1
1
y
!,..
i
"il
ivi
v
,
y4ijJtsii
Bra
Request
Fulfilled
Odds
W
Ends
Soli
Treatment
by
Chinese
Mot
Too
Good,
First
Released
Canadian
PoVV
Asserts
CUSHING,
Okla.
(APi
Al
MEN'S
SHOE.S
J
Dress
and
Work
styles
SALE
PUlCE
0l
LADIES'
PUMPS
and
SANDALS
All
colors.
Wide
selection
s.l
Boys'
Oxfords
and
Kiddies'
Shoes
SALE
FKIC'E
...
Call
at
our
office
or
PHONE
Ladies'
Pumps
Kiddies'
Play
Shoes
Si
I
len
D.
Fitchett,
secretary-manager
of
the
Cushing
Chamber
of
Commerce,
received
a
strange
request
from
a
Colorado
woman.
"I
hate
to
be
such
a
bother,"
she
wrote,
"but
I
simply
have
been
unable
to
find
the
brand
of
brassiere
I
want
out
here.
It's
the
new
inflated
kind."
Fitchett's
daughter
easily
located
the
article
and
the
store
mailed
it
to
the
Colorado
customer.
ANKARA,
Turkey
XCP)
Ma.
Sabiha
Ookcen,
Turkey's
foremost
woman
pilot,
heads
a
group
of
seven
Turkish
air
cadets
who
will
spend
three
weeks
studying
aviation
techniques
in
the
U.S.
With
Crepe
anil
Ncolite
Soles
SAM.
pkh
e
1"
"1
'
-I
taken
to
a
camp
near
the
Yalu
River
in
northernmost
Korea
on
May
26
"but
on
June
12
they
took
me
to
a
hospital
outside
the
camp
where
a
Chinese
doctor
operated
on
my
legs,
removing
shell
fragments.
"The
treatment
there
was
ok.
I
was
there
until
Aug.
1
when
I
was
started
south
1
was
there
when
the
armistice
was
signed.
They
announced
it
over
the
hospital
squawkbox
but
the
fellows
took
it
quietly.
That
night
we
got
extra
rations,
includinft
chicken,
to
celebrate.
"Before
we
left,
the
Chinese
wanted
us
to
have
a
party
They
.ut
out
tables
for
us
and
gave
us
extra
food
and
six
beers,
and
two
bottles
of
wine
for
every
eight
men
as
well
as
!0
packages
of
20
cigarets
to
last
up
for
the
journey."
RESCUES
TIE
Pelletier
sported
his
regimental
tie
when
he
(morgei
o'U
fil(l
bargains
galore
at
astounding
lWprj!J
Call
early
and
avoid
disappointment,
"i
By
BILL
BOSS
MUNSAN
(CP)
Cpl.
Joseph
Pelletier
of
Chatham,
Ont,
first
Canadian
prisoner
released
in
the
post-armistice
exchange,
said
Wednesday
he
killed
four
Chinese
before
he
was
captured
May
2.
Grinning
broadly,
the
Canadian
was
in
the
second
truck
reaching
Panmunjom.
He
had
been
listed
as
missing
and
believed
a
prisoner.
Recovered
from
burp
gun
and
grenade
wounds-
in
both
legs,
Pelletier
told
interviewers
he
was
in
C
Company
of
the
Royal
Canadian
Regiment's
3rd
Battalion
the
riight
of
May
2
when
a
Chinese
barrage
hit
his
position.
He
was
alone
in
the
trench
as
his.
two
Canadian
comrades
were
on
patrol.
"Hundreds
of
Chinese
came
over
our
position,
at
least
they
seemed
to
be
hundreds,"
said
Pelletier.
"I
know
I
killed
four
who
came
into
my
trench.
BANDAGED
WOUNDS
"Then
three
Chinese
grabbed
me
and
took
me
down
the
forward
slope
into
the
valley.
There
were
nine
other
Canadians
there.
They
bandaged
my
from
the
Communist
truck
in
Communist
prison
garb.
When
he
appeared
for
the
Interview
in
a
Canadian
uniform
he
stiil
had
It.
The
Chinese
took
it
from
me
once,"
he
said.
"But
I
found
it
was
in
the
camp
commandant's
ofiice.
So
I
went
in
for
some
books
and
stole
it
back."
Major
L.
H.
Edwards
of
Three
Hiiis,
Alta.,
an
army
doctor
who
examined
Pelletier
here,
said
he
had
superficial
wounds
in
the
right
arm
and
right
thigh,
both
perfectly
healed.
He
said
the
returned
prisoner's
general
con-liuiuii
is
good.
MEALS
ADEQUATE
The
26-year-old
soldier,
released
almost
exactly
three
months
after
he
was
tukrn
prisoner,
said
the
meals
his
captors
provided
were
adequate.
They
consisted
mainly
of
pot
i-to
s
and
rice
but
were
well
cooked
by
three
U.S.
army
pris-tiiors
who
had
been
cooks.
A
taxi
driver
for
five
years
in
Chatham
before
enlisting,
Cpl.
Pelletier
said
today
he
intend
to
remain
in
the
army.
From
Munsan
Pelletier
will
go
to
Britannia
camp
for
a
eom-jjicte
medical
check,
documentation
and
re-outfitting.
Th-j
FASHION
FOOTWEA
fly
to
j
'
KETCHIKAN
'
AND
Picturesque
Welcome
Awaits
Queen
Elizabeth
wounds.
Then
we
had
to
walk
;
through
their
positions
into
the!
ill
WFT
T
TMfiTnM
Now
!7eal!inri
area
behind.
We
spent
the
night
.Renters)
When
the
Queen
I
Munsan
formalities
simply
were
to
make
sure
he
was
fit
to
travel
!
and
be
interviewed.
visits
the
Crown
colony
of
Fiji
and
the
protected
state
of
Tonga
during
her
forthcoming
Commonwealth
tour
she
will
be
the
first
reigning
British
sovereign
there.
"Next
day
they
took
me
on
a
stretcher
to
a
camp
about
35
miles
behind
the
lines.
I
stayed
there
until
May
26
but
it
was
May
12
before
they
changed
the
dressings
on
my
legs."
Previously,'
Pelletier
told
officers
his
treatment
by
the
Chinese
was
"not
too
good."
Pelletier
said
that
he
was
to
set
foot
upon
that
tropical
and
'
semi-tropical
empire
of
island
set
in
the
vast
sweep
of
the
blue'
Pacific
ocean.
I
Details
of
the
festivities
taking
place
during
the
Royal
visit
have
not
yet
been
announced
but
the
Such
Smooth
Scotch
So
m
r
Mellow
and
"Rich
;
Queen
and
the
Duke
of
Edin
SUPPORT
tV-;.v..T.,;.l
j
HEAR
Myrtle
M.
ROPER
TOMORROW
or
9:30
a.m.
and
Harry
ARCHIBALD
ot
6:15
p.m.
-over
CFPR
burgh
can
be
assured
of
the
warmest
and
most
picturesque
of
welcomes
from
these
Pacific
islanders.
The
Fijians
are
noted
for
their
melodious
singing,
their
artistic
performances
in
the
traditional
Meke
dance,
and
their
age-old
Kava
drinking
ceremony
which
is
a
colorful
feature
of
all
important
functions.
At
the
Installation
of
a
new
SOCIAL
CREDIT
B.C.
Needs
Social
Credit
Representation
In
Ottawa
1
v.
i
;i
1
a
Start
your
day
with'
NABISCO
SHREDDED
WHEAT!
.
You
get
satisfying
nourishment
for
Just
a
few
tents!
y
,A
nourishing
breakfast
helps
you
breeze
through
your
day's
work
with
plenty
of
energy
left
for
fun
in
the
evening!
That's
why
you'll
want
to
start
your
day
with
wholesome
NABISCO
SHREDDED
WHEAT.
Made
from
pure
100
whole
wheat,
high
in
protein,
even
includes
the
bran
and
wheat
germ!
Gives
you
'
j
solid
food
nourishment
when
you
need
it
most
in
the
morning.
Tomorrow,
serve
;
i
delicious,
hearty
NABISCO
SI
IREDDED
v
WHEAT
...
to
help
you
last
longer,
(
"Really
governor,
Fijian
chiefs
always
pledge
their
loyalty
and
allegiance
to
the
crown
at
a
ceremonial
Kava
drinking,
and
the
Queen
and
the
Duke
may
well
WhiskvU
ike
part
in
the
custom.
The
Fiji
islands,
lying
at
the
crossroads
of
the
South
Pacific.;
if
Social
Credit
1b
not
to
be
.
hamperpcf
in
the
governing
of
.'
B.C.
With
federal
co-opera-1
tion.
B.C.
authorities
can
speed
this
province's
development,
encourage
industrial
expansion,
eliminate
waste
and
extravagance,
and
give
B.C.
people
a
better
deal!
Only
Social
Credit
members,
answerable
only
to
their
constituents,
can
obtain
the
required
co-operation
I
E
Don't
Just
Say
'SCOTCH
-Ask
For
.
.
.
are
mountainous
and
of
volcanic
origin.
The
peaks
rise
abruptly
from
the
shore
to
higher
than
4,000
feet.
Palm
trees
abound
in
the
main
parts
of
the
Fiji
group
which
comprises
320
islands
of
varying
sizes,
ranging
from
the
great
Island
of
Viti
Levu,
where
Suva
lies,
covering
4,011
square
miles,
to
nwre
rocks
a
few
yards
in
finish
stronger!
-
Tfrr
VOTE
are
About
105
pf
the
islands
inhabited.
Steamer
Prince
Rupert
SAILS
FOR
VANCOUVER
ind
InlcrmediRte
Vorlo
Each
Thursday
at
11:15
p.m.
Tor
KETCHIKAN
Much
of
Fiji's
early
history
is
soaked
in
the
strife
of
tribal
wars
and
bloodshed,
but
with
the
FOR
YOUR
SOCIAL
CREDIT
CANDIDATE
SHOW
OTTAWA
THAT
H.C.
IS
LOOKING
TO
A
BETTER
FUTURE!
This
advertisement
lasued
by
the
B
C.
Social
Credit
Campaign.
Committee
spread
of
Christianity
the
"fero
Contents
26'2
ounces
cious
and
dangerous,
habitual
and
determined
cannibals"
as
one
writer
referred
to
the
Fijians
less
than
a
century
ago
were
subdued,
and
their
energies
bent
1
Mother,
You
Can
Save
Money
at
Family
Breakfasts
...
WITH
THIS
LOW-PRICE
CEREAL!
Breakfast
need
not
be
an
expensive
meal
if
you
do
as
thousands
of
budget-conscious
women
are
doing.
Serve
your
family
nourishing
NABISCO
SI
IREDDED
WI
IEAT.
This
famous
Canadian
cereal
costs
less
than
2
a'
serving
!
'
;
A
Prefer
,pt.4tel
t
Just
pour
on
Tailing
water,
drain
off
quickly
and
serve.
So
delicious,
so
eay!
This
advi
rtisement
is
not
published
or
displayed
by
the
Liquor
Control
Board
or
by
the
Gavernmcnt
of
British
Columbia.
WEDNESDAY
Midnight
Comfort
and
Service
to
the
more
peaceful
pursuits.
Pot
reservations
wrUe
i
ail
t
ity
or
!:
it
oih-
MANCHESTER.
England
P-
?l...ce
Kupe
t,
B
C
,
i
Bens
Leech,'
long-time
report?
5
for
the
Manchester
'
Guard'
a
ti
I
died
in
his
80th
year.
Leecl
4.k
9
started
newspaper
work
33
year
ago
with
a
free-lance
agency
working
12
hours
a
clay.
t
rf
r
r
-
-
-
r
.
tf
d
FOR
EVERY
it-
1
1
:$
$
O.QO
CASH
ORDER
THIS
WEEK-END
WE
WILL
GIVE
YOU
I
FOOD
ESSENTIALS
-
Xvx
XXV
wx
5;
6
DISCOUNT
NABISCO
SHREDDED
WHf
CAR80HYDR"'"1"'
and
get
all
these
GJitra.
comforts
f
"
'A
'
,1'
'
.'4
fl
.
WlnJLiair
Offer
good
Augusr
7,
8
and
10
am
100
WHOll
HEAT
Delicious
meals,
served
aboard
train,
targe,
picture,
windows
-r-
comfortable
SKEENA
GROCERY
Phone
581
or
582
lOfoi
job
AlKRIIOIir
KA81SC0.
PROTtlN-to
e.."""1
"
FAT
-
bolanc.d
dirt.
J
MtnHol
,
IRON
on
Ih.
blood-
..ufH!'1
CAICIUM
t
fHOSfHI
normal
bonrt
VITAMIN
H
-
""7
Ih.
moinl.nB"
appotito.
j
Dependable,
safe
travel
in
all
kinds
of
weather.
if
Air-conditioning.
Convenient
rSst&orfis.
Free
baggage
checking
to
your
destind'
tion
(up
to
150
lbs.)..
1
,
Drive-yourself
car
seriric
at
major
points.
'
,
,
"V
SHRE0a8HtW
n
L
LYONS
FINE
FOODS
Phones
250
Red
465
MIDWAY
GROCERY
Phone
659
,
reclining
seats.
Room
to
move
around,
stretch
your
legs,
visit
with
friends.
i
Wide
choice
of
sleeping
accommoda-"
Boris
berths,
sections,
roomettes,
draw-
trig
rooms,
comportments.
E
,
j
v''
When
yoii
travel,
go
by
frain
'
!
St
4
m
THE
CANADIAN
SHREDDED
WHEAT
COM
PAMY.
LTD.
'
'
....
v
.
;
?
j
SW-I553A
you
ofliro
oa
iow-cojti
rouna
mp
rarMr
,
.
'WILLIAMS
GROCERY
Phone
656
RUPERT
BUTCHERS
AND
GROCERS
LTD.
Phone
21
CANADIAN
NATIONAL
CANADIAN
PACIFIC