- n......_.4ua»- 3- u-c-.-rs»;-uv_1~,v 1-,: _ _ ' I 9 There are 229 years of Ayr- ahire breeding history behind V this picture of five Prince Ed- ward Island people. Snapped at the Prince Edward Island Aryshlre Breeders field day .B,aturday, they are, left to Montague, Ch 229 YARs IN YRSHIRE BREEDING ! right. W. A. Moase, Kensing- ' ton, the host, with 45 years; Mrs. George L. Boswell, Frenchfort, 52 years. (the Bos- wall herd was started by her I husband. the late (icoi'.L'c L. Boswail and is cat‘ricd on now ‘town Ladies Return From European Tour VMONTAGUE — Miss Shirley MIcGregor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Mat-Gregor, Mont- ague has returned from an ex- tonded trip to Great Britain and continental Europe. accompanied by Miss Latter of Charlottetown and Chlgary. _Early in April they sailed from Halifax to Southampton, Eng-" land. From London thcy went on s conducted tour of Italy where they visited many centres of in- terest. Leaving the tour at Mii- . EASTERN RIEFS IS PATIENT Ray Kennedy, Murray Har- bour North is a patient in the Kings County Hospital. ARE GUESTS Mr. and Mrs Charles Ha” of ,l traffic in Rome and Paris. the‘ Baltimore, Md.. are guests of ‘rs. Hall's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Wigginton, Monta- gue. SPENDING LEAVE Dan MacKen7.ie of the Canad- ian Army of Chilliwack, BC... is spending his leave with l',; mo- ther. Mrs. Jennie Mac-Kcnzie, Montague. Following his leave he is being posted to Camp Gagetown, N.B. AT COMMERCIAL CROSS Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mclnnis. Watertown, Mass., art spending their vacation at the Mclnnis cottage, Commerical Cross. T0 ONTARIO Miss Audrey Llewellyn a n d Mrs. Temple Llewellyn. Monta- gue left by plane for Toronto and other cities in Ontario. [8 RECUPERATING Miss Florence MacDonald, of Montague has been a patient in the Kings County Hospital but Is now recuperating at home. LEAVE ON TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Stuart and daughter Kathleen, Whim Road, left Thursday morning for Bris- tol, N.H., where they will visit Mr. Stuart's relatives and then go on to Toronto. They will then go to Kingston to pick up their son Robert and bring him home. VISITING PEJ. Rev. Ernest Thompson with Mrs. Thompson and son Alan, Cambridge. Mass., are visiting Prince Edward Island for the first time and were much im- pressed with the scenic beauty. '1‘hey were guests of Mr. A no Mrs. Reuben Watts, York ‘and lit. and Mrs. Cecil Campbell fid family. I srnnr nouns? turn. Allan Nelson and children Itonald, Shelley, Susan and Q9;-ge of Montague have re- home after spending a filidoy with her parents at Roc- Point. .‘ VISITING MOTHER. smes Dewar. principal of Ir- hrldgo School, Ironhridge, Ont, chitin; his mother, Mrs. Wil- Dewar. Montague. Last Mr. Dewar accompanied his mother. also Mr. and . Kenneth Dewar and M r. Mrs. Stewart Dewar spent 'fi5m*shlo holiday motorina Cabot ‘rs-ail. -'—riutu- Shc w a s : Thelma i ,an, they continued to Austria, I Holland. Denmark, Sweden, Nor- ‘way and on to Germany and IS\\itzerlantl and l“i‘ance, whore lthc-_\~ spent a full day in Paris. I After returning to London they visited with friends in Pl_vinout.h. : Next on their itinerary was Scot- ; land where Shirley visited a girl ‘ trienti in Glasgow. From Edin- burgh afternoon tours took them 3 through Aberdeen. lnverness, ‘ Loch Ncss, the Isle of Skye also I the western Highlands and Loch ‘Lomond. Baimoral castle was seen from a distance, also Crai- Ithie church where the R o y al ‘family often worships. At this point. Thclma flew back to P.E.l. while Shirlcy pro- ceeded to N o r t h e r n Ireland where she spent some time in ,Belfast then in Dublin. I After some sightseeing in . north and south Wales and more ‘visiting in London, also attend- ;ing several musical shows and lsecing a Shakespearean play at ‘ the ()ld Vic Theatre. Shirley sail ted home the last of .iuly, arriv- t ing at Qwbec and procooding to ‘Charlottetown by train. , The girls were impressed with the amount of English spoken in most European countries, the ‘marvellous sccncry throughout (the trip, the beautiful by her son George): George I Matheson, Wheatley River, 45 years; J. A. MacDonald, Glas- gow Road, 45 years and stand- ing, P. A. Mclsaac, Souris with 42 years. S’S|DE MAN (Continued from page 1) frey Mitchell of Lancaster. N.B., dropped out after clearing 12 I Groom was the third Mari- time athlete to pick up a fir I in the two-day trials, but neither 'of the other two winners ap- lproachod (‘anadian native ‘outs and were expected to be passed up by selectors. ; Howard Jackson of Bridge- :town, N.S., won the men's hop, stop and jump Monday with a leap of 47 feet, 214.» inches. He beat favored Fred Wyers Lethbridge, Alta., who has jumped 48 feet, 63/4 inches. But Monday he could only manage .45 feet. 2 inches. l Jackson's jump was 2 feet, 10 lint-hes short of the Canadian I 4 I native record ‘ St. , S . s. I Saturday, Sandra Barr of ‘Stephen. N.B., won the women’ ,high jump at 5 feet, 315 inche I I)II)N’T RUN Sprinter John Whiteley of‘ Moncton, NB., qualified for the , final of the men's 220, but was: iscratched from the event be-E cause he was not feeling well‘ enough to run again. He placed ,third in his heat with a time ‘of 22.7. Joe Skier of Halifax did not qualify for the 220 final,I finishing fourth in his heat. Another Halifax entry, Mike Noble. was seventh in the men's I of st ;yesterday, it was learned from) I‘€(.'- ‘ I I Veteran Liberal S.S. iicssian, AND NEWS PAG Montague, Souris, Kings County 4 The Guardian. Charlottetown, Tues. Aug. 7, 1902. I,No Opponent t jSightecI Yet iFor MuIIaIIy It looks as though John Mullally. Souris, might receive an acclimation at" the Liberal nominating convention for Rings in Georgetown on Thursday,‘ August 9. | There was so sign of anyone fering against him up to noon! l I Major Reid, Rollo Bay, prcsidcnt ‘ of the Kings County Liberal ’ E Association. , Mr. Mullnlly made a strong lshowlng at the convention In‘ Kings for the last federal clec- ,tion, when he lost out to . jKI('I(Il8lTl. Souris who said fol-‘ .lowing the election In .lune that) ‘ he would not offer again as a, i candidate. , 'S.S. Hessian (To Represent Legislature ’ I‘.J l QC, MLA, will represent the P.E.I. Legislative .‘\V'~I‘IT1I)I.\Y at the Commonwealth Parliamen- tary Association meeting in Lagos. Nigeria next month. it was learned from Acting Pre- mier Andrew B. .\-lat-Rae. He * will be in Lagos from Oct. 13 to Nov, 15. The Montague lawyer who was I first elected to the Legislature ‘in 1919 is the dean of all Can. adian parliamentarians in provin- Enmish 880-yard final, after qualifying ‘W31 |(‘i1islatlu'cs or House of 1' rose gardens and the friendliness “'IIh 3 ‘I931 W" "I 1754 I01‘ “Md Icnmmlms in 5" far as “W dale ‘of the people they met Thelma has returned. to Cal-'.CI'others set a Canadian 09911 M‘ tgary where she is on the staff !of the Canadian Imperial Bank [of Commerce and next week I Shirlcy returns to Halifax, wltm-9 ‘ fifth in their semi-finals of the world records for the most rain- Ishc is employed with the Bank ‘,of Nova Scotia I I lM.ARlLYN l (Continued from page 1) ,manager, said: “Marilyn didn't ihave the temperament to com- mit suicide." Paula Strasherg. the star's dramatic coach and constant lcompanion on movie sets, com- imcnted in New York: “Marilyn had no worries at all." “It ad to be an accident," commented Marilyn's publicist, Arthur Jacobs. “She had three big deals going for her. and every chance that Something’: Got to Give would be resched- uled." NO MONEY WORRIES The actress had no real money worries. She retained percentages in her last few films and though some were poor grossers. Some Like it Hot earned her a large, steady in- come. She was discussing a mu- sical with Gene Kelly, could name her price in Las Vegas or on television. Bcsidc her bed was a telegram offering a role in an Anita Loos play. Marilyn Monroe's own com- ent he life can be scanned for evidence that she may or may not have wanted to seek death. Nothing will be conclusive. Bit those who hold to the suicide theory could cite these lines from her last inter- view: "It might be kind of a relief to be finished. It's sort of like I don't know what kind of a yard you’re running. but then you're at the finish line and you sort of sigh — you've made it. . . ." tplace. Toronto East York's Bill ,1‘:-cord of 1:491) in the 880 final. ‘ ; Gwen Hills a n (1 Charlotte 5 Baldwin of Halifax each finished jwomr-n’s . .. Hills had qualified with s second in her, -heat with 26.6 seconds, while . Illliss Baldwin ran the same ‘ (time in her heat to place third. , I Bob Simmons of Charlotte- jtown, was entered in the discus. The 24-year-old athlete failed to . qualify. IProbabIe Pitchers, By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSI ' Probable pitchers for today‘! -major league games. American League I wonurs WETTEST of his first election is concern- Chorrapunji. In di a, hold; fall in it single month (366 inches) and a single year (1,042 inches). ' Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irritating? Don‘t be embsn-used by loo e ml by holding plates morn . gummlyfiooey, pasty tsato or team: . It's I k inc (non-acid). Got ns'T‘s:s.'ra at my drug ountsr I Minnesota (Pascual 15-9) at New York (Terry 15-9). Detroit (Bunning 11-7) at Cleveland (Grant 4-4). Los Angeles (Bellnsky 7-6) at Boston (Wilson 8-4). Baltimore (Hall 4-2) at: Chi- cago (Herbert 10-7). Kansas City (Fischer 2-3) at Washington (Rudolph 5-5) (N). National League , Philadelphia (Mahaffey 15-9) (at San Francisco (Marichal -8). St. Louis (Bx-oglio 8-4) at Pittsburgh (Gibbon 2-2) (N). Chicago (Koonce 9-4) at Mil- waukee (Burdette 9-7) (N). Cincinnati (Jay 16-9) at Hous- ton (Johnson 8-12) (N). New York (Anderson 3-12) at Los Angeles (Drysdsie 20-4) (N). 54 Ch! eomaryauz MERIT MAN Port Closing Puts Squeeze On Katanga ELISABETHVILLE . (AP) - Clarence Roche, grandnephews of the deceased. Present in the sanctuary were Rt, Rev. James Rooney, Rev. Charles McCarthy. Rev. John Kelly and Rev. Leo- nsrd Mcxcnnn. Interment was in tho church cemetery where service was conducted by Rev. Michael Rooney assisted by Rev. Edmund Roche and Rev. Clar- ence Roche. Pallbearers w are six nephews of the deceased; an Gerald Rooney, James Rooney, Leltoy Rooney, Francis Rooney. Joseph Roche and Owen Dooli- crty. GREAT PROJECT Australia's Snowy Mountain scheme will divert waters through the the -dryinwriotstsoostofsooo,- sss.oou. The Katsnga provincial govern- ment expressed belief Monday ‘that United Nations closing of Elisabethvillo Airport is the (first step in international pres- sure to end the province's seces- sion from tho rest of The I I t O ongo. Under an order issued by tho UN Sunday. only UN plsnsa can land at the airport. Sabenn. the Belgian airline with major operations in this mlnersl rich province, said the order was more for-ranching. Sabenn said it had been noti- fied by UN authorities here its planes were barred from land- lng anywhere in Katanga. A UN spokesman said the air- port was closed at the request I i.) r SAVINGS sttiliice AUTO ‘& FIRE INSURANCE floss 894-8132 or sub’ EDIT Immune: 186 ‘lliolimutlt 811003 of the central government of Tho conic h Looooyivilio. n omen Acton «min I vumph over the United States. . the fifth set and A site has been chosen in Souris for the first government -built senior citizen h o u I I n g ‘ units, Welfare and Labor Minis- ter Henry Wedge said yester- day. On the two-scrs site on Chap- ol Street, which was donated I for the project. the housing cor- poration plans to erect a build- ing that will have four self-con- taincd apartment units. I, Mr. Wedge met last night with E corporation directors C.R. Mc- 1 Quaid and Keith Pickand to I complete an application which" will be sent to Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation, who Site Selected For Seniors’ Housing In Sou ris Announced will loan 90 per cent of tho con- struction cost under the limited dividend section of the Nstional Housing Act. The provincial gov. emmcnt Puts up the additional 10 per cont of the cost. The application will contain Plot p l u n s and specifications and show that there is a need for such housing in the area. "This is a pilot pro;|oct,". said Mr. Wedge. “and we are start- inl out with four units. If wo feel there is a need for more -' housing of this type in the area we will make further applies- tion for funds." CC C the Ilusosos 8-1. It made s formality of tho final singlsu. match between Chuck , Mcxtnloy of St. 140.. and Antonio Pslofox. your-old Moxioso utudoo at Corpus Christin tron.) Unl- varsity. The Mexicans whoa two for players Osuus sud Pslsfox ro- thslr twain: on Amort- (in college courts. on prob- ubly so sssinst the formidshls Yusoslsvs in the American sono final. the match to ho played hero Aug. 17-19. '1‘he,Ii-on Curtain Yugoslav: were unsblo to ohsllonlo in the European zone. Thoy have two Plllc and Boris Jopilnovlc. ‘gotnod tho Wimbledon doubles s t Inol. . The A m o r i c s n champions must but Sweden. the Euro- pooh champion. and India the champions of the Far East. to qualify for s shot at the.Aus- -trslians in the challenge into in December. #5- Mexico Sidelines U.S. In Zone Davis Cup Play MEXICO CITY (AP)-—RafaelI Osuna stood off a fighting come- back by Jon Douglas of Santa; Monica, Calif., Monday for a, 9-7. 6-3, 6-8, 3-6, 6-1 victory[ which gave Mexico its first. American Zone Davis Cup tri- Douglas came off the ropes after dropping the first two sets and turned what started out to be a rout into a bh-rilling ‘ battle. Osuna. A student at the Uni- versity of Southern California, appeared on the verge of ex- haustion until he found a mys- terious ncw source of energy in ‘, thrilled a sell-l , out crowd of 2,300 in the Chap- ultepec Sports Center with his blazing finish. when Douglas. after fighting off two match points. finally hit the ball over the base line for the final point, the boisterous crowd rushed onto the court and carried Osuna off on their shoulders. NEW LOW It marked a new, low cbb in the US. declining tennis for- tunes. Although they had failed to make (the challenge round in the last two years. never before in 62 years of Davis Cup play had United States players failed to win the title in their own zone. 0suna'a triumph over the out- gunned former Stanford Univer- sity quarterback clinched the SIGNAL! ODD! An operator known as the "tic - tac" msn flashes odds tracks. changes by semaphore to book- ie: at English home racing Giants Crush I '"" PI-iil|ios‘9-2, . I: can cannons Willie May: of In I‘:-snelloo Egan wsllopod two homers y as the hints knocked out 11 hits to defeat. Philodolohis Phillios 9-2 in the only day action in major Iosguss. d M A Th wt narrows I nu- lfs ‘jbotiglhrs load (in th:i:.I; t ‘ on o our 0 ocgr tho so‘ctImd-plscs Giants. Maya opened with homer No. 33 in the first main! off starter . -sud loser Dallas Green and tho major leagues’ home run loader followed with No. in the sec- ond off southpaw Billy Smith. both times with I run on base. Willis singled to the fourth. fifth and oi¢hth.1he 8013011!‘ 33' knocking in his 100th run of the Billy Pierce. accuiwd Mm Chicago White Sox last winter. hurlod his 10th victory for tho ‘£ 0 Q stliuutoo ioths only game. sclrmlod. - in tho Amsrtoso Ialluo, . toll state was scheduled. Min. nuoto ms at New York. no. the Anlolos was at Boston, Detroit was at Cleveland. Kansas City. wssot Wsshlutou. sud Bslu. - more was st Chiluo. 031'! NEW. 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