- eral goals this season. was playing for Cowdray Park. His team won since last Tuesday, g on only 6-1. victory, ; to 60 women are present; l Train Derailment At Milton ' Iililb air l?aTH?BliLi:iAi& Paper Company . BATHURST. N. B.. tCPl -- Fire- men late Sunday were still play- ing three lines of hose on a huge pile of paper clippings ignited Sat- urday near the big Bs.thurstPower and Paper Co. Ltd.. mill. it is be- lieved the clippings. used with new pulp to make kraft board. were ignited by a spark from a com- pany locomotive. The pile. valued at 360.000, burst int.o roaring frame which threaten- ed another pilc nearby and a pile of pulpwood a quarter of a mile is Popular Army Head LONDON tReut,ersi-Second World War hero Marshal Georgi K. Khiiknv is a key figure in the no-quarter battle for power in the Kremlin. Zhukov, the son of a peasant, Shark Harpooned Dff Louisbourgli LOUISBOURGH, N 3. tCPl--i Maybe it's the Rammer and may-' be it isn't. l That's uhal l.ouisbonr'gh fisher-l men said Sunday night after Les-l ter Fleet harpooned a 600-pound. shark off I-lavenside. inside Louis-j bourgh harbor on Cape Breton'si east, coast The Raminer. identified by Fish- eries Researcher Dr. A. W. Needler of St. Andrcvts, N B. '4 BB once was called the ”Russran .' :- enhciwer", and it is possible hel yet may emulate his U. S. counter-I part and become his country's. leader. y With the secret police out oi fav- or because ot the downfall of Lav-I renti Berle, the Russian army the one strong unified force out-I side the Communist party. in any! further split between the politic.-ill loaders. there is a good chance the army would take over. And at the head of the massive Soviet army is Zhukov, 57. one of the handsomest and most popular? men in Russia. Zhukov, a first deputy defrncrt minister, was also one o the rrmy leaders chosen last wee by Pre- mier Georgi Malenkov to denounce the "Berta men" and the "Berta heresies". By the end of the war. Zhukov. whose troops saved Moscow and stormed into Warsaw and Berlin, was second only to Stalin in popu- larlty. Stalin did not like rivals sent Zhukov to the Ukraine. command the Odessa garrison. But when Stalin died. Malerikov knew he needed army support. to stay in office. and called Zhukov back as first deputy defence min- later. Maienkov also appointed '72-year old Marshal Kllmenti Voroshilov as nominal head of state. Marshal and to Alexander Vassilevsky as a first deputy defence minister. and Marshall Nikolai Bulganin as de- away. Firemen expected Sunday night to be at the scene another 24 hours. -tContinued”onN;)VttgeN5.oolu'2i: Flying Officer Drowned All Grand? River S Flying Officer Melvin Gray. age 24. years, R.C.A.F. Station. Sum- merside. was drowned on Saturday night at approximately six o'clock in the Grand River. where he and two companions had gone to fish. The fatality occurred near the Grand River bridge. and the two men who were on the fishing trip with him did not witness the trag- edy hut apparently he had waded out too far into the river, which at that point. is narrow and with at steep descent into the channel waters. An unusually strong cur- rent prevails there and as far as is known the body was rapidly drawn into the channel stream. He l was unable to swim.. Members of M3-5595'r.the R.C.lll.P., Surnmerside detach- ment, carried on dragging opera- l'8W05E1ll53l0" tions throughout Saturday night. N9” 3”"l5' and Sunday and were assisted by planes of the R.C.A.F'. Station in Japanese Flood Death Toll atiirday (Night Siiinmerside which flew overhead in an endeavor to spot the body in the water below. Tire search was continued until last evening and then discontinued without finding any trace of the body. It. could not be ascertained last evening it dragging operations woiilri be resumed today or not. F. 0. Gray was a native of Van- couver, B. C. He was a son of Mrs. Mary Gray and the late Mr. Gray of that place and was un- married. Next of kin were noti- fled yesterday. He was a graduate of Centralia R.C.A.F. Station and was posted to Summerslde about 14 months ago where he has in the meantime made many friends not only on the station but in the surrounding districts as well. He. was an ac- complished musician and enter- trainer. is Placed in The Thoiisaiitls TOKYO, tCl"i-Moi"! than 6,000 Japanese were reported dead or missing in a sudden. violent flood which swallowed whole, villages about 200 miles southwest of Tokyo. The new disaster was described as worse. than the Kyushu Island flood three weeks ago. which claimed some 100 lives and was considered the most terrible flood in modem Japanese history. Police said some 500 persons per- lshed and more than 3,000 are mis- sing in the Arlta Valley, where fast-rising flood waters overrm seven villages and the coastal town of Minoshima. with a population of 17.000. Police Estimate Five hundred others died. and 2.000 are missing. police reported. in the Hidaks Valley. 30 miles to the south. A Japanese newspaper man who flew over the scene said only roots were visible at the tau-n of Gobo. where the Hidaka river flows into the Pacific. The stricken area is in the wink- ayama prefecture. on the east-cen- tral coast of Hon.-hu. Japan's main island. More than 122.000 persons were left homeless and at least 2.- 936 houses washed away. police said. when torrential rains turned the mountain rivers into angry lor- rents. As the people of Honshu counted their dead. an eruption of vol- canic Mount Aso Sunday night and fresh floods brought new terror to nearby Kyushu, southernmost Il- l 4 by One Killed in Explosion QUEBEC tCPl-One man was killed and foirr others injured slightly Saturday when a tank containing propane gas exploded at nearby Valcartier military camp. An officers' mesa was destroyed in the resulting fire. The dead man was identified as Robert Rouette, 84. of Trols-Riv- leres. a civilian. Suffering from shock were Sgt. George Mann, 46. Pie. R. G. Lspointe. 22. Pic. J. Le- bonte. 70 and Roger Bedard. 16. of Quebec. Hometowns of the mili- tary peraonnel were not immed- iately available. Two Cape Breton Boys losezlives SYDNEY. Breton Island boys tCPi- Two died Cape in ac- drowned in Broad Cove pond at his horny, . m cldents Sunday. Sidney Hardy. l4. Ingoniah. He waded beyond his lives Ind W0 PCYBOM depth and could not swim. Brian other causes. Oouthro, 4, of Gardiner Mines died after being stnrck by a tmck near ported in Quebec and eight in on- a shark, has tcrrori7.ed Cape ..c-3 for fishermen for tun weeks with his ferocious attacks on coastal' fishing boats. l The 600-pounder, regarded as "Al big one" in these waters, gave. Fleet a 20-minute battle after he; was harpooned. The sviord-fisher-: til” i finally got his catch a.shore,: where fishermen and townsfolk gather-ed to examine it 11 FEET LONG I The shark was 11' feet long and ldescribed as having a belly covcr- . worked out. ed with "greenish polka dots” l The catch was made at dusk.' l lFleet went out after Gordon Bris- lacs. 3 inwn Msidelil. SEW H 13119 signed. the trucc vtill call for an Ifish surfacing in the harbor. I The Rammer'a reign of terror began two weeks ago ne-ar Main- a-Dieu. a few miles northeast oil here, where he chased pleasure craft and fishing boats. Then he moved southwest to Forchu. where he sank a lobster boat. drowuingl one man. 1 He chased a fleet of herring. boats ashore last Wednesday ml the Petit. de Grat. area near the. mouth of the Strait. of Caziso. l Over the week-end the, fishing lfleet. was in port and no more at-i tacks were reported. Saint lohn liid Drowninggllictim SAINT JOHN. N E. tCPl lcharles K. Quiglev. seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles QUIE- ey. of the riffs east end. was drowned in the Bay of Fundy Suri- day afterrioori at an East Saint John beach. The boy.was playing with an eight-year-old sister some distance from his parents and wandered away early Sunday at- ternoon. His body was found after the tide went out Sunday evening. No inquest will be held. Britons Buy Meat Without Ration Cards COLIN FROST tAPi -- lfouseu ivec l By LONDON. Britain are buving meat. ration cards for the first time in r13 years. ' And every father now can have ifrzcd eggs for breakfast every day - not Just once a ucr-it as he did in 3 lonly a few mnntlis back. All this results at least. in part from Britain's great unwinding of food controls during the last 12 months By this time next year The only foods still fully ration- ed are sugar. butter. margarine. cooking fats and bacon The cheaper kinds of cheese arc lprecc. rationed birt imported cheeses are picritifirl. though expcnaiie Meat still is rationed in theory but butcher shops are temporarily so firil that anvone may have as much as he wants with only a smile to the htrt.cltPl' While foods remain their price remains steady. Wages lhave nor, quite kept pace with liv- ing costs. ltmvever. Wage earners now get I35 shillings for every 100 they got in 1947--five shillings short of the H0 they would need to match the living costs index. Tins lag has started fears among some labor leaders that wage earners might be badly hit it food gets short during the winter. Heai?yiioEaih”tBIt Bv THE CANADIAN PRESS Drownings claimed at. least 32 lives in Eastern Canada over the week-end. A Canadian Press survey showed a total of at least 32 persons died violently as hot. weather drove re- sidents nf the cities into the sum- mer-remrt area in search of re- lief. Traffic mishaps claimed eight died from Twenty-four deaths were re- W I Ks: withou: l plentiful. I I Signing NC" l By ROBERT TUCKMAN MUNSAN IAPJ--Th? Commun- rat high command agrccd Sundayi to go ahead imrnediately with ”preparatioris prior to the sign- ing” of an armistice. but set no date for thc cease-lire that unit end more than threc years or bloodshed and devastation in Kor- In Tokyo. Gr-n Mark Clvtrk. lin- ited Nations Far East coinirizindcr. called the developrncnts at Prin- niunlorn ”most cricouraglng" .lilfl said the progress ”should lead in an early signing” Just how soon the triice could he arranged Clark did not sax. tinr would anyone in official t)t)Si'it)ll liar-1rd .1 gucss at the date T0 I)lS(ll'SS DETAILS There still are details to be Both Clark and the Reds stipirtatcd thr sonic poznts remain to hc decidcri before an cf- fcctrve truce can he signed Oncc end '0 the fighting within l2 hours and withdrawal of fighting forces from the battle line. to form a 2 1-2 mile buffer zone within 7'1 liours. The Reds pledged they would implement all the terms of the armistice once. the agrcenicnt is signed and becomes effective. The Red truce delegation leader. North Korean Gen. Nam 11. said that in view of assur'aiiccs given by the UN corninand "our side is prepared to discuss with your side immediately the various 1 c- parations prior to the. signing the armistice ngreemeiit." Among the unsettled points were the. drawing of a new demarcation and selection of the neutral area where reluctant anti-Communist. prisoners. including some 10,000 North Koreans and 14.000 Chinese. will be hold while the. Reds try L0 persiinde them to return home Liaison officers of both were scheduled to meet todait DY?- sumably to map out the new dc- rnarcation line. Dr. W. C. Machum Dies in lientville KENTViL.i.E. N 5. tcrn..rn- waldo C. Machum, 67. for the l;rs' .10 years secretary of the Bapils' Federation of Canada and general secretary of the Uriiied BAP”-Si Maritime. convention. tired here Saturday night. He. su."fered a stroke uhile re- cnier-iig ill hospital from a priori- monia attack om; or the Mari':mcs' best knovtu clcrgynien. he had pastor- ates in l-fantsport. Port Maitlarid. Yarmouth and Keritiillc, N S, was It lcadcr in l)ovs' work. and held .manv offices in Baptist organiza- ltions. the ration card may be a museum g9...” .93.; fygli Arnttin Uritct-sity H-y,,.,,,,,.; oti line between the opposing armies. sides! fGen. Clarltliiolts To Early On Rgtimllttigtude Allied Air Force Hits Heavily At Red Bear Areas JOHN RANDOLPH vAPI-Chiiicsc continued a litirlri-up nf the central fr'oii' tor rim. Allied plnries dealt cvipytlirit lilmts to Rcd air and ground power and sullcn guns niuttcrcd nl across Korea-secminizly obliviout i0 rericucd hopcs for an carly ilttrto , Elr'll as the tlrtrnmursts an- rinvirired at Pzinrriiinynm Sunday that they were rcndy to begin pro- parnrioris for signing an armistice Rt SFOYI. iivrrizsts Coin- mrtssii R t:nn'-lriie reports said Chinese re- rnfurccnicrits SlPfidll'.' ncre m1ss- ing north of the Kunisorig river. sccnc last neck of the fiercest n('lltlll ill two years WHITTLF. GAINS Backcd hv Allierl planes and ar- trllcigv. Republic of Korea troops uliiitled gains out of some 60 sqtrnre milcs of territory they yielded to the Reds last week They seized a 1.500-foot hill in a bloody 30-hour fight. while their big guns shredded a Red battalion of '750.iricii trying to cross to the south bank of the Kumsong Sabre tcls Suitdnv shot rlmvii nine Red MiG-15s ill North Kor- con nir battles near the )t:mr'.iur- gran ltnrdcr. probably destrovccl 2 ll0th and damaged three more Capt. Clyde Curtiri of Portland y0re. shot down two MiGs-his fourth and fifth --to bcrrnnc. the jltlth American lot 86? Capt. Lori- true Moore hecamc a cloubln ace twith his 10th and llth MiGs. and lLt. Col. Vcrnont. Garrison heC'-ime tthe. ninth double .tct arc of. the Luar Vllill his 10th Red tot Allied ilEll'Pl'-l)tlllll)P2'5 " T"'T -' 4" 7sMu3t”2'i"' plastered f-tcnn nired on page .m.G. l l 1 ; NOBODY is AS (.000 Looking as His stuoio PHnfog.RAPi-i nnrn in Fredericton TOROVT” VF” - Minimum li".'l Fill). l". l”?l'.IV'”lt'll.lliPS; l He was born in Frcclc:';c'-tr: anti MHL gvyac-I ;nrterided thc r:'v schools and the 7-,,N.,,,, .111 71 llinzvcisitv of New qnsuztk HC ty.l.-3!-1 xi (,7 irr-reiird his bwcliclnv 0' t'illlii2l.Vyjitiiwmtinn .'w'. I”. dnqrro fr-our Co1”2ate l'liliPr'Sl'l .r:.-grin 30 R! t;.t R3 llinnorrri him with an liorio:'a:'y 't'....m:.. '.' Rt Idnctoiatc ni d.i'i:iilx. tiitnun Til A) . l-'i'om 1924 to 1931 1)! lviachiini vt.1,.t,.-of rt xi 'wns general Sc iarv of the 'VirI;- Q...-i..-. 7' RS itimc Religious lirliicatioii (To:rn.:' iN'tllil writ: ' . and for fire fxPfllS Mriittirnc invv: vi.,,,,t..,. it. lwork scrrictiin for the rhrir.li yt..1tt,.. t;il 1 Hrs lriiv.-es' p.is'ii:nic uaa ll5i('lH'lllill"llVlxll til vcars a' Kcuri:.'.r- from 193i M sirtuci FR Til 1944 Ho was cicr'Prl general scc- Ynirmiit”. 'wt '71 lypiugfy Q' the Baplis' Feticiatzoii St '.iivi'r .'x"lrt Si 77 .ol C.1n.irln ill 1944. hnlrlrng the - 'pt-tat until his death tltl.ilT.t.'x ii” The H.-rlifav i no sm-xcri a term as Nltinr n' llrwtltnr tltftre lyric 4.1): 1lt'i"- the Untted Baptist Year Book rm: It-i ucwilwr 'roIT lb-" West It an originator of the Maiit.ni:- t.-.-m..i ya mots ;...n:: the dis- lmys' parliament pr -yect iind .t ' W"lItivt.'t "Ni ii" -"lll'N”d hi pinmoter oi i)oy.s' 5llmlYlFl' t'iil1l)iE- r in his youth Dr. Machuni wis. l'3'l'-l”'l leli"l'lv l5tlr'"'l' active in sports, especially baseball V it wvrrttic-. int-.cr Si Jrytm Throughout his life he uas ii W” illl"Z- t"i"l"'l.'1ii NW Fllmia nmxw ndvncme or Nh”.m.5 as 5. Fix .-nri lKlfif'l' rrittciorl lltuntlvi- promoter of good ritizeiisliip ;l”"”A '” 'll "l'”'"””"3 ll'"”l His gudnwl ml." m.mm.,.s MM nml llillillrl. tight uinds. l.tm four Sl.slFl'5 survlvc. Firiicriil sri'- will ;"' l""”'"'.:"m'” W"1"'"" vice will he held here Tlif'5fl'if. "Wt l'lPtir-tytiryvy t.. Rnfl st, 5;...- with burial in Freclcrlctnn tl"l”' M ”,"'l '” vi 7 Ag gird H i lppcv 5' .'tltit trier tallc; -n-- nf ('1:-lrur tlnirrlr unity is U, S, DQP', Kim: slim-er: or wtticly-scattcreti s n u o thiindct'sloi'nis. i'lF-1ill't" by noon Couriously Oprimisricu... ....-... ....h i.;m t....... tl.mt-high at F.tlmunci3tnrt anti l tCamplwlltnn RR and 53? lvA5l”"NGTON- lAP' "5'”" D" Rav of Yilndt Light soiitliorli W”"m9n" 0ml"l5l5 113” l-NW” 3 uincls. fog lt'lltlll0i urth viirlcly Mtltluusly-optimlstvic view of Sitri-lsr.-it-t-nti sllnwvrs visibility it day's Communist announcenicntl nyyypg imvt-ring to near zero in that the Reds are ready to begin 5...; purely”; Ntnuyoffilllrfl in the preparations for signing to cease. t-my fire in Korea. . . -. For the record. the department t Htgli title today at Charlotteimvt declined any comment at. all. A l ,-.t 359 am and sin pm, spokesmen mid the official repmit High title today at the Nnr.l of the Panmunjom nit-etlng would i shore at 1213 am and ll as p. m have to be studied thoroughly bc- suinmcrside tide lit minutes later fore there would be any formal than Charlottetown. statement by the United states Sun rises today at 4.45 am. and lovbrnmenu cg sets at 7.52 pm-4 .-em it