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! . 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