l. l l i. i i I: ii . x‘ l‘ \,_\ \ iii C OLD 1' li CAR TOON-"llollse _'l‘()l).»\\ it A annuit- .&¢; Z - [MN B N TRAYEILCG‘Ulb-"SYDNEY, Prldc of Australia” “PAIRIEA JUSTICE" SPECIAL MURDER HIT 3.15 — 7.00 — 8.45 filiimll! CHAN at SIDNEY TOLEI? cm nonuo - PAUUII moon: snl runs - Mucus rowuv Jllll! our - mucus oumuu _ SAilY um - mu: SIWARB i “IAST "IIAY For sllllljLEY TEMPLE s.» ‘ FSUSANNAH 0F THE MOUNTIES? — DIONNES in “FIVE TIMES FIVE” — Com nltyfiilng — Cartoon Matinee today PRINCE iuvniim... 3.15 "olnlvl Evenings 7 — 9.00 & thlt Jud Built" BOB BAR l-I R MON. Transformation Expected In Canada's Economic Life l MONTREAL, Sept. 3%(CP) f- Yhe war cannot Idll i0_ bring '8 great traiisiorniailon" in Canudas economic life, the bunk oi Montreal mid tvcuuy in 1L5 monthly busiIif-‘SS review. _ The review prcdicicd the meas- ures of slate conmol already taken Yy the (lilflllillillb goreriuncnt would compel the wnoiu blusuivss commu- nity to inukc uiuiszic reaxljuslmenis of their plans and incfliods Of busi- 55.. The shadow of impending war had an "adverse effect" upon busi- ness lafc in Aaigusr and sincc hos- tilities slrlrlcci ill...‘ bliSitliBéS commu- nity has bocn QllgJgQil in lhc tuskof adjusting iisclf l0 the new condit- ions. Tile plmcss is liiliflviifid. i119 y luck of stabilization .. H‘ " ut," it addccbflhere are good ounds for optimism about the usiness ouiicwk for the coming months, Tlir-rc l5 :ilrcndy' indicated u marked inclcr-c ill industrial ec- 7 —ii , in lllemoriam j In Memory of ,7 ltTR-“i. JAMES WALSH @_ Wellington, P. l}. L Who Passed Away Sept. 25, 1937. eep in our him-ts lives a picture orc rcziu-s fllil‘! silvor or gold ‘T15 tic picture of. you our. dear llfothvr Whose memory will m-vcr grow old._ llrr l)fllT_Ellt"l', Mrs. lllubcr, Cambridge, M555. 14-124-5-23- _ln Memoriam 1920 1939 FRANK GEORGE LANG Lovlngly Remembered by his Wife Elizabeth Lang. N. D. MacLean UNDERTAKER EMBALMER , Charlottetown and. North Wlltshlre EDGAR KENNEDY Comedy NOVELTY REEL EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER 0m with hnowledgc of book- keeping Apply stating references to P. 0. B01 306, Charlottetown. L'1“'9'”‘“- fortli yglllglgt llglutheirmgoun _ v wn GUARDIAN #95,“, , . American Women Ami The War By DOROTHY DIX - Preliminary . lloaring 0f 1n it ll h th alt . "v u’ .. "°"..="...".:.::"...: muck and who aaro death to that are nearer to them molly life itself. Theirs is tho PUBLIC FORUM This lnluml la opoa hr Ila daala of . Tho Charlottetown Guardian dual cl aoouaarliy aadorn tho aalalona of eorroupondenla. (lion, W. D. Euler) at Ottawa, in- mmating that “it is not in the in- ‘terests ‘of producers or in the ris- tiorial interests. i0 take control of the WinriLpeg Grain Exchange at the present time." Now I have no doubt that many sources of dais and iniormutlon |are open to our officials on Par- liament Kill. on a vital problem of ‘this kind, which are not available to the general public. I would expect, moreover, that our government has been in consultation with "Dawn- ‘lns’ St". prior to arrival at the ribove decision-although, be it | HOW-l. the British Government uromvw closed-down its own obelri-market machinery, at Liver- poo 17D to a point, therefore, all good Canadians must be p rod m w- operate and assist to Federal authorities unquestioningly. Never- iheless, it strikes me a; 51174-50- cial and most undesirable (at this time, when thousands of Canad- ians are freely offering their ser. V1085 and tliei; lives!) to permit other Canadians to enrich them- ,bre:id gl'BAll—'“'l'llCh, in this ream ,cr.s judgmenf, may be gccuramy i termed "a munition of war." , We hear much these davs about ‘the nccci for national unity and I “equality of sacrifice." Heaven i knows that Ls the chief need, and the short route to victory at home and abroad. But I object to a con- ‘iinuniion of this gambling with i tomorrow's war-prices for wheat. It is; if I may say so, decidedly [not in the interests of producers or in the national interests." I am, Sir, etc. FAIR PLAY TO ALL. Toronto, Ont. i i ‘Th: Central Guardian i This column is reserved for nrwa ol local Interest but advertising 0| a newsy nature may be lnscrtcd i at 5 cents n word strictly pay- able ‘n advance. ‘ CQNFEDERATION LIFE nvsun. onus. L-9789-7-2l-3i REPRINTS s Folf-zsc; roll 40c. Prvmm servifie. Maritime Stallon- ers. L-i36-9-23-li. l NEW_ GLASGDW CHARGE — , New Gflfljflu‘ preaching service 11 |WHEAT PRICES LN WAR-TIME | Sin-I observe in The Guardian's news-columns a statement by the Minister of Trade and Commerce |selrcs by speculating in the vital‘ i hfcns th heartstrings lllgfl that still lives in the human clod. But none the less. it is not the soldiers on die battlefield; who bear t f; h,‘ ihe heaviest brunt of war. It is the women-the sweethearts. tho wiv .i e mothers they ief benind them-who suffer a greater agony than any ‘ “ and dread they know and who die a. thousand deaths in felr and 0i what may be happening lo those they love, The soldier has the knowledge that ho goes to dangerous ‘ ‘ to stir his blood. suspense his own. The very air is vibrant with with activities. distractions, no such oonsolations Eve the_ heart sick; watching, h while fate plays dice With her life and happiness. But if in the post the lot of woman in war has been nllod with toll-r! and heartbreak, modern warfare has made it n blacker ody. fol‘ now it is not only t their men from them, but also their lit o child- ren. A new sound has come into the world. Underneath the dmne of the airplane is the shuffling of little feet be hurried away to some place of safety from the death that rains from he akiu, Perhaps in all history no such strange and awful olmptcr has ever been written as that which we read a few days which told about the evacuation of hundreds of thousands of little clren who were taken from the great cities of England and Hume and hurried away to 801110 refuge where, 1t is ho , the God of War may not nnd them. The oungsters, too small know what it is all about-only that. some form- Befs danger threatened them-had been prepared for it. u W¢ll ns m!!!“ So when the hour struck they formed as stra a procession as mortal eyes ever beheld-little children with gas mas over one shoulder and over the other shoulder their school kits filled with their n htieo and a. toothbrush and e. change of underwear, as if they were go to sco Grandma. But starting out on a journey that led they knew no when. nor whose end they could guess; gOing away from honi and mo and all that. had made their lives. Frightened, bewlldere , forlorn, poor little victims of warl Wee for them, but weep most for the mothers whose children were snatched) form their arms by war. Thev were glad to have their children go, because it was their chance of surviving the madness that has fallen upon the world. They did not doubt their little ones would bo kindly treated, but they were s0 small, so helpless, so lost without their mothers. who would look after them? Who would care for them? Who would know that Jimmie was shy and timid and would have to have somebody buck him up and show him the way? Who would know that John was ‘afraid of the dark and must have a night light by his bed? Who would care whether Susie ate her spinach or not. or that. Emily would cry her- self to sleep if she didn't have her beloved doll? Think of the fear that touched each mother's heart. When would the war be over; when would they see their little children again, if ever? Would they be lost in that great, strange world into which they were oing and never come back to their mothers? Would they even forget he {aces of the mothers who bore lhem, for children's memories are s0 s or . Only the Mother of Sorrows whose son died on the cross knows what those mothers suffered when they kissed their children good-by and lis- tened to the patter of their little feet dying awav down he street when the soldiers had marched, heads high, heels clicking, guns shining, the band pinyin-Si. lust an hour or two before. Mary, pity women in times of war! But—and it is to the eternal honor of women-no mutter how cruelly high war has cost them, no matter how it b nkrupts them in heart and purse, when their country needed them they ave always paid their debt to the last furtlilng. And they have done it without whines or com- plaints. They have offered up oii the altar of war something that re- rttliired fni- more courage to (give than their own lives. They have given l eir husbands and cons rm brothers. They have counted no sacrifice too great to make- hungry that their soldiers might. be fed; cold that they clad. Deiiciitely reared girls who had known no hsrds lps ave tolled to exhaustion amid the smells and SOunds and s‘ghi.s of hospitals. And behind the slackers and quittci-s who were too cowardly to fight has been the unwavering line of women who lashed them info going to the front with the whips of their scorn an onfempt. ‘They have gone might be warmly If. is only in times of peace that women are paciflsts. When Lhey sea their country meuaced or some of the hard-won gains of civilization about l0 be trodden underfoot they flame into o righteous auger that lights the fires in men's souls and strengthens their arms to no out find do batile for the right. And this is a matter of nature. For only strong women breed ctrong sons, and every hero l5 the child of a. heroin mother. None of us who are middle-aged has for otfen the part that Women A. M and 7 P. M Bible School tlvity, principally throiiilhi and. war equipment? Bllvrns C6CITlNS~At ilTJPEZTP ‘ qeptember 17. i939 i0 MY- tvfrs. William Collins, city. a son. WARD-At uic P.E.I. Hospital- September l8, 1939, to Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Word. city. a daughter. McLELLAN-At the P. E. l. Hos- pital, Sept. 19, i939. to and Mrs. Andrew Mcbellan, Monticello. s daughter. McQUAlD-At the P. E. I, Hos- pital, Sept. 20th. 19I_l9. t0 Mr. Mid Mrs. Joseph McQuaid, a duughtcr. LARTER — At the Charlottetown Hospital, Sept. 21, i939. t0 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Larter, city, a. dough- ter. IANAHAN-At the Charlottetown Hsopital, Sept. 22, 1939, to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence (Tim) Ranahan (nee Ella Poole), city, a daughter, RUSH-At the Charlottetown Hos- pital, Sept 22. 1939, to Mi‘. and Mrs. Frank Rush, city. a daughter. of Mrs. N. W. MacKinnon, South- ic Mr. and Mrs. Cherry Valley, o. daughter. MATHESON—At the PEI. pital, September 2i, i969 to ley River (nee Elinor daughter. ' MAKEIJZQFE‘ Munn). a BIBT — JAY — At the United Church Manse, Mount Stewart, on Sept. 20th, i939, but the Rirv. S J of Fanning Brock to Watson Jay_o_f_t.he_ some placc. __ DEATHS SHAW-At Uigg on 89M. 21st. 1939. Miss Isabella Show, fiztd 8'3 years Funeral today at 2 o'clock from the rcsidence of her nephew, Ernest Show, U188. to Uigg Baptist Church September 21st, 1939, Mrs. Rhchel MncLecd, sized 63 scars. from the residence of her daughter. Mrs, Mlnchin, New Perth, today Cemetery. 22, 1939, Carol Ann Harding months old. Only daughter of Mr and Mrs. Paul Harding, notice later. land Hospital, Friday, Sept. Church at Cape Traverse whcr flowers. September 33, i939. Donald New com Phone I49 l the speeding up of orders for munitions PRAUGllT-At the nursing home port, Lot 48, on September l5, 1939 Ireo Prnught, Hos- MI. and Mrs. Russel Matheson, Wheat- ' ' In QT my“ B‘ A" “m” m1“b°"h ‘a; Mrs. w. N. Tocmbs of North who! MMLEUD- At Charlottetown on Funrml at 2 p. m. hivfcrment Lorne Valley HARDING —At Summerside Sept 9 Funeral AULD-At the Prince Edward Ys- exports of live cattle to the 22, i939. Mrs Isaac Auld in her 84th year. The late Mrs. Auld is rest- ing at the Mclrsan Funeral Home until 10:30 Sunday morning, then leaving by motor for the United funeral service will be held, start- ing at 2 o'clock. Please omit NEWCOMBE—At the Prince Ed- ward Island Hospital on Saturday, bc, aged one vcar, son of Mr. and Mrs. Welter Newoomoa d Porthill v10 A. M. Cavendish Baptist ‘Church '3 P M. Prayer Meeting Tuesday evening 8 o'clock I L-147 0N RED CROSS EXECUTIVE- .Prov.'.*.c'al Commissioner J. J. ' Morris has been appointed to re-. pi-ieseni the Bfty Scouts Association of P, E I. on tit-e Central Com- mittee of the Red Cross. AMBIILANCE OBSTRUCTED - Wliiie enroule to the hospital lest‘ nigirt will an accident victim, N. D lvfcierinis amirbkincc was un- duly delayed bv certain motorists who pPrSiSied in keeping to the Cénlre of the road despite the fact that the ambulance driver kept blovvilvg his siren, it was reported ‘ov Mr. McLean. The Highway Traffic Act of Prince Edward Is- land provides that all traffic must come to a complete half, at the side of the road on hearing e siren. SERIOUSLY INJURED — Mr. William Saunders of Alexandra is a patient in the P. E I. hospital suffering from multiple bruises a- bout the head which were received when he was struck by a car st ‘8 P. M. yesterday evening Mr. Saunders was walking along the road at Soutlipof wllen the occid- ent cccurrorl. Last night Royal Canadian Mounted Police said they "would not divulge" the name of the driver of the car which struck Hhc mnn. The victim, a man about ,30 Wars of i-l.'!€. is married and has a fnmilv. Late inst ~night he was reported to be still unconscious. PQERSONALS Mrs. Eleanor Lawless, who has been visiting relativzz in Grand Rive-r nun KlPhmOlld has returned to her home in Boston. She was sc- compunled by her niece, Miss Mar- ion PraughL-S Mr. Leslie B, Toombs. of Vancou- ver, B. (2., is visiting his shire for a few days. Mr. Jolm D. Maclntyre and his son, Maurice, of Rosllndaie, Mass. are at Dresrnt visiting Mr. Mac- Infvres brother. Mr. P. Maclntyre of Newport, PEI. Dr. J. D. MacGulgiiri, Charlotte- town returned inst night from Montreal. Dr, and Mrs. J E. Fleming of Stanley Bridge, were visitors to the Cily yesterday (m business. FOX MEAT? Owing to higher costs on ‘cattle, due largely to heavy United States we are forced l to raise our prices on Beef lTripe. We regret this move but it is beyond our control. cl We have a limited supply of Jubilee at the old price. Beef Tripe — — — — 4% Jubilee Ground Meat --5 (F. 0. B. Charlottetown) played in the Great War. Many who are oder remember the breve women of both the North and South who in the Civil War gave them- selves unstiniedly to the service of their country and to the struggle for the right as they saw it. What they did the women over the sea are doing today. And it is what womEn will alurays do, for it l5 one of the miracles of the feminine temperament that it, always rises to meet an emergency. When the need arises it turns the weakling into a tower of strength. it make; the coward who is afraid of a mouse face a lion without a quiver of fear and meiamorphoses the leader of the Peace Lcague into a. militant fighter. So fur, we women of the United States are only confronting in our ‘thoughts the horrors with which our sisters acrossthe water are grappling in reality. Our men still come home to dinner every day and growl over the roast being either too rarc or too done. Our little children still play around our feet of an evening and gas masks are no part of a. bubys lnyetfc. We can still buy all the food we can pay for at the grocery, and all that we know about war is what we read in the newspapers. May God in His mercy keep us thus safe and prevent the terrible conflict that is devmtutlrig Europe from touching us. But the woman who does not realize that it will be a miracle if we do not become involv- ed in it is simply befooli herself. She is stultlfying herself by believ- ing what she wants to be leve and refusing to face the truth. For in this day there is no space nor distance nor isolation between nations. We are knit together by bonds of steel and electric wires that we could not break if we would Fan. sceemships and aeroplanes and radio have made u; one vast family and we can no longer ask: Am I my UYOglGlIS keeper? We are all brothers and responsible for each others con uc . And now i/wo great ideologies have clashed, The one believes in free- dom, ln decency of life, in worshiping God and keeping His wmmond- merits; the other believes in despotism, in taking away from the people all freedom of thought and action; it seeks to destroy religion and all that is spiritual 1n man. How long the struggle between these two be- liefs will be or which will triumph in the end no one may say. Therefore, it is this crisis that we women here at home face as well as our sisters abroad. and we must. prepare ourselves to meet it. We must keep ourselves calm and unembittcred as for a; this is poslblc in such a. time as hysteria. We must try to be Just in our judgments to sce thin s as clearly as we may through the fog of rumors with which the,,alr is _ We must try to live sanely, quietly and soberl , as be- fits those who are lookirgg‘ on at the greatest tragedy the worm lips ever seen and who know its sdow is over their houses also. I once knew on old women who, in fclling how she had met the vicissitudes of life, would ssy. "and l hesricned my heart.” It seems to me that that is s homely phrase that we might well adopt as a motto in these times of stress. Let us hearicn our hearts: let us call upon whatever reserve of strength and courage and fortitude emf faith and hope we have to meet whatcver the future has in store for us, secure in the faith that G0d's still in His heaven and that in His way, which may not, be our way. He will in the end make 1t ell right with the world. DORUIHY DIX 0F MUCH LOCAL INTEREST -Writing to a friend in Charlotte- town Mr. Thomas W. Morris, of Mlnudie, N. 3., says that the picture now running in the Prince Edward Theatre. "Susannah of the Mounties," should be of special in- terest no Charlottetown people be- cause there are three persons con- nected with it who are well known to many Charlottetown people. The flier of Mrs. Percy Pope. J. Far- rel Macdonald, one of the actors in the picture. spent two years at St. Dunstan! College. and will be re- membered bv menv in Charlotte- town. as he put on an Opera in the Mhsonic Opera House (now the Prince Edward) called "The Dccfcr of Air-enters." The fine points of the Mounlcd Police work in the nicture were supervised bv Bruce co-dlrector is Kenneth Macgowan. Cay-fume“ a ghm-logggmwn bay his 18th?!‘ WM P- fiflinfofi-h MW!- who was in the Mounted Police for gowsn, a Charlottetown man, bro- 5mm yen-l ANNOUNCING the opening of Kay's Yarn & Gift Shoppe SA TURDA Y, SEPT. 23rd Orders taken for all kinds of knitting. Come in and see our stock and samples A fair share of your business will be appreclaicd KATHRYN SHEIDOW, Prop. 173 Gt. George St. -‘ CANADA PACKERS LTD. l Charlottetown, P. E. l. - '~<t‘ s... c“... -_ 11-149-9-33-3 .p .-.1. .,- v rutcrvinuuiaiirsrrlitis- Ilia wman defend Wm Io and makes the dullest soul glimpse the divine . The beat of tne drums is in his aka, the glory of the 5b c1311’ Tram" flag before nLs eyes, the touch of his comrades’ shoulders warm Iqclnst r e . But the woman whose mm is in thc wllr has no llwh I115" 01 She must sit at home and helplessly wait with the waiting that makes ‘Dr. J. W. McKenzie. He iestifkd oping, fearing, dreading news from the front, Murder Charge 4 a badge Btlpendi mgrsltrm y Irv K. M, Mortln in the preliminary lhearing of gay w. Large of Chor- 4 town J with the murder wife on August l8 inst. They iwcre, Dr J. W McK Dr. . . o. l R. D. Howutt. Mrs. Florence Chandler and Joan P-cndler all of Ohlorlottewwn. . . , m‘ direct summation. Mr. J. J. ' “ ‘ . K. 0. .-= ’ 0'1 5°‘ thc accused, | Pint witness on the stand was I that ho ma called to the Chandler residence on August 18. Q. What did you find there? A. I went in the front doer and fMlilKl a man and woman lying on the floor in a passage way between |tho front door and the kitchen. [The woman was lying to my loft on her back and the man was ly- ing on my right. close to the woman on his face. ‘Ilhclr heads were towards the front door There was blood over the fr"; of the wo- man’; dress. She had a pulse, the pupils of her eyes were dilated amid I pronounced her dead. The man was still alive. Tllwre were blood stains over his chest. ‘turned him over he ope eyes and moved his lips. I noticed a revolver by the woman's legs. I ordered nn ambulance and short- ly after this Dr. Hewett arrived and I turned the case over to him. Q. About. what time of til-e day did you arrive A About 2 15. Q. Did you do anything further? A. I examined the women's heart Q Did you examine any wounds? A. I couldn't on scoouhii oii’ the blood. Dr. Rowatt Dr. R. D Hewett. the next wit- ness. slated he was called to the Chandler home on Aug. l8. Q. Did you go alt once? A. Yes as quickly as I could. Q. What was the mrmiber of the house? A. I don't know exactly. It was either 8 or 8. I knew the residence anyway. Q, What did you see when you arrivedi? A. I saw many of the City Po- lice surrounding the hallway and two people on the floor in the cl t British dc Q. Did you maike any examina- tion? A. Dr McKenzie pronounced the woman dead and I identified the body of the man as that of Mr. Roy Large. Q, Did you know the man? A, yes. Q. Do you see him in the court- rocm. A Yes Q. What else did you see? A. I noticed that the woman was dead and that, Large was still alive. Phoned the hospital to ex- pect a patient. by ambulance. I noticed blood on the man's chest but made no further examination. I proceed-ed to the hospital and examined the patient in the oper- ating room. I found two wounds and ordered an X-ray to ascer- tain if any foteign body was in the chest. The X-ray proved nega- tive. I then decided that the bullet had passed thmumh his chest and ordered him detained at the hospital pending treatment of the wound Q. Where were the wounds? Witness than described how bullet had entered on left side of - M. End of exile: The Duke and Duchess of Windsor back on English soil. This ublcphoto shows the former King Edward and hi: Amer- ican born wife, the former Wallis Simpson. at the country home or a friend in Sussex, where they were brought from Frwnco on u . ,.\..v.,.,...,,,,.,,_,,_,...tm_‘ chest and described course it took. J J. Johnston councillor for sc- cilsed asked witness about exit of bullet and witness ansWeIed ‘him. Q. What is your opinion of the cause of wounds. u A. I do not. imderstond the ques- on. Q. Would you say that the same weapon caused both wounds A. Yes in my opinion one object ller only clothes s jersey, loaned by a seamnn, and l Mlflllfl r050- lll-month-old Nicola Lubitsch, daughter of screen producer Ernst Lubltnch, is pictured aboard the American freighter City of I1int as, with 222 other survivors of the torpcdocd liner Athenla. it reached Halifax, N.S., With Nicola In her nurse, Consola. Strob- rneicr, who, when the torpedo struck. wrapped the sleeping child in n blanket and rushed her to the lifeboat. inflicted both wounds. "card TwiFsiiI-t: Mrs. Chandler's Evidence Next wltncs called was Mrs. Florence Chandler mother of the dead woman. Q. Where do you live? a. tJNPIeasanLH-tifitxreefih A . ere .g ere on ug. l8. A Yeayou Q. Who lived with you? A. My two daughters Cora and Joan and two sons. Robert William and Carla's child David. Q. Hecl Core. been living there right along? A. No only since June. Q. Prior to that time wherehatl she been living? A. On POWTLBJ Street with Roy Lam. Q. How many shots did you hear? A, I can only swear tc two, I was so confused. . After the Police come what did you do A. I went out to the sun porch and had nothing more to do with it IQ. Do you keep firearms your house. N . o. Q. Did your daughter keep fire- arms? A. N0. Q. Did any other members of your house keep firearms? A. No ‘There was nothing of that description in the house. Miss Joan Chandler The next witness called was ill Q. From June till Ali-gust did Miss Joan Shlrfey Chandler. your daughter and child live at Q. Where do vou live? A your house? Pleasant 8t. A_ Yes. Q. Were you home on the day Q. Was she there on the day of of Aug. l8. A Yes. , Aug. l8? Q. Who was with vou? A, Yes we had dinner together, A. Cora, David and mother. Joan, David, Cora and myself. RD- Q. Who was David A. Cow's ‘cert was wway working and Wil- baby, linm was working at the ex- Q. After dinner whet did you hibltion. do? Q’. What did you do Liter dln- A, I Amped finish Hie work iihen ner went to the sun porch to listen to the radio. Q. What part of the Sun Porch in relation to the front door? A The other side. Q. Your house is on the east side of Pleasant St. which Si. is the front door nearest Eustim or Longworth Ave? A. Euston St. Q, WT-iich St. were you closer to? A. Longworim Ave. Q. Wlhot did you do then? A After A. After dinner I want up stains and fell asleep. I woke about 2.10; before I got down stairs I heard a shot, and icrrible screams and ran down as fest. as I could. Q. What did you find? A. I found Cora. and Roy La e on the floor. r didn't think the was dead and tried to coll her. There was blood coming out the left side of her body. I called on thewphone for help mid to get a oc r. , radio program was over Q. Was anyme else there. at 1.46. A, Yes Joan was in the Sun Q. How did you know the time? Poroh and she mct me at the foot A. By the 15 minute programs of the stairs. on the radio. "The Road of Life" Q. You celled on the phone for program had inst finished and the help? telephone rang. 1' got up to answer A. Ya. it but Oors got there first and ah- Q. Where was Con’! diild A. I think be was in the dining room When I put my hand under her heed the little fellow was standing there. I handed him to can. Q. Did my of the neighbors swered it. She shut both doors. I did not know what went on until she finished. I asked her and she told me than- Mr. Trainor admonished witness that she was not allowed to tell what she heard from her sister. come in? Q. What lmpoened lhen? Yea. Mrs. Teed was the first A She went back out to the kit- to arrive. elven. Q. Did anybody do anything to Q. Where was David? the bodies. A. He followed her out to the A. No. It seemed the Police were there in a minulc. Notihlm was moved Q. Do you recall Mrs. Ghendler Whether ybu heard the shot or screams first? A. I'm prett the shot 1 he...“ shot and screams. sun porch. I went back and fell nsleci: and was woken-ed by n shot. I Jumped up. met mother at the foot of the stairs and she passed David over to me, Q. What did you find? A. I found two bodies on the floor between the kitchen snd the front. hall. y sure it was first another Liniie . Then what? A. writer Q. what d A. She tried Q. Did she? A. N0. ' Q. What did Mother asked for a Ill-l ‘I id she do with it? to get Oora to drlnl you do then? A. I went back out to thc llm porch with David ploy-capo 2 ycats. Owing to the Did any neighbors come in‘! Yes. . Did the Police come? A Y?!’ . Did you do anything fulfil"- N Iflow old is Gore's baby? illness of 0011"" Cordwell, who is n. patient in i111’: hospital, he was unia-ble to test . and the hearing til "next Friday. was rrmnntied Hi1- nnmn-r 663.com BAP“ r0 FETAL-LIKE SMOOTHNESS “The look of old leaisher is Priz- ed in the library but not in ti" complexion," says n. bcnuty Elmer“ "Don't let a glowing tan fade inw a snllcrw. muddy tan." shelwefnli ‘mm is the time to eiiminw m” pietely all traces of the will!" eneri, windblown sppearmi" “hi” was smart. with slacks and P" suits.” The expert recommends Siwdgtl bleaching treatments in Pm" u your regu‘ar beauty routines. Y°d =hould begin them right 110W ‘m’, continue until your cmnriiflw", white, soft and petal-smooth e881’; After thorough cieensiiiil- "P1- a bleaching cream, mold it into t l skin for several move with soft smooth on a little minutes, the" re‘ tissues. N” skin clenrinl cream and leave it on 7°? “mm an hour. 1f you do not linve thi! type of preparation sPPly 1* “m” according to directions. put rich cream info i866 “d Alwayi tlirogi after a. mask treatment. 0i cmtmfi End-of-summer masks ough include bleaching DrVWTm-l‘ 1m you make your own, of 08'4"” almond meul, moisten with fir“ lemon juice instead of WM“- “n: apply in the regular manner. If you likke a. few drops of musk. Du‘ _ era an in the boy lemon of beaten white and a if?" m“? in the bowl of wlilpncd yolk Am cleansing fnce and i-hroni. palm“ a layer of white-wlth-lemon. dry, then apply R "m" with-lemon. Repeat all of the e58 twenty minutes ,Q was it s women's voice? A. It woe my dcugfnwl" voice. Q. who wore they? A. My sister Corp cmd R0!“ lei of yolk in layer! “ml in used. Rest 7° while the mo" burdens. Rinse ‘off with wri‘ WEN!-