PAGE SIX ORTINGIiEWS s» ‘l. By The Associated Press Torn Warren, rookie to a 10-4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in the first game of a National League doublehead- er to snap the Do er's five-game losing streak and e Cards win- ning spurt that lasted through nth; in arow. m l m arren, appear g n c sec- ond game as a relief pitcher had a chance to make it two victories for the afternoon but at the fin- ish suffered the defeat when the league leaders shoved -over two runs in the 11th to win ‘I. DiXie Walker tied the score in the ninth with a home run,his 10th of theseason. In the 11th, Warren. fifth Dodger pitcher used in the fray. yielded a single to Johnny l-fopp and walked Stan Musial. Hopp was forced at third base nnd then Musiialld stole bthlrldaltind scored on a W peg y c ey {Owena Marion's single scored the in h e -.secon run. liczflsme IIIQLSlE-ARHLYQ sleisfiledlhargd‘ Ai 305ml!- Al JBVEYY Illifilled l ms, whm they are w be plhyedltwo-hitter as the Boston Braves hasn't n5 yct ‘been announced oy blanked the Pliifibilflh Pill"!- mmm. Officials but make no inis- 2-0. at Braves Field to win a dou- mk‘; “mu, l, mes,- same pggtpolqeql‘ bleheader. The Braves came from “Hos Me going to may fl leaning behind to capture the first game m bcfon the playoff picture is 6-4. unfolded l It was Javery's first victory since ~ - - lJune 17 {her} he turned bagk the r h antime fans are really New Yor Ghnts. 5- . B "WES mlgiillgeamlqe bit; the leagug hasiFleld and the triumph gave him a Cfillflhl the fancy cf a good foll-,season‘s record of four wins in 1B owing and hut what tennis 111111311195- lnukl- ille 2 ‘tie is the subiect of- At Phiiadelphifl.‘ the ChicaKO - oohmiiioiis nrgiinieilts. of- Cubs ran their string of successive he,“ hhd Aircriihftsnieiil rare fag-iv‘ es _to_slx__by_-defgtlrig_the 1)l‘€(l to ineet in t t? i118 l’ 9 '“'—'""_ "€'" miijtlfll)’ but the other two teams providing they nre at peak form s can very easily cause a major up- o s l I I ’l"he following taken from the Of- F B t tawhwlournal should prove interest-l fng w followers of the Big Lear. ‘.195 here: 0f the doubleheader softball league Jill scheduled for yesterday after- aoon at the Park diamond and a: s result the playoff picture u lust is vague as it has been since the itart of the league.‘ Rain forced postponement Officers and Corporals can hardly Be bcateil out but it is ii far diff- rrcnt story as far as Navy, Ser- geants and City All Stars are con- :erned A defent or victory can rnzike the world of difference to either of the three squads so close s rho race between them and had :h.- iznilies been played yesterday ' lowers of the three teams would had much more to .- on when in ar- 111111111115 (JFICEIIllXig inst which two‘ a; the three will have a chance of bflillllli! for the league title ‘ If‘! a e "Y “W "lfilffififi C d1 Pres Baseball writers have startedl ‘m n“ l r .,.,- h» IDNDQN, July so ——(CP)— iqffiflf.“dfffifiof'§,§"‘§=§-e5‘§§§§§"§$lfilNetherlands sportsmen ln London Harridge the smmmn mag“. hold so much confidence that the maiden,‘ I, méy be ma, 5 mm-‘ end of the war tn Europe now draws “m. race m the National League near that thev are tendering ii and the lack of any other conten-lliliichwii 111 “ma” this "will" mus subjects has influenced ‘his lJuly) ag a farewell gesture to oncentrale barra . but the fact Allied "lendi- sciill remmnds that Rfrlany baseball A. Milhado. president of ih observers are lfiCOIlS€d by ‘limilqilleflililf-IS 590115 olfiiinllflilml- "Spilbnll" episode recently occas- said in explanation that tiiere are ioiisd by st. Louis BYOWIIS‘ Nelson many person-s 0n his vcminlttee who Patten have "JC-bs to do over there after C O I the liberation.“ The Potter incident has been sei- "They never know when that Zed m, a; gnmething of a "caliselmay be leaving Britain.“ he added. “ICDP? Hnrriilges d€cisl0n in "So they want to say 80044716 e l; the St mills hurler before thev get the call. I think we mm h; tossing a "spitter"jliave reason enought m be optimis- acied plenty of notices. And tic" . of St. Louis‘ demand for, —-—~_ wion has developed ad- Word-famed Wimbledon will ' have an international lawn tennis e tournament next month, according Most of \Vll€‘l'(' n c-not to men-‘ w present Plans the n,“ Umpire riubbzird-ds vulne-r-lplayers will be service men in noi.‘ ‘is l’l fiLlillliii that Potter crcr,‘ terms representing Britain, Aust- rcnlly h "SplLHH The lirn- ralia and the United States. pire m inirnns that thr St. Louis -——- hnrlei- olcw 0n his fingers“ and for The Royal Australian Air Force. ‘ n he gave him the gate. which will provide the team from ' at the szzlnc time that. "down under." l5 holding a “trlal" ‘owns’ iilllli.‘igci' had been at Wimbledon later this month wo.-mt; him soiliu nniloyance ne-lagalnst a Norwegian collection 0f Brooklyn right-bender. pitched the Dodgers _Qi_t=.__iri_argin of _victpry. ‘Ann 18-year-old San Fran- cisoo girl. bettered the wunenb world record for the BBQ-yard free- gtiygeaeswim today with a time of Dodgers Defeat Cards To Snap 5-GameLosingStreak Phillies twice in a doubleheader, 4-2 and 11-2. Henry Wyse, - though relieved in the ninth in- ning of the first ame by Hob Chlpman, got credt for his 10th victory. Les Fleming was win- ping‘ pitcher in the second. '1‘ e Cubs won the first ame when the clubbed Charley anz for nine its and four runs in the first five innings. In the second game the Cubs piled up seven runs on Al Ger- heauser the first five frames, and coasted in to victory behind Flem- ing's steady hurling. At New York, Cincinnati Reds and New York Giants divided a twin-bill, as Hank McCormick sparked the Reds to a 9-3 victory in the nightcap, b hitting two home runs, each wit one on. The Giants won the opener 8-0 as Rube Fischer thwarted Bucky Walters in his fourth attempt for his 16th victory. In Saturday's games, St. Louis Cards hammered out a total of 24 hits and made‘ them good for 26 runs as they swamped the luck- less Dodgers 14-2 and 12-7. 1n the day's other doubleheader, Cin- cinnati dropped a close 5-4 decis- lon to New York in the first game, despite a four-run rally in the eighth. but came back to take the second 5-3 in the 11th inning. Rip Sewell pitched a five-hit shutuotforhls 11th winof the year as Pittsburgh whipped Boston Braves 3-0. while Chicago set back Philadelphia 4-2 on the strength of two first-inning runs that meant Batters Swim Record SlAN FRANCISCO. J 111v Iennis Tourney To Open Aug.1 The K. of C. senior tennis tourna- ment will get under way on Tues- day afternoon and evening Aug. 1. and will continue until winners are declared in singles, doubles and mixed doubles. The boys junior tournament will also get under way and the young ladies will start the Mon- fore lhni mime"- e The Potter lncidcnt has baseball ‘ men starting to wonder where the, tennis champion and a sergeant in irzll start and finish tin-the Royal All‘ Force. landed cl of alleged spitballs. Thcl France oh D-Day with a couple of] been rillcrl out for around‘ bats and balls crammed into his hut it would prolmbly hcnvv kit. , \' naive baseball charac- Egrgmanrh probably the first. cst ii has not been used, vrell-knovm Britidi sportsman to‘ ‘.0 time since that ruling. ‘set foot on the Normandy beaches. ' ' ' wants to arrange a match in Paris n 1,1,‘; an ensj,‘ matter to denqwith Garrett Nash. United States czde on ills subject of "splftfifi ‘Army lieutenant who beat him n‘. C ‘lllbbell. master of the “screw-l cogpje hf months ago in a London ~ i . has defined n “ol>itl€r" 8S on!’ challenge match. p.‘.ch in which a pitcher morstens ___ his [ulcers and makes a wet SD01, Alex Stark, veteran athlete from on tho ball. causing it “to dart flOWnlBerwgcir, out, who resigned a and out Willie revolving SlOWlY- commission in the army to join the ' ' ' lair force as an AC2 stepped brick Eut how to toil ivlicn a 11111191‘ l5 m commissioned status With D70- <l<ll taly mnlstcniijie the ball?‘moo,lo,~_ fymh warrant officer to fly- IP01‘ 1 lice, nny pitcher WlD-iifqyhr gffl¢er_ the pe pirlltion from his 19"" stark 36-year-old former mem- hPnti might be charged with "flmflber of the Ontario Provincial Pol- pcunding a baseball felony. 1119f!‘ Mg lg sports officer at one of the cslnin time are many Pitcher-e W” Canadian BCftrber Group stations blow rm their fingers as a nervous up nor“, 1n peacetime he wim the habit in the same innnner that mom’? Dominion shield {or rifle shooting much the peak of their cap before more than once and was formerly eYC-“Y Plicll a member of the Lake Placid (N.Y.) ' ' , Athletic Club. Before coming over- Where such a violation of the seas 1M1; May he drilled airmen in l""'-‘*“ 5W?“ “ml where l‘ [mlshfiaislbhvsical training at many air is the Cl nt subject of ‘argumvfh- Siam,“ 1,, can“, and Nevyfgund- Slorno in litnln that llntil pltthéfSvlandl mcludmn Aylmen one 51m, ‘yafking m; a sweat. cm the i________ mound the “$l1lii9i‘" will "W" be i Remember When IJIIOVCII from baseball Most base- , By The Canadian Press illnplres admit they have 11° Duncan McNaughton of Van- couver created tine of the greatest usesets in the history of h lmpic Games. hcriiing the ivorlosi lbest iuriipers at Los Angeles. That leap of Richard Bergmann. world table l in. . to _s l9 from X11118 l 1‘ "l ’ is boinlr used Thcy fifllfi- Vi"? l stnl‘! Yllllll‘! on a legitimate m9‘ li ,~, ll‘: n hurls-i" in the heat of n‘ grime, but ill the cud it is loft to thr- l-iriilire to decide Wheillci "l" n: the lnll is f" n‘: fill "miaiuriil t it it on" es the plate. 13 god _ mg “N as r ° ° _ {Billet slliarliitlifig bfglye the United Harrldge has placed himself ililsitatcs aimremacv in the Olylnoil a position for critlclsmlbiji rcfiufi- - o. _ r m e ——-—————»——i—~——-—- l?“ wnglrlgmlgllllbnnlThlgplglownz have, can Lcagile president and Umpire fnsl-md thug, 1h view or Potter's, Hubbard in making his r8901‘!- (lginial, the case should be lnves-~P0ttcl' hos been set down for l0 {nah-h 13h; Hnrridge has denied days for using a foreign substance the fgquggt on the grounds that on the ball. But base all men ar- m‘, “m, henrlnq would vclvc guc that according to Harrldges onlv ‘the Browns’ and Potter's op- decision. whether n pitcher ac- ngalnst Umpire Hilbbflffls ti-ggllfixrfigflfielvstol geptgmlilngf m)!‘ Leg; ' v r v arbiter needs is evidence of sus- Any l-gfg-rgngp m h "spitter" has oicion and then he can throw the been __ gyoideg _ blijfih, U}? _i*,'_‘°"_l' _.E1_°;L9“_£§l_ll1°__8l ANNUAL CAMP 17th (R) Armoured Regiment (P.E.I.L.N.) Dates-Mil to 19th August, 1944, inclusive. I event. Location—Beach Grove Training Area Attendance is compulsory for all members unless a request for leave of absence in writing. giving a sufficient reason, has been submitted to Squadron Commander and approved. l J. K. DUGGAN. CAPT. Adjutant. day following_Old Home Week. Please get your entries in im- mediately. - a Gonnie Mack _. Picks All-Star Baseball Team PHILADELPHIA, July 30 —— (AP) — Here is Connie Mack's all-time, all-star team of living baseball players: Walter Johnson. pitcher. Mickey Cochrane. catcher. Bill Dickey, catcher. George Sisler, first base. Eddie Collins. second base. Hans Wagner, shortstop. bfirank (Home Run) Baker, third ase. Babe Ruth, right field. Tris Speaker, centre ficld. Ty Cobb, left field The team was chosen by Mr. Mack at the request of a commit- tee planning a celebration at Shibe Park next Friday night in com- memoration of Connie‘s 50th an- niversary as a Big League man- ager. Its members have been tn- vited to take their places on the Shibe I-‘ark diamond as a feature of the jubilee. Baseball Results SATURDAY AMERICAN New York 2, Detroit 3. Philadelphia ti, Chicago 4. NATIONAL Chicago 4. Philadelphia 2. Pittsburgh 3, Boston 0. Cincinnati 3. New York 5, Cincinnati 5. Q, St. Louis 14. Brooklyn 2 St. Louis 12, Brooklyn 7 INTERNATIONAL Montreal 4, Baltimore 11. Montreal 6, Baltimore 9, Toronto 3, Syracuse B. Rochester 1, Jersey City I. Buffalo 5, Newark 6. S UNDAY AMERICAN Washington l. St. Louis 2. Washington 3, st. Louis ‘l. New York l0. Detroit 2 New York 7, Detroit 13. Philadelphia 4, Chicago 8. Philadelphia 3, Chicago 0. Boston 5, Cleveland 3. Boston 3. Cleveland 3. NATIONAI; St. Louis 4, Brooklyn 10. S Lo THE CIIARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN » vooue CIGARETTE TOBACCO Glllf/éf /b// i/a/ue /br /0//y0z/r owners Softball Practice lSculler Performs Iron-Man Feat ..?2:'s..vi‘:.-."ii“ scallops"; s so. at the nuzular diamond ic- t rla Park. ' ° i PORT DALHOUSIE, Jilly so - . AC?) ~—t Kg; ThOflllllfli, “Toronto rgonau s‘ -year- cl c cr, per- formed the iron-moon fgaltl of win- nlng four singles events in the g Mid annual Royal Canadian Hen- s lei! Regatta thus assuring the dou- legal-glue team the honors for the year n a row. __ His quadruple win - two vic- INTERNATIONAL fizlgjnfgéd“ “lg t“; Sfffmd?” 4'9 or o rgos w h Pa points. At the close of the three- ' ' day mice: llieéej Saturday. theHTor- 3 one cu a us edged out am- Bfil-E-irmo" g2 i? ilton Leanders for the Canadian Newark 56 w "538 title. Leanders tallied 44 points. [Jersey (my 5, 50 ‘so? Qn a basis of eight points for iMonnwl 49 51 ‘mo first, three for second and one for l» a l» llls- §.‘li.“‘l% “c: ' r . , an corse, c ., lfifliflfifi, g 3;,’ fig boating club was fDllrth, wlth- 24. | ' Wérgniiéattea léichwsolullers garn- er pon , D rot 7. Ottawa NATIONAL Rtawing Club 14 ifnd Pennsylgnla 5t Lou; 68 25331 . wo. St. Catharnes, ni... cmchmai, 53 a 5“ ucnt pointless in the meet. §§€f"§‘.2€l - f. 3'1?‘ . 4 Chicaso 41 41.400 . ' Home =9 n hi» Gandhi Pro osals Ph adelphia 37 54 .407 BYWklYn 3'7 57 .394 rustic.“ Gauss Gontroversy Si. Louis 57 43 .576 . ._i Boston 51 45 .531 ' N“ Y°YK 5° 45 rm LONDON July ae-(cr Router) glfiggfgld jg :2 —Spcake;s of all parties in the - House o Commons today hailed Detml‘ ‘a 5° 59° the proposals Mohandas Gandhi washl" w" 42 54 $33 for settlement of India's political Phllade phia 42 s5 .433 ‘ if. 0f G. Softball Game Rained Gut For the second ti game bctivsch the the Ace; in bus softball league was rained Jut yfl-ii/Erdfly- It was the last game on the regular schedule and will m; be plays?‘ as it had no bearing on the p , s. The standing follows:- Tonm P me a scheduled l-litrilzhts and \Viilgs Tigers Aces Royals Hitrighfs muuwofi Grand Circuit Meet Gancelleii ' OLD ORCHARD BEACH. Mc., Jilly 30~lAPl - Wet track conditions forced cancellation of yesterday's Grand Circuit light harness rac- ing card at the Kite Track. Pilzzfip BRITONS— fflontlnlled frem bagel) h of gliding here and winning or being destroyed. "In my bclicf the thing to fix on is this-your armies are now engaged in the biggest life and death struggle of your Whole war. T e plan-our plan-provides that We shall break through. The subsequent pursuit will be twice as inter- esting and one quarter a im- portcnt as this battle. Iierlln Wilt: full in Normandy and Pol- an " The Daily Mails‘ Alexander Clif- ford wrotc that one reason why the move across the Orne the pre- vious week was halted. was that the bridges put up at the last second to achieve surprise were "totally in adequate to take the tremendous weight of the follow-up troops and the material necessary to back the tanks up " The country, too, Clifford said. has not been suitable for the tyne of fighting we are tending to de- V5101). which is based on tremen- dous Wclght and expenditure of explosives and machinery. . Philip Gribble. writing in the News Chronicle. set down se- veral factors for the slow rogreas. Uilfavoratfe flying waet 11', he wrote. limlteo Allied mastery of the nir to 1U percent of its full use. Furthermore the build-u: was set back several days by a ga e on June 19. 13 days after the landmg, which cost 20,000,000 pounds (about I90.- 000000) worth of gear. The British and Canadian con- tribution to the American succes- seg was mentioned b Brig-Gen. . uls 9, Brooklyn 7. ttsburgh 4, Boston 6. zttsburgh 0, Boston 3. ncinnati l), New York 8. Cincinnati I. New York 3. Chicago 4, Philadelphia 2. Chicago 11, Philadelphia 2. Q's-u E C. Anstey in the ily Sketch. "South of Caen the British... . found a solid line of anti-tank m‘ across their psth."- he said. " e Americans have advanced without any anti-tank opposition to speak of There lies the explanation of what has happened The magnrt INTERNATIONAL Montreal 2, Baltimore 3. Montreal 4. Baltimore 5. Toronto 3, Newark 9. Toronto 0. Newark 4 Buffalo i0, Syracuse 4. Buffalo 1, Syracuse 3. Rochester 10. Jersey City I. Dochester i. Persey City 0. of Cacn was too Germans to resist ‘ CHEAP pflfl-I-lltt-Y-I-JTF-‘BTTAMINB lflllllfCP of milk proteins. calcium, out refrigeration. strong for the Dried skim milk l,- an economical csphtrus and B vitamins. 1t can stored in its dried form with- the Kinghts of Colum-- A. l lon future as offering new signs of hope for that troubled country but- Leopold Amery, secretary of state of India, criticized the Indian nat- ionalist leaders plans, saying they do not "form even a starting point for profitable discussion." Mr. Amery said Gandhi's state- ments, issued following his release a from detention by British author- ities at Poona, were based upon one central demand-the immed- iate rccognitloil for India's inde- pendence under the provisional government. The cabinet minister added that the only powers now reserved to the Viceroy. Field Marshal Vis- count Wnvell. are those which deal with control of active milii-arv op- QITHIOIIS. In proposals transmitted earlier this month to Mohemmed Ali Jin- nah, president of the Muslim Lea- gue. Gandhi proposed division of India into Hindu and Moslem States Moslcm insistence on par- tition of the country into Moslcm flnfl Hindu Slates was one of the obstacles which lcd to the break- ‘ down of the Orlpps mission to 1n- dlii in i942 (A Bombay dispatch said Gand- hi was sent to Jinnah a formal outline of these proposals. asking the Muslim Leagiic to endorse the Indian demand for independence and to co-ouclrnte with the Con- gress lnrty. "JlliCh reperesents the Hindus. in formation of a pro- v ' nal government for the trans- i period.) Airman Finds But Now To- llse All Winds WASHINGTON, July 30 — (AP) -The United States Army's Air Transport Command now uses the winds over the North Atlantic instead of fighting them, making all-year air traffic in both direc- tions practicable for the first me. Capt. Howard E, Hall, a com- merclal pilot for 15 cars. develop- ed the method for f yihg the wea- ther. Hc provcd it with 50 round trips to England in a (2-54 trans- fiort aircraft equipped with special strumente. George Hafner, navigator for Hall, says the new method of wea- ther flying is the greatest step in aviation in many years. Two years ago, when air trans- portation to England was a far greater need, the North Atlantic air routes could riot be used dur- ing the winter. Last winter, using Hall's method, the planes flew one- way-eastboilnd-over the North Atlantic but came home by the alternate southerly route. This winter, the A.T.C. plans to fly the short northern route in both di- rections. Described simply. the plan takes advantage of the rotation of wea- ther “pressure areas" to provide tail winds. Instead of flying the shortest route in miles, the planes now fly the shortest route in time. Capt. Hall based his idea on two plain facts-high pressure areas lrevolve clockwise. low pressure areas move counter-clockwise. you were mapping a course eastward. and a low-pressure area lay across the shortest-line route, the shortest time route would be along the south edge of the pres- sure pattern. where the natural air motion would provide a tail wind. A westbound plane would fly on the north side of the pat- telrra and benefit from the same w n . ' Now, instead of waiting for the winds to be favorable on the Great Circle route or ‘deciding to tussle with headwlnds and crosswinds. the navigator fixes his course where the favorable winds are. even though the path ie 200 miles ger. ‘Iltable operation. shares are selling at higher figures ALLIED QUARTERS. Gen. Eisenhower is most gratified Jewish boy cleans ghetto street. Ills helpless On Sept. 1, 1959, when Hitler's armies entered Pol- was that country's pride. fight to the last drop of blood." radio Warsaw said. l The first 11 ilotes of Chopin's Polonaise were re- ipeatcd over the air on a studio xylophone every 30 seconds between announcements. to show that on Sept. 27. the Poles again spurned Nazi offers to surrender, but the next day. the Polonaise was no longer heard. War- saw. burned, battered, starving capitulated. Because ' f and, Warsaw _he city was still Polish. rt t t Warsaw was _th fi Natural Rubber Interests Gptimistii: LONDON. July 30 — (A P) —- Britriin’s rubber interests are won- dering whether, when oriental lun- ber areas iirc won back frcm Jap- an. the natural product can coin- pele with synthetic. especially ‘n the United States. Perhaps because there is very lit- tle synthetic production here. you hcnr mostly optimism for natural rilbbcr. Investors lake it for granted that the great DTODGNICQ in lvfnlnyn and the East Indie: will relum to uro- ' Some than before the War. While not minimizing the im- portance of synthetic. British experts generally forecast ft scram- ble for the natural product Harold F. o .. t. recently said that synthetic only like rubber in certain of its characteristics There are indeed some chemists who g0 so far as to ouestion the likelihood of imltatlfl synthetically ture of the natural rubber hydro- carbon. If such be the case it will not be possible to aive to the syn- thetic product all the attributes of natural rubber " Eisenhower Is Optimistic SUPREME July 30 — (A with the results of the fighting in Normandy during the last week and views the immediate future of the campaign with high optimism The commander of the Allin-cl Expeditionary Force is understood to view the favorable trend of ‘he Climpilign as proof of the sound- ness of the policies the Allies have pursued from the beginning — that of proceeding cautiously and aet- tina the bottlenecks out of the way before going ahead- rubber Copeman. chairman Growers‘ Association. .. s the molecular struc- It SAW: Where Nazi Brutality Shocked the World elders. right, are lined up in Gestapo roundup. their brutality as conquerors, which has becomi grimly commonplace, shocked the world. Je\\‘s werl herded into the Ghetto, caged behind an eight-foot concrete wall around tlie lilo-block area. The)’ 11'9" impressed into slave labor in the mines, and were forbidden on tlie streets after 7 p. m. Poles Mill Jews alike who dared object to this treatment were beaten or shot, their homes burned to the ground; , the Nazis spared them no imaginable indiEIillY- ‘Photos above show typical instances of how the con- t the Nazls,| queror treated the conquered. m“. War Demand For Steel Remains Heavy CLEVELAND. July 30—<AP)- Despite hopes of an early end m the wnr in Europe, military demand! for steel continue heal‘! fourth quarter requirements no! in the hands of the war liivllilii‘ tion board showing a considerable increase over the third quartet. the Magazine Steel said tndnlfl The principal emphasis is bl! merchant and naval 5111175 all‘ heavy shells, steel declared. addilll that combat tanks, landing "i" and trlick needs eXPBYldW and that word is expected mom- entarily on distribution of silviil 35,000 exportjrcight cars. “We Will 1| flzzzi Edmunston Mon Fatally Injured EDMUNDSTON, N.B.. Jul 29- (CP) - One man is dead tonight alld another is in hospital at St. Basile with a fracture of the left leg as a result of a head-on col- lision between a motor cycle o - erated by Joseph Bellefleur‘ iljh Leonard Soucy as passenger both of Edmundston and CPR. express truck operated by Ludgcr Martin. The accident happened at 6.15 am. and twelve hours later Joseph Bellefleur succumbed leaving to mourn his wife and four children. An inquest will be held in Ed. muiidston Monday ev g, 8ft? YA c)” CLUB KINSMEN DANCE MONDAY NIGHT f FEATURING voua FAVORITE MUSIC R. G. A. F. ANSBNAIRES RANGE BAND l DANCING 9-12.39. "ADMISSION 50c. __.__- KING’S COUNTY HOS DANCE OEORGETOWN POTATO WAREHOUSE ‘W TUESDAY, AUGUST 1st. Don Messeris Orchestra First Appearance of New Band in King's County Accommodation for Mammoth Crowd