CATION- VA u“ ___. ""9". r - - f the Bap- .. Buglflells yflgflfi‘ cgngregations fidmcnth oi August 5 unlsnai. 0 arrow-m seer-hat. . we Mrs, Artemask 1 o u, spy-he‘ mo iniiuwith the, Baptist‘ filing":- a male, J. B. s, Howard‘ Rlay Lidstone and My no pallbearers were: ' ,1, Inman. Otto Doull. M“ Bruce Burnfl. Melvme if mo Brewer Johnston.‘ M510“, m the Central Bedeque H55‘ cemem-y where she rests pd, hgr husband and llllflnsl ughtei‘. _'—»-——'l Personals t. nd Mrs. Bert tar andml-Qlylng‘ Oflicer Hack t the week-end at the home m, and Mrs. Cecil M111. U19!‘ Afllght . Clifford Boundy has ar- Jhsin Summerslde from St. m, Np, and ls the guest oi pgfgllfi, Mr. and Mrs. Janis, . ton. no. and Mrs. oeorse Gav and liter DeWltt Gay, of Westmouriit. s, are visiting in ' tguests of Mrs. Gays parents. , and Mrs. C. D. McCallum. S _Mr. Ernest Wright. sum!" t left on Friday morning for orltreal where he will undergo an erallon in the Royal Victoria spltal. Re was accompanied by wife and was met in Moncton .- ills sister, Mrs. R.obert Gordon. ... will also accompany them. “ha-stills pain ensington and Vicinity lfr. and Mrs. Byron Sleeves .- two children Janet and Peter I licncton, N.B., returned to their III on Thursday after a pleas-l t ilslt irith Mr. and Mrs, John IIS. Miss Dorothy MacKenzle was a tor to Charlottetown on Thurs- y. Miss Eunice Campbell ls spend- l her vacation with her parents l Long River. Mrs. Wallace MacKa g, li.Y._ and Mr. Fulam MacKay , Brighton, Mass., are visiting here e guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rus- ll MaeKny. The many friends oi Mr. Hed- yPal-ntel- regret to hear oi his llllilll£d illness. Mrs. John Bond cf Cambridge.‘ in. and Miss Ethel a. Pillmunl . Colby College. New Hampshire, ere recent guests of their aunt g uncle, Mr. and MrsnJ. B. Mill-I Mrs. l-lolbrook and Mrs. Johnl (Fadyen are guests of Mr. and rs. Wilfred Taylor, The many friends of Rev. “The L. and Mrs. Sorners are fllEhl-od to welcome them back to‘ e island. They have bought a esldence at Summerside and in- lld to reside there. lllr. and Mrs. Clifford Rodd have nrllllvlell to Moncton aiter apleas- alfilslt here. They werfaccom-i Fed “ck by Mrs. Rodd’: sis-l h. Miss Shirley Kennedy. , M‘ and Mrs. Lester Baldwin, ,5‘ lYlhly Baldwin, Miss Frances- imtn}. nml Mrs. George Trynor oi' . eorgc s, N.B., were gucstsl ‘ “Wk ht "Thokclme". , . . . Ml’- and Mrs G A Caron and gmand Mrs. C. J. Fletcher of mmreal. were visitors to Ken- , _» ~11 nn Monday. Mr. and lldrs. i431" llPlht! over night guests| tr. and Mrs. C. Chappel. , lln- Nell Marks is the guest of‘ “l; later Mrs. Guss-le Cameron and! l mETOII. Wis Annie Cole is spendi ng her 13ml“ l" New London with her 1’ "ll-i Mr. and Mrs. John Cole. f Pie. Wm. Gill returned to his‘ “ml 0h Monday. iflggufinfll‘ BS New Brunswick In“ ll era. Misses ‘Thelma and Rev. Benlamin Fream is open -| lna his 4 ' u» "alts: tr. smell Toward Mr. J u- flilnlmkit. "if logs, llclhe , M - M, kwnlsse-ngflln Townsend and Emu. Po y wer Mrs. Dim ‘M1533’;- l-Ifilweeldb The anii l s Cilliigh Sela? w“ ___.._ fry Carin and do ht ofSt l F mes. Aaro- of Fiush- 3 m- byi w was a were we , lighted, and the much credit for hg qoganiaation. are to be uaed to sponsor scholar. ehlpo to deservin students the Acadian Society flflng this as the" Eilecial work. Already five tlhtgysmare being. educated through s i nil. one avlns graduated in arts this year with honors. The 5mm?!’ “Nut to award three new scholarships this year, thirteen boys competing for same. Great xgrk our good Acadians. Keep lst Extension 0f Command To MacArthur MANILA, Aug. 5 — (AP) ._ Gen. MacArthur azinounced sat. urday extension of his Pacific filmy and to the Ryukyu S Blinds thus for the first/time as- auming control of conqugrgd Jap. anese soil in hi5 drive "on to Tokyo." The o" l “ ‘ = that the Ryukus, with the Philippines, Ffblm l. great semicircular primary responsib ity of Gen I MacArthur for the final conquest cf Japan." The United States 8th Air Force, to be based on Okinawa, will be under Geri. Spaatz’ United States Army strategic air forces, which remain separate from the MacAr- thur command. The extension of command. which became effective Tuesday midnight, was not a sudden shift. Gen. MacArthur previously had an- nounced the appointment of Gen. Stllwell to succeed the late Lt-Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr., as Commander oi the Okinawa-con. querlng 10th Anny. Admiral Nimitz, under over-all command Okinawa and a dozen smaller islands were occupied. presumably remained in command of naval forces in thr- Ryukylli- The Ryukyus, extending from Formosa to the Japanese mainland. form the natural invasion bridge which Gen. MacArthur would fol- low in the "onno-Tokyo" declaration he issued Feb. 6 in proclaiming the fall oi Manila The Ryukyus change apparently was made under the United States olnt chiefs of staff assignments of April 5, dividin Pacific commands. Gen. MacArthur was then named commander of "all army forces and resources lln the Pacific theatre and Admiral Nimitz was elven command of all naval forces and resources. whose Veteran Crowmen Will Be In Charge gpmw A , a — (OP) — Veteran alficrewgen, most o! them with two tours o! operations to their credit. will be ln ohm“ °‘ tho six Lancaster bombers of the Canadian Bomber Group which will begin 'I‘t&!lS.CBn8d8 tours at different POInie Au8- 11 ln lid °l the R.C.A.F. benevolent fund, All" Force Headquarters said tonllhfi» Tho Lancaster "R. for R0885 hi5 captained by P1109 Sildn- w‘ °mn fludson, D.F.C., Victoria and 5 crew inciuea Flt. Lt. Walter Ci- , Economy. N-$-_. Basil E. Shaver, Ottawa. Richard Boyer, Montreal and Pierre G. Doiucet. NB. nt. u. J]. Short A.F.C.. Moon h1- Cflh I-llllfl Qm u‘ F0. Herbert N.S, and 5". Ont. r u We" “W. “ill tour, Canadians across Conant: s; b, ‘u, to meet the creWm m holt some o! the" "“P°“°“°°‘ tho lkec over WNW _,_._.._. Too Late To Classify rioI m. "x for S. loiwla. Thomas. ‘cosmic ardlan. s-e- -— w-"fi-asia ... Y 8 gag: cglydition. WY"? M. I‘. care of Guardian. -"' "" ""'Tl-'§’"fin.i.ro1.n L051.‘ — IN OI cmtglning sum of money. Finder leave at Guardian. Roward'._°_u - - r r swat.‘ lctbinl moo It - - ' lulu. m 1-3 0t. Georve a“ min." I" and lathe. Write ABC c-o Clll ANTI!) couch in ti .5‘; neuron PICNIC Petit Rocher. . 2l_ ti-~ final destruction i" ‘IO-DAY LlDDIe lack Alllfllk Ill IIIIIIII "ll 05-00000 not on lop tuna ti! vi 4,4... s4 "1 w’ A150 Shows 7:30 - 9:15 Matinee Tuesday-ZSO CRT 1WD” "strands ii l‘ si on ,1‘ . ‘Famous Bomber ‘Will Visit $’side l base | _ A veteran of (the European war lls the famous “R. for Roger", the Canadlambuilt Lancaster bomber which will be visiting Dartmouth (Halifax), Sydney, N .S., Suirimer- side, PEI, and, Montreal, during the forthcoming trans.Cana.da dis- play of Lancaster bombers in aid of the R.C.A.F. Benevolent Fund. “R. for Roger" ls considered one of the “newer" Lancasters but al- cld in. experience. The huge four. engined bomber ha; chalked up 22 operational sorities over enemy ter- ritory, a total of over 160 hours It has been badly shot up on two occasions. and holds an outstand. ing record. “R for Roger's“ targets have included Manneheim, Hann- over, Leipzig, I-Illdeshelm, Ham. burg, and Marsburg. which are an imposing array of Nazi stronghols for any bomber to attack and re- turn to fell the tale. The famous Lanc is a member of No. 4B4 Squadron, known as the Bluenose Squadron and its crew on the tour are all former members, of this squadron which was adopted‘ by the Halifax Rotary Club. The crew are proud of their bomber which on one occasion Carmel I bomb lead of 14,000 pounds on a 7 hour bombing mission. The load consisted of one 4,000 pounder. foiur 500 lb bombs, and eight 1,000 lb. bombs. “R. for Roger" has un. doubtedly had its share in the destruction rained on Germany. The Canaclidh bomber bears the insignia of a slightly wacky rab- bit holdng out a. carrot at 9"" length. The colour scheme oi this work oi art is a combination oi futurlsm and the natural talents of one oi the crew AlthouBll the rabbit cceeds in wearing a hlflhly bglligeglent expression, the artists choce of hues renders the onlooker slightly billous after the “I'll glance. The aircraft is consequently known as the "The Cfuly Rabbit- On one occasion after a partleulurly rough landing, the base control tower sllghtlngly referred to tho’, aircraft as "The Jllllllllng Rabbit" The Bluenose Squefflrfgg W?! ‘f’: c ucdrons o e am “I m m Bomber Group. based in Yorkshire, th the crew and the l gland. Bo 'o'n rumn. ‘in. 1m. at first u" tCanadian Squadrons were operatlhv with twimellfll-lled wclllnlrtone- Tilt conversion to Lancastors and H11 - ifaxea oae later in the year. Pilots the nt- phonon to pilot the hi8 loin-outline xwl-mmuci-r, had chained to m aircraft “P flying hours before taking 0"" "5 ‘ewtggns of the crafts and the t-"Ufildfnn dropped a 800d DENY‘ tion of the 13.639 tons of bombs which were unloaded over Germany that year by the Groulv- Tn 1944 all the squadrons in the 57°“? mON than quadrupled the‘? ma“ and together dumped 95-594 m of high explosives Oln 911° strongholds "R for Roger W! I i=0“ i“ rl<ml=hiim°str.r.i‘ii my“ m“ m a Germany- Lancastor. recently and its crew 0f all oi the Blue- hmnfll?‘ 3W5 tour at Dartmcu a RX iugust 11th and the aircraft will b; (m digplay at Dart-month. Syd- ney Burnmerside and “Wll-"lll the. his exhibit will end on Aug- ust lOth. The iamoul , ilowh to Canada- votorah aircrew. Jot» Soucdron. IXIINIIVI VIEW mm the highest peak of the 9° l: i niilo bfgleugi Nllféihggo lgfloli" cvos can n— - ~ ' land. Mon, Wales and Enalen=l~ ___________. 5100x3004. Aug. a _ (AP)- The first contingent of 70.000 9"‘ mans moved through Sweden from though it is young in years it is‘ THE CHARIDTTETOWN cuaaovn Celebration Al" Lonnox Island wm.-devoid»: a. A. Ber- and Mrs. Bernard were pre- att lac service and remained after the To the Honorable J. A. Bernard, hieutmam Governor of Prince Bd- ward Island Your Honor: We. the natives of known reservation, flail perhaps gladly welcome you, the very wor- thy representative of our beloved sovereign. to our Island Home on this day which we proudly reserve to ourselves-St. Ann's Day. Your elevation to the highest of- been received with great satisfac- tion. because your best known characteristic has always oi all your fellow citizens in every walk of life. We can therefore very readily assure you that your ap- pointment. is a strong urging us to greater loyalty and allegiance. We wish to express our gratitude to you for your kindness in coming to join us in our simple and hum- ble day of honor to our Patron Saint. In turn, our continual prayer will be that the Almighty God will bless you and Mrs. Eggnog-d mo“; I office as Lrieutenant Governor of Prince Edward Island and Lennox Island. Signed on behalf oi the Parish- cners oi St. Anne's Parish. Urban Mitchell, Chairman, Mathew Peters. Jacob Saris, Ibustoeg, ‘Two Important l Conferences To Open In London . BY ROSS MUNRO | Canadian Press staff Wi-itoi- l LONDON. ans. s - (CP Cable) I "TWO lmlllilrthllt international lconferences, the first dealing with fellei fur shattered Europe and the 1 second with the birth of an inter; l national peace esenoy. open in lLondon this week and Canada will be represented at each meeting. The Dominion has a vital interest in both. The third council meeting of the United Nations relief and rehabil- itation administration. faced with , tremendous problems in Europe in the months ahead, opens its session Fllesdlly ln the London County Council building. The meetings are likely to last for l0 days or two weeks The l4-natlon executive comm- ittees of the United Nations pre- paratory commission, which pre. pared for the setting up of the Francisco, begins its deliberations 'I'hursday in Church House, near Westminster Abbey. and this con- ference will continue for months. LJB. Pearson, Canadian ambass- ador at Washington, is the chief a Premie B; RELMAN MORIN PAR! , Aug. 5- (AH-Pierre Laval, picturing himself as an un- willing tool of Germany, claimed Saturday at the treason trial of his Vichy chleftaln. Marshal Henri Philippe Petain, that he had pre- ven the Gestapo murder of two former French Premiers. The arch-collaborator, who has been sentoneed to death by a Mar- seille court, asserted he saved Loon Blum and Paul Reynaud from German firing squads and profess- ed lgncrance of the murder of of~ anti-German resistance. Though acknowledging in effect tillliat he was the “most hated man tied ear-fugitive contended he and Marshal Petain saved France from "asphyxiation" and asserted he twice refused to enter a military alliance with the ime of a in North Africa. into the secrets of the Africa re- sisted the Allies "to ent aGer- man attack" and revealed that two American diplomats-one of them the former ambassador to Vichy. Admiral William D. Lenhy - had demanded explanation for Lavalh itigtorlous "I desire a Germumvlc- l‘! ' The four - power war crimec oon-, at the reservation for several hours church W88 wil- the ' "oldest in the Maritime Provinces, flce oi our land, we assure you, has been your keen interest in the welfare incentive abundantly during your term of Snood Former Firing Squads Pierre ‘Laval Claims IIe Prevented Gestapo Murder Of Leon Blum And Paul Iloynaud. Georges Mandel, celebrated martyr France," the swarthy, white- Gennany, once at the Anglo-American maintained War Crimes Trials Open September 1 Dy All! BINGLITON IDNDON. Au8. 0 — (AP) -. loeliinu CIIAIIIIIIIII this column h reserved for new: o: local Interest, but advertising it ll-'1“Z.'l..i".“'..°..'l“’.'.’.° ““‘"°" able In advance. ' ' c“, m,‘ flOOIlbllllohgs-gh; OONIIDIBATION . soaancz u" m raasaluranou or aosas 1'0 JIBS. BERNARD-A nice oomph. ,ment on the part of the women of 9h MM‘- Parlsh. Lennox Island. was aocorded Mrs. J. A. Bernard, wife of the Route-Governor yester- llllg- when rho was presented with arch v. et of American Beauty roses latad mun.” by Wally/elm ‘Puplln on their be- cmeg, who a; n] nn&‘ half. e occasion was the annual diplomats who intrigued for it. in. Ollvhcation in honor of St. Anne, diustrialisto and financera who gave m‘ “"11"” Dltron saint. silbetcnce. The trial itself will be held in, "Wm" FmllWlll-l» PAR- Nuemberg, for years the scene of T‘ — m" Thelma O'Donnell of the Nazi party's annual oonueuflernon River leaves this morning It will open before an intornaflonaldm‘ R-Wmlmld- Quebec where she mmhflrv trlrunal Sept. 1, with re-‘Wfll d a week before leaving presentatives of , p|gg¢.'|!0t treel. Previous to hol- 4e. Russia and the Uni States pg-g-‘PQTISIIIU Wulifilnll. well Part7 at the residence of Mr. The prospective list oi defend- and Mrs. AJ. Bruce, Douglas S’... ants was reported by a fesponiiblg at which a large number of hel- American source to include Herman friends were present Included in Goerl . Joachim Ribbentrop, those present was Miss Agrlgg Q10. FY3113 “All! P8990. Alfred Rosen-‘ver of Murrav Harbour a close berg members of the German friend of Miss O ' general staff such as Grand Ad» ‘Donneu miral Karl Doenitz and Field M"- shals Gerd Von Rundstedt and Wil- “éfiuitfm”... u. I190 y. a hi tdiibu- nal will be asked to cogxiivict the Nazi terror - atrocity organ- lzatlons. If a guilty verdict is ro- tumed, it will mean a blanket con- victlon as war criminals of all Ger-l mans who can be established to have been voluntary members of the Gestapo 0r the 8.5. The basic outline of procedurfi for the trial was-advanced Jus- tice Robert Jackson of the nited States Supreme Court, shrewd and able former Attorney General who was assigned by the President as chief United States prosecutor cf war criminals. The first urdle which he con- fronted was he wide divergenge o! criminal law in the four major countries. As a solution, he suggest- ed procedure should be based upon military law in which there are fewer differences. To overcome another major ob- staole-—the possibility that time- consumirig individual trials would take so long that witnesses would disappear and evidence be lost-he suggested a collective trial. But for a collective trial Justice Jackson had to find a blanket charge. For this he turned to the, American charge cf "conspirac ’ , a crime under which collective trials long have been held in the ‘ United States for a variety of of- |fences ranging from sabotage gambling frauds l Even as Justice Jackson and opposite numbers from the other three major powers wrestled with the legal aspects of the coming trial. teams of legal and criminal experts-some of them former G- men, others drawn, from" _ Scotland farence a. ed agg- rint an unprecedented: ted as ls-men who 1 .| Neat polloy. lush on“ GXSOUI Personals Mr. W. L. Clark of the Windsor Star, accom anied by Mrs. Herman and her s ster. Mrs. Lawson. is Expected to arrive in the City Wed. nesday. While here, they will stay at the Charlottetown Hotel. Mr. William S. Bernard and his 5011' 50591111. who have been the guests ‘of Mont-Governor J. A. Bernard and Mrs. Bernard at Government House. leit by plane at noon yestr-rdav ior their home in Boston. Mr. ‘William Ber-hard 15 a brother of the Lieut.-Govemor. jfard-cconrcd Eluope 1n genera; Iand Germany in particular to a- mass evidence T°Yl5 1100B tons oi documcnfll have been collected, translated, an- alyzed and digested by theleg-alpx. Ports. Collectively it will trace the history of the Nazi rise to power. tell l-lle Story oi its intrigues in a dozen different capitals, and re. view the economic and military pressure it used to gobble up most of Europe Leave For Odd Fellows Convention The following representatives from the Odd Fellows in Charlotte- town to the Grand Lodge session in Monctori leave this morning to be in attendance. Vernon T. How- att, David L. Bethune, A.O.F. Gill, Percy G. Acom, George S Ryan. The session will be held on the 6th. ‘lth and 8th of August. Canadian delegate to the U.N.R..- R.A. meeting and he and three other Canadian representatives now are in London. It is believed that Mi‘. PSBTSOn B150 W111 tepre» Alpha Rebekah hodge_ Na 1g 59m .11“? D°mim°n F“ the Hm’ w" will also be represented at the ses- lneetlngs of the United Nations ex- l Sim, Among those attending will oeui-lvo wmmllm hll-hllllfih ll- ls be Mrs. Ruth Enman, P.N.G., probable that Escott Reid 0i the M11 Rum whisk P_N_G,, Mrs, External Affairs Department at M“ Adam. 93.15“ Mm Lulu Ottawa will arrive in Dlglflilddqlchojson’ P_N_G_' Mtg Annie lslllgrfll’ w lake W" m“ lesmnslb‘ Gamhum, P.N.G , Mrs. Beatrice ll’ La orn, P.N.G. and Mrs. Ruby Behind the scenes at the U.N.-|Hog1f:_past presldeng R..R.A. meeting will be another The gouowlng ladle; wlll also Canadian-George Mooney, temp- leave {or the Qonference tomorrow orarily on loan from the city oi mommg and win navel by motor. Montreal where his normal role is Miss Helen Flnlgyson Mrs, director of the Industrial and I Economic Bureau. As secretary of the general com- mittee and score pro tom of the council, it will be his task to guide the council‘; deliberations and direct U.N.R..R..A.’.s ter. Pmm A national secretariat. Fbpelgn Affairs Committee of the The question o! increasing sup- Ftyench Consultative Assembly a- plles and financial assistance t0 dopted a resolution todlav demand- U.N.R.R..A and the problem oi mg that the French Governmant dealing with displaced personnel in break diplomatic relations withGmc “men's: "swim no“: °°"'"‘"°“" ' to e crnc n s n - . the conference agenda. 12>1t$tn8 Milzmgs °€h:{“1,,%°$ig§:§§ re . relations with spam. The egpayail; Foreign Ministry 8113mm” _ had 1 m’ Wench Gpvemlixlgiiih would notified it tltat the will 9 b, disgega-rded. Mrs. Pied Still , At the conclusion of the session. the ladies will make a tour of New Brunswick before returning home. ug. 3 - (AP) —— The BIRTHS '_' _ N m, Rustico, Aus- gnililliauto fir. find Mrs. George A- Pineau. a son-- r their. has p, . a i ‘ Mrsiizvesléy ctgéstahle. City. a 5°" Sterl s ""1 - _ A th c u. n- ilames Harding, a dauflhlel? mu“ Marie. _ ui PEI. Hos- finsl 101g,‘ to ldr. and Mrs. ‘ Richards. nee Mam" g. i.'{:§,‘§§ck?',, son, James Edward. "Wt-rhea. r Au‘ ' ,Harri lnal He said that. as chief of the fir: .. the PB - Vichy Government, he lea-med the Aug, 4, 1M6, two former premiers of the thirdiumd, Bethel, a son- republlc "were going to be shot cyqtuNEILL — At the the Germans in reprisal for the Augugt 4, i945. to Ml"- condernnation in Algiers of Pierre mg McNeIll, Milton, a son. tizufheu (Vichy minister of the ln- wm.“, ror ." Laval asserted he also protected to the Germans and demanded on investigation when he learned that Mandel had been murdered. He said he heard about the murder rand from Joseph Darnand, chief of the Mercer. Marjorie moron/o; 8 Vichy Gestapo, who Laval asserted daughter of Mr. and - was "imposed upon us by the Daiziel, Chat1°tt¢l° - Germans. ander Linflu Laval. assertin that the Vichy Government m e the best of l. bad situation after the Franco- Gei-man armistice, declared the worst actions of Vichy resulted from direct orders of the Germans. glence Franficlad gas pfostrate. rmans co ave a her. Hence, he claim 77th year. Funeral from her Iresid Marshal Petain could only nelotl- enoe. Tuesday at 2.30 p.m. n er ate, trying wherever possible t0 merit in Malpeque ¢4lllWWfY~ dull the edge of German demands. rs From Mr. and tori incision and Mrs MARRIAGES .1040. ilcl, Charlottetown. by Mn phy'3 Cove, N5. please copy)- DEATH S the {an mo. the was tendered a fare-l P. E. I. Hospital. Mrs Ion. to Mr. and ivllrs. Percy PEI. Hospital John y-—— "“’ . PHY - On AuS- DALW themsglfiatlon Army Cithw- or . John rd Mu-{Iphyhlollolfifrvtml- . D0 s llTD Y. ' and M“ “ma (Halifax papers __________.. ARI) — At Baltic. August B. Mrs. Johnson Bernard, in her inferring to the sending of 1B0.- Germany- opinion }_ 000 French workers to for which Hench public holds him mainly mopcneibi Laval said th tained the liberation of . French prisoners of war. "I realise those who was at in return he 0b- N. D. MecLean UNIIITAKER Gen. Crerar 3! FRANK [DWI ' Canadian Pm; sue Writer Hal-IPA; Au . 5~Nearly 10.000 of Canadas figh ing men and yo. men arrived at this th Gen. H. D G. gsiloifiiiieilccm ytomiio .4 e Deopleoi this rtahxifamb, ‘ilgésybifglrzvoll t his men “board Frfixce‘ WP Tflhspurt Ie De e men aboard the m" llgotme from die wars af r the 5mm‘ Period services vollm. Eff-gum!» the Dominion ever ut, Mo“ “(Willow fields of act onu ‘mu, 9m 115i saw Canada n" °l' "We years ago and‘ he the hllly outline of Halifaii took lsrlllapethwhhéi the tranqiort noggd' Sign ab?) Mrbor there was a ten. m,“ 3 that. could almost be’ It was a feeling of “Well, made ll-"lt never seemed 51% but here we are. home." ere was no cheering at fir t-‘ 3;“ that one uier. when the sshipl tiff; fog‘ weérlitddthediegrecitgment of gfigmid t em‘ m arkation a h wit aboard qexégorted ktihe-btilgtriliigy ' 61' 111m harbor and to the quay-l we've i pos- Slde- where a SOOttISh pipe band l (civilian entertainers and hundredgl relatives and friends lined the sldles of the weather-beaten pier to We Come the veterans home. RC! ;“r§s-°ll‘.§i§iu§°ll§2. shim.“ "at E e v l toéirzeletéliem. a emu]! en. Crerar, retiring com. "lander 0! the lst Canadian Army, were four senior officers who served abheadouarters: Brig, Cc, Mann (‘mt of stall; Brig. c. Walsh, “n”. fillglheer: Bus. W. B. Wedd, 5J3“ mllltary government OITICEPJ‘ an‘ Brig. J. E. Genet, ch19! sjgna] °“l°°l-. . I t a ocktomeetG, as the trooper Pulled lnexivcgieliiis- vrvifle and his daughter, Mrs. H. Z! other. as well as hi h ilt 811g éeivillan officials. g m ‘My: . e cnce Minister McNaughton, Lt.-Gen. J. C. Murchlc, chief of the Reneral staff, and Brig. D, A, White, district officer commanding nlllltarv district No. c. headed the military delegation. On hand to‘ extend the civilian welcome werei Lleut-Governor H. E. Kendall o1 Nova Scotla, Acting Premier ,7_w_ Comeau of the Province, and May- or Alan Butler of Halifax, Mayor Butler presented the re- turning General with a gold key to the city, while Mrs. Crerar ro- celved a lewelled replica and the assurance she and her husband were welcome whenever they wish- 6d t0 make a lengthier visit to Halifax. Then the General stepped back on the gangplank to dofl’ his Cull and wave farewell to his troops amid loud cheers. This afternoon a motorcade head- ed by a car bearing the General and Mayor Butler toured the streets of the garrison gpoundg, he. neath the slopes of the old citadel, where Gen. Crerar ins ected a group of battle casual les and members of the C.W.A.C. l Gen. Crerar and his party leave by special train at 5 a.m. A.D.T. tomorrow for Ottawa, where Prime Minister King and other officials will extend the government's wel- come. The traln will halt for 30} minutes at Monctcn, N.B., at 11.30 tomorrow morning, and another 30‘ minutes at Rlviere Du Lollp, Que"! late in the evening, before going, on to Montreal and Ottawa. Among the airmen returning was! F0. Al Foreman, Westmount, ue., former British Em ire lightwe ght boxing champion w o retired from the ring undefeated. Only man on the ship to wear the Union Jack insignia. on his sleeve. emblematic of service in Russia, was Maj. Nelson Darling of Vancouver, who spent five; months in the Soviet helping rc- leased Canadian prisoners of war get home. One of the best service records belonged to CSM. Bill Ireland. Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. A tank le- covery expert, he got his first taste‘ of action when he went to North Africa with ahandful of Canadian l observers and later travelled with the Dominion forces on the road‘ that lad to Berlin. Ropresentatlve oi what he calls ‘retreads" who made I. come- B F. Gossage of campaigned through this one battery commander of the 69 British Forces May Train Abroad BY BOSS MUNBD Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Aug 5 -- (CPI Large formations of Nae British Army maydn tho hiture be Morn’, abroad to train in order to free them from the geographic limit- ations imposed on modern man. oeuvres in the United Kingdom. - This is one of the questions which will probably be considered by the Committee recently ap-i pointed by the Army Council here to review the future oi the British , . Anny. . With tremendous strides beins made in transport and supply of troops by air, some Influential British military authorities visualize British expeditionary forces flyllll! out to North Airica, India, 06115616 or Australia to do annual tralriins- Supporters of such a scheme 58y it. would enable Empire forces w train together in un llll-ellfitQd plan. i Duzlnlg British o or .~ . AnlglfllCflflg ln-Jces the United Kingdom imposed a heavy add- itional burden on the British P90- plc Hundreds of square miles of agricultural land had to be turned Into training areas. Civilians had to be evacuated from 500R; towns and during battle training many of these towns received such severe damages they v:ill never re- COVOT. Exercises on an army level Ill England were generally unrealistic for it was. impossible to have nn. the European War. trum- Canadlan and Given A Noisy Welcome As lie Do France Docks At Halifax a th 0.10mi _ -. e youngest nurse on my. oosy-cn-tge-oyoa a uifftrliiei $9." home, bted by , ancouver. Helen Icnderson, a to Canada as a bombs made Br‘ n children, joined the W. and BOW, after a spell q her homeland, is returnqr p foltor-bome in Hamilton, out, A one-time natio l swim . pion, Flt. Lt. Bob per of an- couver was also aboard. In 1988- 39 he was Canada's star free style swimmer at the British Empire gain . A basketball star and anothe" man returning vi‘ Gl an. and ‘ Ont "rm ti“ ll d)!“ ‘m’ . rs so a squa. One of the most decorated on the ship was Wing Cmdr. . e Pollard of Montreal. Only 25 now, he went to Britain when he was l3. Joined the RAJ‘. and sirtce thcn has collected the D.S.O., D. RC. and AFC. He transferred m the R CAF. nine months and is back to Canada to oin wife and can who precoe d his: on the westward jaunt a Iaort while ago. But—and my o; woman abou-d will verltymtip- thebravest man on fire ah , Qt, Major H. G. Nelson of oronto, A veteran oi five years and eight months overseas , he w "joed" for the job o! ‘a IL? on the trip back and one oi’ his duties was to cheek on everyone not carrying lifejackees. Ono day Gen. Crerar aorgot to carry his, and Nelson had to him on the shoulder and rem him. It was a ticklifii , b according to Nelson the-Emilia used his lliejacket évor , Veteran: lltbnlhfle KAEJIIAX, August 5 - (OP) — hi hing to reduce cnowdlng the dope of and spilling alcuni of the nothing q General Orerar, ed with a thunderous 19c, And surged toward in aflqnwme where the Gefi mood, _ tarily ming The eral was M“ ‘more "u? behind to}; d wars. The General‘: ktteult veterans was ma . them had been w _ serving under his France. and he elgltted ly with every 1mm. ‘ Marltimers. To Pte. G. L. Loflanc d ior- in mouth, NS. who waged plane had been while fighting in the lied tho on the wings whil Crerar rcmar verv soot 9%? 0R P47 l/OT/l/l/é/ RADIONIC Sold Dlrocf ly Mull Only c1 $40 Canadian Cvrvoncy (‘n Rd-T-WmrWithNBW: Nefiglaeltaolosnl-Ia’; hzfiC and ConLCrya- III "‘ rnphonc, adlonic Tubes, B1!- rerles and Battery Case. Von Ihl: Nolhingl You: nanny luni I! this fine quality aid doesn't mainly you-as i: has thousands in United 4 States and Canada! Zenidfs precision . mass production and direct salea method bring ir to you at about 1/4 the cost of comparable instrumenu. No charge f0: shipping, duties, taxcsl You AIIIIII l0 Yourulll External 4- PoeitionTone Control does away with costly, compli " fittings. You ad- just the Zenith imfnnlly to your own hearing needs as easily aa focusing binoculars! 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Noel. races on eats were enjoyed. restricted, full-scale movement oi troops without. seriously fllslmlllu"! the llfa and work of the people This alone is likely to force the modern British army to go further afield for it; tralalnl- .._ . Lava, who wound up his two 4am," days o! testimony only a iew min- utes before the 12th da of Mar- shal Petainh trial end _ declared he saved M. Blum and M. Rey- naud from German tiring squad! I latent; ta la Giana. . Norway for repatriation today -— l" box care. Sweden but only’ 11°‘ ll 8 "‘" "in l» urn-- n; ‘UGUST rsssihtinuirrruslirt. fill! 1nd ‘ lho nmn,_‘§‘_‘°h°" “to runner Efli-ybody Welcome “on”, “SET-w Yul ras-F-"ri-t... s... WEDNESDAY. ' City _ .- ____ .._ ..Prnloae_-_i Q Phys“ that here for Iirenrun. fiiIinfiiflfiiiitttZZifl _ .. _....__‘ ‘t. BINDING