JULY 21.__19_41 Ti-lll Jjl-llgkporrsrowlu GUARDIAN l “m IIISSIPPIAIIS (Continued from Page l) celmllt GUARDIAN n”! ' la reserved for an» i’? Chief Justice Thane A. Clmpbell, n-no had been Premier of the Pro- vince upon the first visit o! the Assodlltlml in 194i. His Wcrswp Mayo!‘ B. lilrle MacDonald, and the Hon. Dr. W.J.P. Macltfillan» '1 ‘"11 WWW“. bllt advertalng of i‘ ‘galyuzrrn but‘; ‘an Lllltrfbl I I . able in advance. u, m I COOK'S for fnotograpna. CBASWILL for Photographs. At Home In Canada coivrenaaarlolv ran -nv. Ex-GOVOTIIOT Murphee referred to the trail-l‘: last tour of Canada m 194p when it often had to be sidetracked t0 allow the Canadan trocp trains to pass through. He was conscious. the ell-Governor SURANCE. __ HOWARD MCINNI!’ Illtgd F°°""'°" l1 1'15 Queen Street. Qi- said. of the heroic contribution Canada had made in the lart war’ snd he was glad. loo. uhen the day came that his country decided 1., throw her weight ‘m with thcss other nations who were fighung (or tho freedom of the world. ' He was at home among Cunndlnn people who spoke common language. held common, rdeals. and were of a common pur-; pose with the people of his own‘ rid. ' “n. concluding. Ex-Govarnon Murohee. 0n behaLf of the M's:- gslppi-ans present "and of the three rnllllon we left at home" ex- ‘nded g hourly invitation to the eople of Prince Edward laland toi visit his State. The party left aboard their 17- m train at 8-45. Flue Exhibit Cara the Over 2.000 people visited the ex-I 1,11," “r of the “Know Mississippi, Better" train between i‘ o'clock‘ and g o'clock yesterday afternoon.‘ n,” were wnrrrfly welcomed by‘ Mr. Si Corley, state comrniszlnncr n. agriculture for iuisslssippti Many farmers and other persons interested ln certain p rises of ag- rlctlltllre. keP1 Mr. Corey busy ail-l srvering questions un the State's lof Norse Electric Ranges. FUN FOB. our AND YOUNG at the Knights of Columbus Car- "Wfll- July 14th. at Victoria Park. JUST RECEIVED — Shipment Rog- ers Hardware. SPECIAL TWO WEEKS’ SALE -_ Mrs. Johnatones Ladies Wear; bad Beauty Parlor equipment, for sale. reasonable. 511150 — Play Bingo in the Oben air at. the Knights of Col. 1111111“! Clmlvll. Victoria Park. Thursday. July 24th. " a-r. arm's casein-anon _ Lennox Island. July 28th. Rlesr- . vutlous by Bus by phoning 24I or 2272. HELP THE GIRLS AND BOYS by attending the Knights of Col. llmbus Annual Carnival at Vic- toria Park Thursday. July 24th. KNIGHTS 0F COLUMBUS An- nual Carnival Thursday evening on the Recreation Centre grounds Play Bingo ln the open air. in aid of the Centre for girls and oys. FUNERAL A'l‘ BROOKFIELD- All, Gov't Replies To ‘Mr. G. F. Ferguson I The Acting Superintendent of ' Insurance in the Provincial Gov- l eminent has sent the (allowing letter. which is self explanatory tn ; Mr. George l". Ferguson. New Lon- l don, Prince Edward Island. _ " rt "Your complaint as to the var- iation in fire insurance rates be- cause of differences in the risk charged by the Prince Edward fa- land Mutual Fire Insurance Com- pany. reached my attention this ,morning through the Public Forum lcoltlmn of The Guardian. "Lb-Col. C. J. Stewart. M.C., Superintendent of Insurance. who is now on sick leave, referred this matter. when it was brought to his attention by the Honourable F. A. Large. Attorney-General, to the ‘Manager of the Insurance Com- pany. I am informed by the Com- pany that the rates now charged ‘by it are less than the minimum rates required by Section 233 oi The Insurance Act which reads as follows:- "'The minimum rate to charged or taken by any insurer ,urldertaking fire insurance, for |insuring a first-class isolated non- ‘hazardous property shall not be less than forty cents per one hun- l dred dollars insurance. per annum: land the minimum rate of insur- ,ance upon other property shall be increased relatively with the in- creased risk. according to the na- ture of such property. but any in- surer which maintains its reserved ,fund to the minimum permitted |by this Act, may. subject to the ‘approval of the superintendent, charge such rates as the board oi l nvhrat production and methods of? T1" ""1"!" 01 1119 1514 M". 55m- tdirectors decide.’ cuitmtlon. Many disPlal/ed much! interest in Mr. Corley's exp‘ails-; {ion of cotton growing and har-v vesting. The cotton crop, Mr. COP, lay said. is planted ln- April and in “no years harvesting contin- ues until January. In the exh bit car were several pmures of oic Colonial homes in! Natchez. onetime caplta‘, of the] state. In the year 1850. Mr. Cor-y lev said. air of the scvcll known millionaires i-n the world. lived in1 Natchez. fllugtrptlng the agricultural lm-, pry-lance 0f Mississippi. M1’. COW- ley said llB dairy plants in the? state held rmords for winning. herds. Annual production for con- grave were conducted by Rev, supply Mtrl-| ccntrated mi-lk was 55,707,717 lbs: for cheese. 10.942827 lbsJ 8M1‘ for ice creams. 4.613. 638 lfl11°ll§ | The value of beef cattle on MISS-I issippi farms ls $44,410,000. Mr. Corley aai-d, and the State has some of the nation's leadmg bee!’ ltam McAusland. J. W. McGreBOP cred the Other Featuree Other lntercstinfl figures elven‘ by Corley were that Misslsitplflfl record ror corn yield per 4C1‘? W" m bushels; its annual rroduotlon of pecans was. over 8.000.000 lbs: annual cotton production. 141M000 bales; and ita daily oil production approximately 96,000 barrms. | "hing oil. extracted ircm the ‘rung nut. has now reilCh-"d l" 5"’ nual production of 30-1199 The Tung nut. MY- 0°11“ “M” t0hs._ uel Silliphant was held Sunday afternoon from her late residence at Brookfleld Services at the home and grave were conducted by Mr. Donald Nicholson Rev. G. Carlyle Webster. Interi merit was in Hunter River cem- etery. The pail-bearers were: Archibald Johnston. Gordon Mac- Leod, Alfred Carew, Earl MacRae, Jchn Mobbs and Wilbert Stetson. FUNERAL SATURDAY -— The funeral of the late Mrs. Ambrose wood was held Saturday after- noon from the residence of her son, Edison Wood. Kensington Road. Services at the home and Professor Whidden. ist/er at the Charlottetown Bap- tist Church. Interment was in the People's cemetery. The pall- bearers were: Walter Burhoe. Louis Diamond. Mr. Lidstone. Wil- and H. Whltiock. LUCKY WINNERS- The lucky winners in the big Kroehler Ches- Qqrflgld sale at. l-Iolmanb both stores were Mr. Cecil Gallant. 498 Notre Dame Street at the Sum- meraide Store and Mr. E. A. Smith. 1 Dalvay_ at the Charlottetown SW"- There were several ties for the cor- rect number of days that I-Iolmans have been in business since i857. therefore it was necessary to make a drawing. Charlie Peters at Sum- merside and Jack lviclsaae of Borden at Chariotteton made the herds and outstanding individuals. drawings. We congratulate Mrs. ' bought to the 514119 11°11‘ ‘as r Gallant and Mr. Smith on their China in 192B and has rid-t reached" i that full yield stage which it ll 6X‘ good fortune in winning ther pected to have "althln a few yeMB-I Chesterfield suite absolutely free. The largest corporation of "-5 We know they will get. many. kind 1n the world - the "010111191 many years of pleasure from their gorpornflon or Laurel. Miss. l§| new suites made by the famous one of MlsLs-Slllllfl recent indust-y Kmehlel‘ Mfs- ¢°- RC5. Of interest to members of 111.6 PE. island Fish and Game Assoc-l ration mas Mr. Corie?! 115111119“ that within the last two W"! m" 10,000 private ponds had been| constructed in the State. Three‘ iisn rl-itcheria- are maintained in‘ Mississippi- by the United State! Fish and Wild Life serves Thole distribute fingerlings to tYiO 111°11- sands of p0n"| scattered throuih- out the State. ' Three- hundred and thousand. two 111111111911 children attended the lchcols of Misslsfllllll 1'1" Ye“ Mr. Corlev Lalo. , y The luncheon given the M1551!‘ tppi visitors yesterday “"1"” at the Charlottetown‘ Hotel Will undel- the auspices of t1" P-E- B‘. land Tourist Bureau an-i all ar- rangements for receivinl "15 f” tertainlng them were under 31W direction of. Lieut-Col. W.W. Re-d. D.5.0 , supervisor of, the Bureeu. Following the luncheon the via- ltors were taken on a motor dPv" GHICAGO. July 20 — (AP) - to several beauty apots 0n» 111' An article in the clIImt HQ d north and noun. abuses, the caeiipdioiogy any: research has dia- being supplied throvSh 91" °°'W'.closed that X-raye give "satisfact- aratlon of the service clubs and. my "119; 1mm pfln" to sufferers sues AGll_il_lil||l (Continued from Page i) dny and both loaded produce for Newfoundland. The Connector sail- d direct for Newfoundland and arrived safely. It was believed here that the Meigle went aground during heavy fog. Lloyd's list the Meigle as'a ship arid fifty of'l,060 inns. built in Glasgow. publicl scougnd, as years ago. She is said 1 to have been owned‘ by 0- T- 511"’ and is registered in St. Johns. fifty-nine, Report X-rays Aill Arthritis Sufferers lfurid has been maintained above lthe miifimum permitted that the company has been allowed tn and ‘write insurance on such favorablel terms to the policy-holders. I "Your complaint is. therefore. ,one regarding the internal man- iagament of the Company and it. ls ‘vour privilege as a policy-holder Eto attend the meeting of the Ishareholders of this Mutual Conl- |pany and air any grievances which you have at. such time. "Yours truly.” Enters Insurance ‘Business llere 1 Mr. W. Gordon Bears has ent- Manufacturers Agency lbuslness with his Father, Walter ' M. Bears. Gordon is a veteran of the last War having served wlththe Royal Canadian Navy from i941 to i945. Since his discharge he has attend- ed College ln Toronto. and has now taken up residence in Char- lottetown. The Walter M. Bears Manu- facturers Agency business has been in operation for the past twenty-five years and the many customers and friends of business will wish Gordon success. CVEIY 4,980 Germans Died iFor Hitler Plot IDNDON. July 120 - (AP) - More than 4.080 Germans were shot. hanged or tortured to death 2n a reign of terror which follolv- ed the unsuccessful attempt assassinate Adolf Hitler July 20. 1944. the Admiralty announced today. _ "The terror which followed (the attempt) was one that Hitler ever organized against his own people" the Admiraltv said in a report based on German ,.—laval documents captured dur- ing the war by British and Am- erican intelligence officers. "The revolt was essentially a revolt from the top. It was im- possible under the regime of Himmler! Gestapo for lordinary people to take part." The report explained that the motives behind the plan were hatred of Hitler. and belief that. lather than surrender. he would "drag the whole notion to des- truction with him." 'Four Drowned in be‘ this ‘ oi the worst. new lo pm Letter in Forum By roulc“ 555T- _ lo llred eyes I x: is smote rssr rooav ao-w-qm IYB TIRED‘! Soothe and refresh them in ascends with two drops of aufe, qentlo Murine in each aye. You qot- l QUICK litlil. Instantly your ayes feel ro- . ireahed. Marina's skilful blend of 1 in- - median: cleanses and “as eyoa that are lire from k sun, wind and 1LT” or upon" m 1 MURINE l FOR YOUR EYES Anniversary , Services lleld At Zion Ghur-ch l The eighty-seventh anniversary of the congregation and the thirty- fourth anniversary of the pro-Sent edifice of Zion Presbyterian Church was celebrated yesterday moi-hint;- The bcautiful and commodltllli church was filled to its utmost ca- ‘pacity by friends and admirers of ‘the guest speaker. the Rev. J- ,sutheriand Bonneil, DD. pastor of Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York, who spoke on “Peace of Mlndfitalring for his text a massage from the 16th chapter of St. Matthew. | Dr. Bonnell said it was a very lgreat pleasure to be with Zion on this occasion. and expressed the "11 15 °111Y “"1156 131° 1'95"" hope that Zion would 8° wrwflfd I the decision. his seventh. for l“ from strength to strength under the guidance of its Pastor. the REV- ‘ Mr. Webster. In the course of his sermon Dr. ,Bonnell pointed out that human- ilty is nothing more than an ggrggate of people. "We are liv- ing in a feverish and distraught generation." he said. "The reason is, our minds are set on materill things. We must strive for spirit- ual poise and tranquility. We are living in a divided world and thut is a reflection of divlded'lives. when we respond to the Master's ‘Peace Be Still’ there is a great calm; then it is the peace of vic- t0 1' '. "Bvilhen the Peace of Christ en- ters our heart. our first step is to find our peace in God; secondly we must. find peace wit-ll ourselves. Finally. we than achieve peace with our fellow-men. One of the functions of the Church today is to bring peace of mind to the men and women of this age." A solo. "The Lord is My Lialrt" was rendered very effectively by Mrs. A. H. Roller. The Anthem "Like as a Father" (Hatton) was rendered with feel- ‘ng and splendid interpretation by 'the large choir under the direction ‘of Mrs. Frank Johnson. A.T.C.L- Many complimentary remarks were heard in connection with the lovely display 0f flowers. The evening service was con- ducted by the pastor. Rev. G. C. Webster who took for his subJF-U’ "The Festival of DedicationJQHls record for annual earnings. With intently the end of the i947 season Still a way off. Calumet l-‘anm has earned ‘a record $639,060. Calumevs previous mark of 6601.600 was Glfl lriiscourse was followed and sympathetically by the large‘ congregation. Tile Double Male Quartet were iheard to fine effect in their refl- i derlng of "Glorious Things of Thee are Spoken". Many friends ex- vpressed the wish that this splendid octette might be heard again soon. Gonfirm Airport Gontracts Let OfITA-WA. July 20 - (C?) - Transport Department official confirmed Saturday that contracts had been awarded for repairs and extensions to airports at Moncton. ‘NB. and New Glasgow, NS. The Moncton ccrltract, awarded 4o the Rayner Construction Co.. oi Toronto. calls for surface treat- lment to existing runways and an ‘extension to the east-pleat run- way. The New (‘hasgow Airport will thave an extension to its north- ieast-sowhwest runway. the work to be done by Acadia Construct on (co. Bridgewater. us. Officials said they were unable to give the amount of the contracts, although lit was understood the Moncton lob was in the neighborhood of e500.- 000. I 15th Straight Victory For Blackwell By The Canadian Pra- j Recaptures eSculls Title ‘ Theo Dubols of the my}, _ (u, _ Cleveland Winnipeg‘ Rowing Club. who at so w“ u.“ Ferrell: Harder and Lopez. Baseball Results (Continued Prom Page 1.) Second Gama W a O00 100 000-1 e g 100 800 IDa-e 10 1 Malteraon. Sun-borough “d l cont-Hider with too much senior- N" Y°'k 00001000111-1 I 0 There Just doesn't seem to be i my Way of stopping lanky mull calibre. ty among oaxemen qr lop-flight recaptured tho United Detroit 010 10o 201.4 lo o Beven. Neweom and Houk; New- Blackwell. fireballlng Cincinnati smog single, “n11, m], “turd”, lctfds "Wlrler- Tlhe lorlz-lessed in the 73rd national Nwing cham- s."i:“ai:..'.'..tf t"; - In regaining the title he won in lYork Giants with seven hits to 1941" 13.15015 "jumpy-led on m. Db 1111611! llP 111! 17th Vlclmy 01 "l! trolt River course b strolrl-n asp isoason. and the Reds won 4-1 in the Hmong, Chump...“ §ohn D ‘Kg-w "rev - =1 H“ quarter-mile mark and overturned. 1mg cap 9'6 Main“ 1°“ “mm” Kelly winner t/wo weeks f “mum work‘ and mow‘! 1m‘, ‘w England's covsted l-lerilcv dll-afiorfd ond place. half a same ahead of‘ mm: and m,’ m only my“ o! his Flrat Game Philadelphia 010 20o ooz-s 1o z Chimn- aoo ooz 011-6 a o $518; p13§g°usmzh° "m dwnedilaet fldstarts spilled o. his left: lfewslxldon. McCahan and Ro- Brookyyn Dodge" toppled smear knrfed too deeply into the fins. Grove, Harrlst and Second Game 1 Philadelphia 40o 20o ooi-n a ' 1 Chlouo 001 oso 000.4 e oi water on a recovery stroke, fully Lo i i u‘ c"°“““1‘ “"1" "m" ' two lengths ahead of the field. stormy nintlh inning finish to wdrl 3-2. They collected all their runs in the payoff frame against four of the Red Birds’ best pitchers. Chicago Cubs. snapping out of a lorlg streak of futility. took g pair frcm the equally hapless Philadel- 1 I Stymle Games a phia. Phlllies by scores of 4-2 and 2.1;.$32212“ti..S.“.i.°§f°}i.§.°°‘i§§..i;. ' 12 vicwries in 13 games. At New York. a crowd 0f 47,U1. I which swelled Giants’ home attend-‘ , dance to 1.01245 for the season.‘ NEW YORK, July 2o _ (cp)_| saw Blacluwell get off to a good With a powerful surge that brought start as ex-Giant Babe Young wal- a celebrity-packed crowd of 46.183 ioped his eighth homer off Dave roaring to its feet. Mrs. Ethel D.- .Koslo and Ray Lamannu made it Jacobs’ Stymic Saturday won the' so with a four-bagged‘ in the $l00.000-added Empire City gold1 seventh. Blackwell fanned seven cup race a1; 581mm; Park to add and walked but two, losing his 11,101,119.- ghlnyng chapter to M51 shutout when Willard Marshall‘ [flgs-to-riches San o! the Heb banged ‘“~h“5th homer of the yea.r waya in the rlint . rt - r1 m Bobby nson cloruted two out augur; sffiggigngbefgithgi. ‘Liana: of the pilrlz. his 17th and 18th of “(may race Manned by "s s on’ the year. to 121d Giants to victory so“ as an annual m" “Pork; 1n m" PM‘. 1 N 1 "W"; “ct series." the hard-hitting son of Equestrian-Stop Watch swept past Mrs. Walter M. Jeffords’ 25-1 shot Natchez in the closing strides to take svaooo first money by a long1 neck under hard-whipping Conn McCreary. Four lengths behind Natchez. doing his gallant best over the exacting mile and flvc-eighths . route, came King Ranch‘s As-l ‘ sault. beaten for the first. time in n . eight championship races, but i still l8 lengths ahead of the first g CIQCAGO. July 20 __ (A?) _,of two invaders shipped from ‘A: e1, 1h ,. Mme‘ F H mm _ South America for the race. ‘to; ‘hi1; p13“ in $5 i; (f! Assault. backed down to i-z by . - the large crowd which had seen‘ 3353555..fidllg.a?°iil..,lli“fiii than. p;- sun-l ssssno Arlington Park Handicap 11',‘ "l" h "°h‘“°e‘“§=~ 11"‘ before 30.000 fans. Armed earned ssed a) 53% f‘ ‘assay’ c- WMAM first money_ ‘lhOflny kl! nieysth anx. ony l Armed‘: margin over the Krng ‘ 7694mm“) n e “ce- Wm‘ Ranchs Bridal Flcwer, stablemate Endfiavm“ n- champm“ i” 5'" of Assault. vrbs a length, but the finértla- tfinmh" ‘:5 1611511: b" golden gelding never was in dan- £11m “Ne; ‘Q33; ‘tfret L“ "m: ger after taking the lead from Brl- U" 13 t 1 5h Z5 P "11 ‘dill Flower on the first turn. m“ 9"" 5"“ e 91"’ ‘FY1115 1 The Brolitc Farms Challenge Me "ltetings two decades ago. ;was third. slightly more than two ———-——-"% lengths ber nri Bridal Ifiower. Frere Jacques ‘Take Wrni- Pel- licle. Eternal Reward and Miihty Story finished in order. Rlppev. in the original field. did not start. ' i The winner with Jockey Douglas Dodson astridv. covered the l 1-4 miles ‘in 2:02 2-5 and carried top weight of I30 pounds. i Armeds winnings today enabled owner Warren Wright of Chicago to smash his stables own world _____€_.__._7______ New Yorke . .- llelp in ythe ninth when Young and Eddiet , Miller found him for home run I balls. l i Armed Wins i i Stars Move To Vancouver (By Norman Altatedtcr, Canadian y Baltimore Press Staff writer) . 1"‘ houser and Wagner. 8000M Gama. [New York 100 307 n00 00.1113 1 Detroit no oez m 01-12 11 1 ‘ <11 innings) i Peso. Rascal. Gumoert. Reynolds and Berrag. Overmire, ‘Prucks, tBenton. White. Goralca, 391mg. ln-lan and Swift, Wagner, summ- SBVBBG and Guerra; Pllllsh. Gebraih and Dickcy, INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE First Game. Syracuse 000 020 003-45 l: 2 Montreal 000 100 0011-1 5 3 Just and ftox; Smolko md Sahdlock. Second Game Syracuse 000 001 0—l 5 0 Montreal 100 001 x-B 3 1 Wehmeier Kenn. la and West; Melton, Gerhenuser and Campan- First Game. Toronto 100 000 000-4 6 1 Newark 000 003 0124-4 7 0‘ Deal and Desauteis; Mallcttel and Lollar. Second Game. Toronto 100 $90 [-4 6 I Newark 000 000 0-0 5 0. (7 innings) Konstanty and Batts; Karpel, Mueller and Deiniriger. First Game Rochester 030 010 030-7 l0 l Buffalo 305 010 oox-o 8 1 Mikan. Raeder. Byerly and Mar- shall; Shirley. Pierce, l-iausmann and Richards. Second Game. Rochester f Buffalo 001 000 0-1 8 l 212 030 x-S 10 1 (7 innings) Gardner. BYSTU’. Green, Reeder and Williams; Gray and Yount. First Game 000 010 030-4 '7 4 200 111 flit-G 15 I wittlgi Jersey City Mueller. ~P“.anigan, Gust, and Lenn; Jones and Grarso. I Second Game. i Baltimore 012 000 01-3 9 l; Jersey City 200 101 x—4 5 3 (7 innlngsil‘. Podgalny and Weigel; Mellis and Yvars. llirty Weather LAs Ocean Yachts Eastern Tennis Begin Race MARBLEHEAD. Mass. July 20 - (AP) 7 A fleet of 22 yachts- many of them veterans of long ocean races-sailed away from Halfway Rock in "dirty" weather late Saturday in a resumption of the 365-mile ocean race to Hali- AGAIN IN 1947 4 OUT OF 5 SAY THEY PREFER KELLOGGS! I YOUR FAMILY WILL TOO." ASK FOR KEl-LOGWS WHEN YOU BUY CORN FLAKESI Antigonish Race BLwlts ANTIGONISH. N. 5., July 20- rCP) -_ Fans saw close finishes in allthrce classes of a harnesa card at the Riverside ‘Trotting Park here Saturday. The homctown-otvrled Iola Let took the No. 1 Classified in straight. heats. and Polly Scott owned by Johnny MacLean of l-ic-atherton won a similar victory in the second event. lace Betty Lou Harvester fin- ished the first heat irl the lead with Donna Budlong placing third but the horses reversed their positions in the second. No. l Classified Iola Leo (Loves) . . 1 Martin Dell, (MacKinnon) . 1 Vera Britton. (Sears) 3 Ne. 2 Classified Polly Scott, iMacLean) 1 i Harold Wilson (Kell) . B I No. S Classified Betty Lou Harvester (Cogger) 1 3 Dom-lay Budlong. (C. Sears) S l. Rcamore Boy (J. MacLean) 2 2 50-foot schooner owned by J. C. MncKeen of Halifax. The Eska- soni is one of three representa- tives of the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron of Halifax. oo- rporlsors with the Boston Yacht Club of the down east contest. The yachts are competing under a handicap system. ranging up to allowances of eight hours, because of the wide variance in size and rig. The unpredictability of yacht racing cancelled selection of any favorites. The fleet. however. in- cludes the 45-foot sloop Alar own- ed by David J. Bailey of Green- wich, Conn., who, last month sail- ed her to victory in the 466 lnile race from Newport. R. 1.. to An- In the third 1 | I i lTigers Glaw persona wishirg to make the vislt-, ors‘ brief ltay aa pleasant Is W!" lible. - llElTllS i . 50c Per Insertion IIITII! n??? "Allan - at the Charlottetown termini July 120i. m1 to Mr- and lfn. Jamel Mailer. city a eon. M ltitldaolean i lmormkza mums: BIRTIN. MARRIAGE. . JLwae-announeedwd from arthritis. bursitis and allied‘ I diseases of mQ joints. R The magapille is published by the Radiological Society of North Am-' erica. The authors of the article.‘ Dru. Ernest A Pc-hle and James A.‘ I _'—'__ yLocke Winner Morton of the University of Wia-:—l"our person's. including ‘three consin Medical School, Madison. members of one family. were ' Wia. said X-ray treatments "def- drowned tonight and two others, ini-tely have something to offer“ limited l llmllll‘ fit! When ll By WJt. WIIEATLSY |-. arthritll uufferere. .. rowboat in which they were boat- (Canadian Preu Staff writer) Their conclusions were drawn in] capsized and plunged theml TORONTO. July 20 _. (up) _ from a study of 100 patients. The into the Rideau River off this Bobby Locke. the nhunky 29-year- ages of the patients null“! ‘mm wwn‘ m mug‘ lflllth 0f Ottawa. old South African who made a 40 to I0. and the majority were Drowned were Thomas Kiley. 30. ‘money-gathering tour of the Un- gmnen, of Ottawa; Albert Voyiairle. 3S. of ‘ited States "It appears. the doctors said. Winchester. Ont. and his ia-year- circuit. won the Canadian open "that arthritis ta gggravated by a old wife and their five-year-old championship Saturday at Toron- lifetime of hard work." eon. Alfred ~ to'a Seal-bore course with a record- Detaila u to what caused the smashing 20S. Indian Province %GOODE. Onto July 30-(6?) eapalzing of the rowboat or how Locke. running his winnings to the two survivors reached the aaf- about 017,000 in North American T‘ JQI] Ijkhu] ety of shore were not immediately play over the last few months. '-%- known. _,- knocked three strokes off the 2'11 NIW DELHI. July 20¢- (Reut- lrerk for 72 hole: set in fwd by m) - Indie’: strategic northern 115N500". Burma. July 2°’ “will little. veteran Amsrcan gateway. the ~ Northwest hontier (AH-Three lfyochit Party me’ pro fr m Cleveland. province. voted by a majority of bera were killed in a gun battle i-Ze lock down $2,000 first prlee 200,170 to join Pakistan. in the laet night in thefilome of U. Saw. money and the Srgrcm gcld cup. ‘ -or" India" referendumflibrmer Burmese premier, when which will be. sent to n‘; h~me Burmese police arrested U Saw club in Johannesburg. ‘ ay. Detailed ruulta of theroting and 19 Myochit members in con- Two stroke:- behind lsotke end "n; - » nectlon with the assassination Sat- one stroke unue~ L-‘tr-‘s rc r". VflflqJoug for Pgklgflnlflflfl. urdayofU-Aung San and six other came Ed (Porky) m“ r. P» r" tund Ylilminetnn, Del. urn “no Valid votes for Indtrlllt. Burn-lees mlniltera. it was announ- i‘ ' ‘m1 no u"! 7°‘ ‘LAW’ ‘long lablished 1n 1944. Armed moved past his stable- earnings. Armed now has accumulatld S168.- 775 to become the richest Calumet Farm horse .n history and to 910W 111m] bonlnd stymie and Assault Whirlaway ed in the trials. results of which mate. Whirlaway. in in the financial race. earned $501,161 during hi! Career- Yanks Twice (Canadian Press) Detroit Tigers toppled New York Yankees twice Sunday, winning the opener 4-l behind Lefty l-lal Newhousers three-hit pitching and capturing the wild finale 12-11 in i1 innings to shave two full games off New York's American League lead. ‘The Yanks still enloy a com- fortable 9 l-2 game margin over, the second place Detroitera despite the setback. St. Inuis Browns meanwhile sank the third-place Boston Rad Sox twice. scoring all but two of their ll runs on homers u the}. humbled last year's league winners 14-3 and 7-6. Cleveland split with Washington. taking the nightcap B-i after Sen- ators won the opener l-0 behind Mickey ffaefner-‘s five-hit twirling. Mel Harder went the distance for the Tribe in the nightcap. holding Washington to six hits as he acor- ed his sixth victory against one loss. Philadelphia and Chicago also I split. White Box taking the opener 0-6 and the Mackmen coming back for a 7-4 victory in the afterpleca. Prince Hal Newhouser had com- plete control of the Yanks in the professional golfing. first game at Detroit. as he heed Bolfml lonLv I man in noteldng Ilia 10th ' victory. In the extra-frame nightcap, Eddie Mayo brought home the bac-- Philadelphia on with a rouein, double that ecoredI-Ioot livers from first base in the ilth. The Yanks had bang- ed in seven runs in the sixth to go ahead 11-3 but Tigers wouldn't quit. Pat. Mullln'a pinch homer. hia second of the day and 13th of the year. out the New York margin tn four runs and Detroit tied it in the ninth on Roy Culienbineb three-run homer and George Kell’: dbul-ife combined with a walk. 'l h" ‘0-2 cs'li'-i-a"lll CM the 2." ~- p1 maily as (i0 Inrdl. VICTORIA. July 20 — (CPl-y Laden with laurels of the East- West matches. eastern tennis stars moved over to Vancouver tonight to prcparrfor play in the Domin-l ion championships following over-l whelrning victories on the grass courts of the Victoria Lawn Ten-t nis Club. ', The East's experienced squad‘ garnered 28 of the 31 points award- 1 will be considered along with those lat the nationals July 21-26 in selec- tion of a Davis Cup team. Another clean sweep of events was made Saturday by the east-| arn representatives, led by Henri Rochon. the slim. dark-haired l 1947 Ontario and Quebec champion who stopped Vancouver's Walter Stohlberg. 6-0. 6-3, 6-1. Brendan Macken, the no. 3 player on the east'a squad, but ranked first in the last Canadie; list. downed Vancouver's Art Jef- (ery. 6-4. 6-0. 6-3. Don McDiarmid. the steady Ottawa veteran also won in" straight sets although Vancouver's! Jim Skelton battled him to a-a! 8-6. 6-4. ' Brendan's 21-year-old younger brother Jim_ played a headier game than lanky Don Hodges, Regina and Saskatchewan champ- ion who bowed 8-0. d-l. 7-5. ilow They Stand i ' American W l. Pet. New York . 59 29 .670 iDetroit 47 36 .566 lBoaton 4s 40 .029 Philadelphia 42 44 .488 Cleveland . 38 41 .481 Chicago .. 39 4B .448 wssningto - so 41 .4s4 St. Louis ....... .. 31 5G .373- Natlonal W l. Pct. 1 Brooklyn ..... .. .. sl se .500 .New York ......'..-. 4s so .556 .__-__. 4B S8 .648 at. mute ..._...._..- as 41 .523 | Cincinnati ...._...... 4B 44 .488 Chicago ...... 40 l .471 .......... 3S S0 .419 ‘Pitteburgh so so .412 flntarnatlonal W l. Pet. lMontreal ._..... B0 SI .641 ‘Syracuse ............... D D .571 Jersey City M 0i .550 Rochester ........_...... 4O 0! .496 Buffalo .. fl 44 .488 Newark ._... . 4i 92 .441 Toronto .. 4i ae .423 Baltimore 34 b6 .882 ARE LAND-BOUND 1 Prragllnr and Eoiivwt. South cog understands as Amsric=n republics, have no outlet ‘O U“ IDI- ) er UDerrlo; As the sturdy yachts started out on the deep water classic after a war-time lapse since 1939. there was a better-than-i2-mile wind. a rough sea and some fog. There was a favoring south to southeast wind as the craft set an inshore course for the run up zhe coast. Sherpherded by the Coast Guard cutter General Greene. the yachtsmen expect to make Halifax next ‘hlesday Four of the class "A" boats. each of them Bil-footers. hit the starting line almost abreast of each other. They were the Ketch Mohawk. owned hv Kenneth R Makoon of Marblehead: his brother John's schooner Grena- dier: George C. WiswelYs schoon- and the schooner Onward III. owned bv Herbert A. llapolis. Md. Other racing veterans include the Eskasoni which competed in the last Marblehead to I-Ialifa-K race in 1939. and the Mustang. 45-foot cutter of Roderick Steph- ens. Jr.. New York "gcht design- er who competed in Le defence of America's Cup. The rigs include cutter. ketah. yawl, sloop and schooner and range in size from 37-foot cutter duckling of Dr. G. H. A. Ciowea. Jr.. of Boston, to the 77-foot schooner Queen Nab. owned by J. Barret Crockett of Marblchead. In Halifax. the competitors have been invited to participate in the rnco week activities of the Royal rlcva scotia and Chester Yacht Clubs. Among the trophies at stake are the Visitors‘ Cup. the Wen- Barlow of Providence. _ ouah Clip and the Prince of Flllfit. of the Canadian boats, Wales Cllp. presented by the fcross the line was the Eskasoni.‘ Prince of Wa-lea- in 1860. SPECIAL PURCHASE l AU: WOOL SWEATERS- ..-... 7'“ i 3.98 "“‘ 4.98 These ore Reel Value! Any time of the your! But right t... . . . . . . . . .. now-in the middle of the Su sweeter for cool evenings-it's Royal and Brown. plus Powder and White. Sizes ~_THE . 8o Don't Wait! 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