JULY 22 1946 I'll! luau “£11m; yesterday morning at msrxirk of St. James. the Rev. R- J Berlls. minister-elect of the (ihumh o; st. Andrew and Si. pgul, Montreal. chose his text from the following words inPsaim '13: "When I lmugm‘ m m?" was things it was too painful for meflmitil I went into the Sanct- oi God; then understood ‘No.11... that the Psalmist lived 1d a time very much like our own _an age o! violence and uncer- tginy.y—l\1r_ Berlis pointed out. "I don't suppose for one moment that all the secrets of life were sud- denly revealed to him in the sanc- tuary. What happened WM mile-h more subtle and insblflllfl- As he bodied hirnsel.f down in the holy place, the spirit of God entered his darkened heart. Suddenly ho saw life in new perspective: his attitude had been negative-now it veered sharply to the positive: he had been complaining. “Look what life's donve-‘to me". Now he began asking. “What can 1 do mo?" He could not say, "I un derstand the world." but his spirit was that oi one who would wme later. a greater one than he. who said. "Be of good cheer. I have overcome the world.” This been the perennial experience of God's people when. amid the bur- dens and bewilderments 0i life they have sought out the sanctu- ary of G01." stressing the need of awareness _lhe art of heightened sensitivity ii we are ever to understand e. Mr. Berlis sald. “One oi the pecfcls of successful living is to live each moment to the full,—to extract from each fleeting exper- fence the maximum degree of meaning. I often think that seine hf us never live in the present at all. We are so ore-occupied with yesterday — yesterday's mistakes. yesterday's might-have-beens-and so worried about tomorrow-that we have ho remaining energy-no reserve of strength-for the op- portunities of today." Quoting CENTRAL lillAlllllAli This column is rye - of local luterestfugut "aawinil-‘il.’ l fof a nevuy nature may h; imam, at five cents s word. strictly pay- ll e In advance. ._______________ BED C8085 Swlmmln at Kenalngton and gaggfifi Beaches Monday at 3.30. ON VISIT FROM BOSTON, MASS-Mrs. John Power oi Bos tOXl- Mus. and a former reslden: o! this city. is spending a three weeks’ vacation here visiting rele. ‘fives and friends. She is the guest lof Mr. and Mrs. William Carr. Cumberland St. l on nourn TUESDAY _ The “Charles A. Junni " 1g expected b11111 0n the Wood Is oxide-Caribou route to-mormw morning. officials 0f the Norlhumberland Ferries Ltd. Said last night. l FUNERAL vnsrnnnav _ri.s' funeral of the late Mrs. Jame; 1-1_ Gregor was held from the resi- dence of’ Mr. E. J, MacMillz". York Point yesterday afternoon. Service at the house and grave cmlducked by RBV. G- Carlyle‘ Webster. Interment People's Cemetery. Pallbearers were: Wal- ter Gregor. Spencer Gregor, (3.... d0“ slid-W, Walter Mnlheson, Lorne McMillan. Gordon McMillan. VISITING AT GOVERNMENT HOUSE-Mr. and Mrs. Ephege Bernard. Ca-pe Tormentlne. N. 8.. have been visiting Mr. Bernard's. parents, Lieutz-Governor J.A. Ber. Inard and Mrs. Bernard. at Gov-I ‘ernment House. Mr. Bernard. who’ is employed with Canadian‘ lNational Railways at Tormentlmnl \ his duties Saturday] . Bernard will remain the lluest oi her husband's parents for a few days. crrv POLICE coum -—Satiil‘— l day "mmlllll t" lne cit-y police court Bel/En Offenders were before Ma"-‘bv HE CH George Stephen, oi Montreal. vice-president of Trflfilfl. C-P-R» who was made a. Commander oi the Order of the British Empire in the King's Dominion Day honors list. ' Bases Likely To Be Postponed OTTAWA, July 21 -—(CP)——- Court action has been launched against four more persons linked but it is unlikely that co-urt pro- ceedings wili get underway until with Soviet-directed espionage. late August. All were charged in connection with the obtaining of a passport for a Russian agent \vho had op- erated in California, but who now has disappeared. At Ottawa William M. Pappin. passport office clerk. elected trial when he appeared before from Thornton Wilder's play "Our Emile K. M. Marlin. A drunk; ‘Magistrate Glenn Strike on three Town." he referred to the ques- tion of Emily. the young wife. "Do human beings ever realize life while they live it, every. every miflllt€?"—fll’ld the Stage Manag- er's reply: “No-thc Saints and Poots~maybe they do some." Showing the- need to link our common- ideas wlth great religious convictions 1i life is to hold any continuity or meaning. Mr. Berlis $50 said. “The great words in our language depend for their mean- ing nn God. For lnstance.—Man without Grd ls an orphan in chaos -a troublesome Elect infecting the epidermis of (he planet. Life without God becomes a tale told bv n" idiot full of sound and furv sltlliifyln‘! nothing. Love without (‘d can degenerate into mere ‘ nl‘ the flesh. Famllv without (‘ d ls precarious and uncertain. our. sod in rlostruclion by every nnsunc whim. Countrv without (‘no br-ccnve: W» mere tool of tv- rants. ‘Ilhese little words can hold lnvh vtzl noble meaning only if ibcv mirror faith in God. There can h= no true un-derstandlnl xvithcut faith." driver was given seven days in 11ml. Two remanded drunks were fined “VB 3nd $10 respectively and :1 third was remap-led until Wednes- day. A man charged under both the Excise and Prohibition A015,. was fined $100 and costs or mired months for the first chatge and $200 and 8081s of twee mqnlhs for the second. A woman guilty of keeping liquor for sale was fined and costs or 1'0 days in jail. A speeder was fined $10 and costs or 20 days imprisonment. SOLOES AT AIRPORT — On Sunday evening Elton Woodside of, New London soloed at the local’ 8119011. Mr. Woodslde started fly- ing on June 25th at Paul's Flying Service and had never been near the controls of a plane before. Less than a month later tvith 7i hours and 55 minutes of instruc- tion. he made his first trip. last- ing ten minutes. alone in the new Fleet Canuck. Elton contemplates‘ taking his private pilot's license ‘tests ln the verv near future and 095s to use an aircraft in his business; and plans on landing in is own farm pasture field. charges and was remanded a week. He was released on $3.000 bail. Also charged with him were Sam Carr. former Labor-Pro- gressive party organizer who has‘ disappeared. and Dr. Henry Har- ris. Toronto optometrist. now on hollrlzrvd in the Laurrmtlaxis. was ox ctcd Harris would pear in court Monday. At Toronto. Dr. John Soboloff was arranged on a charge of knowingly making an “untrue or misleading statement" in connect- ion with the passport incident. He was released on $8,500 bai-l until July 23. Reliable quarters report that the actions against Pappin, Har- ris arid Soholoff might not git tiridcrway immediately due to .he fact (ha! legal circles are in the midst of summer holidays. ap- til lute August. EASTERN GUARDIAN Rc-l peeled remnnds are expected un-_ LOTT B)’ JIM HOBNICK’ Canadian Press Correspondent DUPMl-QUEYI‘. Que. July 21- The bodies of four mining men lie tonight 900 feet below the sur- face of the Beattie gold mines. cn-tomoed at the bottom oi the mine shaft under 1'80 feet of water-soaked clay which engulfed the skip carrying them to the sur- face when they were only 50 feet —about a m1:iutc-—from safety. Some a0 fellow employees face Ml flfdiwufi task. a month or more in lemlth. of digging their way through the clay barrier to ra- move the bodies of Paul Matlsh. ‘Bill-fl. boss and widower whose wife ‘and daughter ivere killed the ,Germans in Yugoslavia; Scott Vlllrk. 24-year-old war veteran .who went through foupyears oi lwar without receiving a scratch land leaves a widow and one child: ‘Joseph l-lemovlc. 45. single; and Joseph Bedard. 24. killed while l l l i {working his last shift before his, marriage to Jean Des Sureau which was to have been held next Saturday. July 29. ‘Hie accident occurred Friday momma. But news travels slowly in this area and a full day after ‘the accident only a few persons in the twin mininz communities iof Noranda and Rouyn some ‘J0 to 30 miles a' ~ knew anything a- bout lt. Ev miners who travel by bus from Noranda to Dupar- ‘duet to work hadn't heard the news. The cave-in marked ruin for three years of work by more than 300 l Rainfall Blots '0ut Forest Fires SYD , N.S. Jilly 2i -(C1') —A heavy rainfall Saturday blotted ,out forest fires ' . tlons of Cape Breton after flames had lakcn a heavy toll f woo'l-' land. An our-break on the Sydney-Re- serve highway which felled 15 power les and disrupted power before gin; brought unr-er control Frld y night was still smouldering y. but there was little possibility of lilarnes breaking out again. | The rain brought relief to fire ‘watchers who had remained uh duty in the neltches Creek sector ‘where the second out-break in l0 ldays caused slight damage to five l houses. _ . The downpour also snuffed o';= | blazes at Pcrt- Morirn. River RP" an-zl Gardiner m the l belt, and or Portage. ‘ ma-gh, Estemare, Ottawa Brook an scattered rural areas. i l I 0wu__ r since June. i943. GUARDIAN Cave-in Ruins Work 0i Rehabilitation when more than 1.000.000 tons filay slithered into the ole" of “glory left by previous open-pit mining operations and filled tho under-ground workings, Production which W115 cut off at that time has never been restored. There was some hope oi normal operat- ing in the main underground workings by the end of this year and it was expected the long job oi rehabilitation would be oom- lJ. ted curly in i947. ‘llhc fresh disaster means a. rep- etition of all this yveek—in some Dart at least. For the last three years Beattle h-as been operating its mill with ore from the nearby Donchester property. which it owns. From a production standpoint, the cave-in is not expected to have any effect as there has actually been no ore mined m the 14-year-old Beattie workings since the first mishap. So far there is no official report on the disaster. Maurice Lafon- talne. the Quebec Government's ‘mining inspector, investigated Fri- day but his report has not been completed because clay was still seeping into the shaft. There is a possibility of an in- quest even though the bodies have not been recovered. Coroner J. Torie said he is asking the Que- bec Government for permission to follow this unusual procedure. In most Canadian mines. the greatest danger to miners ls from Mrs. falling rock or rock slides. But the soil in the Beat-tie area is us- ually fine and is difficult to tvall in tightly for sfia winking. Layers and James Mair of George- town Constance Clair of Monta- gue. ordon Farrell and Stuart Currv of Souris; Joseph Kelly of Morell; Francis Ledwell and Ted- dy Sanderson of St. Peters Bay and D. R. Morrison of Summer- slde. Red Cross Instructors’ badg- es, cards arid pins were presented to the above _- rector of Junior Red Cross who is also. a member of the National Red Cross Syvimminlz and Water Safety Committee. Mrs. Earl Taylor of Charlotte- town examined the class f0r their Royal Life Savlhz award which is one of the requirements for a Red Cross swimming instructor. The program in this province is under the able direction of Mrs. Harry Cudmore. The instructors have gone back to their own districts and classes are now underway in Mcntazue. Cardigan. lvlorell. St. Peter's Bay and Scuris. while Georgetown. Keppoch and Summcrside will be getting started during the coming week. llistorian" W. A. Newman. search for the C. P. R. who v.- made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the King's Dominion Day honors list. Moth-er 0f Five Found Stranglell (By The Canadian Press) HOLLOWAY. England, Julv 2i— Mona Vnnderstay‘. 4.6, mothgr l of five ’ci1lldrcn imusic hall performer who tourc and a of Montreal. manager of the cis riment of re- l‘ former tl - U. S. _Ga|lup Poll = REPUBLICAN PARTY SHOWS NATION-WIDE GAIN IN i POPULARITY, AS MAJOR TREND SETS 1N i Big Unknown Is Whether 6.0.1’. Gains Will but Until 1948 Electioil . i i PRINOEIION. N.J.. July 22 - A slight majority" of voters polled 'irom coast to coast say that. ii s presidential election were being held. today, they would vote for the Republican Party. Specifically. 51 per cent say they would prefer to vote for the 6.0.9., while 49 per cent say they would want to cast ‘ l l their ballots for the Democratic Party. J i By American Institute of Public Opinion The 49 per cent Democratic figure re- presflnts a sizeable drop from the percentage 0i popular votes polled by the party in tiae last presidential election-M per cent. Polls like this on general party slrenilih have been found a reliable political index in the past. but obviously carnct take info ac- count the personalities of can ‘dates. or y "candidate hpptfll." Nevertheless, today's ' voting would seem to indicate that a major trend has taken place in political sentiment in» this country. Whether that trend will be of a lasting character. pointing the way to a change of parties in power. or whether it is merely a temporary and transient setback for the Democrats, no man can yet whether permanent or passing. it dues reflect a political mc mcsphere radically different from that which prevailed only s less than a year ago. A comparable survey on party strength conducted by the Institutl h early August, 1945. found the Democratic Party riding high in pop- ularity in all sections. as people celebrated the mounting victoriQ I against Japan and looked forward to a period of pence and irrosperity. The party maintained this popularity until early this spring when l the strike situation grew to a crisis. and many other postwar problems cropped u-p. In order to set the present situation in full perspective the follow- ing table shotvs the vote in the last four presidential elcctio followed me world a5 Mum EYK Champion by the trend of sentiment since 19M in Institute polls conducted at girl weight lifter. strangled today here. “'35 in a churchyard found periodic intervals on life questionr. "IF A PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION WERE BEING HELD TODAY. WHICH PARTY WOULD YOU VOTE FOR. THE DEMOCRATIC Mrs. Vanderstay was the latest QR, REPUBLIQAN?" victim in Etnglands homicide wave which claimed the lives of eight and girls and women iii June early J ulv. Cabinet Meeting Held Sunday LONDON. July 22—(lVIonda.y)-- (Reuters>-—-A special cabinetmeet- ing was held here Sunday morn- Sunday unusual in peacetime and it was believed that none had been held since the end ing. it was learned today. cabinet meetings are of the war last year. The Liberal News Chronicle said that only two subjects could have been sufficiently urgent to war- |rant calling of the meel.ing—the Palestine crisis and posslbil. ymof c bread ra loning scheme which was mass sabotage by bakers of inaugurated Sunday. Prepare Palace For 41% 37% 45 46 42 45 47% 01 i932 Election 1936 election 1940 election i944 election Aug. 19% Feb, i946 May. i946 TODAY orld Copyright Reserved- banked seats. Three tiers of boxes, small but richly lifted and heavily draped in rcd and gold rise straight up from behind the horse-shoes seats. There, press. film and diplomatic rPpi _. will be accommodated. The huge grey building will be‘ bright with the colors of the flags of 2i nations. as delegates enlen the narrow doorway and mound the red carpeted staircase of hon- or between two glittering lirms o! Republican guards with tleelr colorful headgear and smart the‘ forms. Everywhere are rich paintings by Rubens and other door. they will walk own the masters, busts by the greatest wide declining aisle to the base French sculptors. beautiful cry- of the speakers dais. Here they, stal. impressive tapestries and will he at the hub of a fan of panels. it over as their western front headquarters. In the small. moon-shaped auditorium, 20th century devices such as floodli-ghts and radio equipment now are being instal- led. Microphones will stand be- slde place cards and on the raised presidential dais. while on the walls. like ugly ears. amplifiers wi-ll convey the messages ~of the poacemakers to the four corners of the auditorium. Delegates will cnlcr the chamb-I er from the long red carpeted "Salle Des Pas Pardon-trial “Hall of Lost Footsteps" as lobby is called. From the richly dra ed double carpets, ‘Red Brass Swimmingl l ‘PRIME "clinker saavap- 1 a Miller, and Mrs Miller and son In the report of the P. E.I. Medl- l Robert Miller, acconl anied by cal Association meeting at Monta- l . l :ln Arlington MPS- liflllefs sister. M55 591cm .gue last week it was erroneously whlle- “We femmed '4! ihill|statcd that a hot chicken dinner om». George Street. Fredericton was served. This should have read . played n. the Red Cross swimming July 21 —~(AP)— Historian. sturdy son of Lawrifi.‘ 1938 Kentucky Derby winner.» Peace Conference visrrons msrvhiv - Dr. ran! i-ur Great enthusiasm is being dis- uA or on FOR VI-SIT OF FIELD MARSHAL MONTGOMERY All Returned Men interested in turning out on the above Guard are asked to report at the Armouries tonight at 7.45. All ranks will be paid for training parades as well‘ as for the Guard itself. Comd. l7 (P.E.I.) Reece Regiz Reveals Blunders- 0f Japanese B!’ STANLEY HELLEUR PARIS, July 21 -iRc-uters)— Historic Luxembourg Palace—scai of the French Senate before the \var-today was full of hurrying yvorkmcn, painting and hamm ‘mg ln preparation for the power peace conference due to open July 20. Except for a brief pr-ric-d in the 1870's. the palace was the homc of the French upper house from Napoleon's time until the i940 Nazi tidal wave stvcpt the French third republic out of existence and officers of the Luftwaffe took h follow a week's vacation s en-"-~ . 1 Th t . . th gh- at "he harlmwww“ Hoteb C “Plkgyshotteerténfilisafzseg ‘tllrllesr seasone byura ' tglgtegfuilaiitjétey. program m“ c AGQ I°“°‘°W"'.P- E" *1 while ,1’ Cm" farmer in the viclnitv of Monta-| Ln Charlottetown some 350 chll- ' lmwww“ hey “we emermned by gue. and one of them tipped the dren are receiving daily instruc- (By The Associated Press) and ms Hurst. Miss While, who , nipped the, United Stages Hflflill- wesewalw- my a - m a employed e fit‘..i‘i'iii"...i°ltil’i..‘lili . Mo“, or me Pacmawwar from me he: vacamm h‘ Marysvme‘ N [a c I iietenirfeldlcate Cross award-S. Own gtcAflinlttoln Perl" to Javanese side—the fantastic plun- with her parents, Mr. and M they“? following have been Guam g . fatal weaknesses-was told in Bmllh Jflumfll- ~ ‘ ‘ca? by 5‘ ""1? . _____ v g h ving completed a SEPEHUOU: Phc fvy-y-ai-old, owned by birabflllrlieezlltliitercllagafibllflllvavfiazumay RECEPTION-On Tuesday ev-i. tfifl-Illfzllg course:—-Lois Arsenalllllllt. Herlgsluulllti Vllooliflkcf Knnéas City. Highlights of ‘npenoganons owning, July 15m’ a; the homé ofll e filldalrgalraegrvMziccliféanargdaXeurKen“ esta lsicd u trai rccor of 2_. . ' ' me iortncr P300711 cl‘ 2:01 l-o es- Pgnductcd m“ (an m T°ky° bylMI’ and Mrsfloletus Mumméhwel? Hflffv stoti Patricia Shannon and lablished by Discovery in i935. . e United lfitllitasedSl/IEYBCAC bomb- lzivebn, phrtietceptiondsllarfiynfifidale glrllvd _____ Jame; Kelly‘ an o: Charlottetown. Historian Famed only n2 pounds mg survey cu : er e ren o v - _ “h; . g h; a - ‘. . . _ . _' l. The Japanese tried to negot- surrounding districts. Mr. and‘ Sm“ ‘he m“ ° s 3°“ "g lEmcst MacDonald. Phyllis Agneil howcxef. compared to the m5 . v - ' d l h u '-‘ . e, sians before Potsdam. place in New York recently. re-j hi‘? “éngmpfi, ‘Evelyn- Henry Keppoch Fen\v'i_<_:it_ eiy _ .2" The 9W5!“ M JPPB-“ese Imval "wed beanie“ ¢°°d wishes ‘mm. mcht Insurance benefits illegakn. - ~ allots were lost at Midway anti in ‘ their many friend-i vresefit The reports w. B. Davis, head of the! that crippled the fleet for lack efywas attested by the number of. Cnmmission h, the Maritime f“... earrier protection and from which ival-uable gifts and the amount of--,on_ your addgyyom; “Se, are it never recovered. ‘money received. Mr. and Mrs. pending m.‘ Wm be m“; within, 3. As early as Guadalcanal tupyMurphy wil take up residence inia (cw wed-Ks ' victory such cases and the eight convict- A merger of the Japanese |ed received jail terms ranging army and navy was contemplated. ifrom seven days to three months; but the navy spiked the idea. lScction 67 oi the Act. on which Personals . “to residence. gal notice later." Dr‘ Mme“ 5m" Mrs‘ RR" Hurst scales at 34 pou s dressed. tion at Brighton and Kenslngton (lgrs, me Sacra, negoglgggoym m, Alfred E While-St. John Te.e- fled as Red cross instructors a.“ win the $56,800 Arlington Handl- Jalmrfs topplanners and fighters. l the groom's parents in Millvaiei Alex‘ Mflcbmm‘ Albert Ganant’ 01 for the l 1-4 miles to plot out late for peace throuRh the R/us- Mrs. Murphy. whose marriage took persmm one o‘ ‘hem a woma a.nd Grac-e Lewis 0i Ofirdmml pmmd imims‘ Packed by BMW’ the Solomons, a compounded loss nopularlty bf the young Couple 10.3.1 depprlmgnb o: the u, 1. Japanese navy officers realized Charlottetown in the near future. There i; m; option o: a fiflg .n 5. The brilliant Allied drive up through the Solomons, which split | Japan of‘! from her vital oil and materials. surprised Japanese stre- lcclsts who expected a great fleet- to-fleet slugging match in the Central Pacific. 6. The material cost of modern warfare exceeded anything the Japanese had foreseen, and acute shortages of oll. steel and ships dcvelooed almost at once. MAvu-uwasr-mwmmnam ‘ RAT E S Births and Mars-In as 25c. Cash must accompany or er. .»v.-.s.-c-.-t.-.vi.~awvunw BIRTHS RODGEBBON-At the Charlotte- town Hospital, July‘ 13, 1946. to Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Pooh. a daughter. CARRIER-At Woodslde. Dart- mouth, to Mr. and Mrs. ILB. Oar- Yltr. a. daughter. Juli l6. DEATHS _ unnam- -at the City n 1m July 2i. Jerome Gallant a years. Remains resting at Htnnessey funeral home from Where the funeral will be held on Tuesday mtifnllfi at 8.46 to (lhurch oi the out Holy er. thence to B. O. Came §3.°."“i'.'.;.2l .“‘° My ‘ 0 . ulv 80. Reginald (Hum) 39rd year. John Remains will arrive at the amuse Funeral Homo this l ""1411: and be come to hi; New Ha an. Funer. N. D. MacLoan IINDIRTAKER EMBALMER Ohasieiiolon aul flu-ll: Wiliolflro Ilolo ll was impossible. j I odgeraon, _ th a Redeem- I iery. Montreal Docherty in shls | Mrs. W. T. Pearson. Parkdale. returned Friday evening from a‘ successful buying trip to Moutreall and Toronto. Mr. Arthur Dlckieson. who is at. .nreeent attending the rehabilltat-_ mm college prior to entering the |Unlvergity of Toronto next temp‘. has arrived at his home in New Glasgow for two weeks holidays. The many friends of P. J. Mac- Donald. C.N.T. lineman. will be sorry to know he is a patient i" the Charlottetown Hospital, fol- lowing an accident which took place at Bedford Station. coming from Mount Stewart. He was hi» bv a fast approaching car. bvl l5 convaleeclnt very well. Two yearling cattle, black and white, and red and white. Ear-tags 1241 and i242 If. located please notify navrs a ‘rnasaa —’ AIIIIMIBIIIR K his of Pflhiol. Wlll b0 M" Iweaniyesasy. ‘in; mi. st puny‘ ealo I I front of o n "gflltnfor Inembefl. Ilse r 521%“ a m a. an on If not line. the foilowinl Wil- y. ‘Too Lute To Classify LAIGI III DRISSB at Plu- oonh Dry . Psrkdsls. ‘Ha-u ;£;%..’f."’wllf€§"‘£i°&. ‘a "d? T: "..r......’.“°'i'3§aal3.'= l‘... "r ' "an thesmtences are based. states l‘ that a person on summary convic-' tion may be imprisoned for a term not exceeding three months. with or without hard labor. Davis explained. In all the cases to date than ly making false statemmta Mr. ‘ false representations for the pill‘? pose of obtaining unemployment insurance benefits. Those mcnls were madc- whcn . cuscd persons flied _thclr for -bcneflt, ploymcnt office. Magistrate Roger Rand of Yarmouth in passing out a 30 day sentence for such an offense n few days ago pointed to the servo-us- He stated that the government has seen flt to inaugurate a system whereby it is possible for insured garcons to draw unemployment eneflts to help them over a per- iod when they arewaut of work. But it was never the intention of the Eovernment lo permit people who are working to go info an unem loyment insurance office and ellberately lle to the officer in that office so that they may ob- tain some money. That might ev- en be classed as obtaining money under false pretenses, which is a far more serious charge. Other magistrates have pointed out. Mr. Davla said. that benefits obtained in that manner were thefts from n fund which is the' property of the insured workers of the country and built up for their securl-ty. '1‘he~ deparilncnt ln ifs efforts to safeguard lt for worker will rosecule attempts to draw benof ts illegally, ho said. Drlvf‘ Qu}AcHEs with their local cm? l l Maj-Gen C. B. Price, OB DSO, DCM. of Montreal (left) the ncss of the Act. Mr. Davis said.‘ newly elected Dominion President of the Canadian 119210-11‘. l5 ShW/n above being congratulated on his Pnsident, Mr. Alex Walker. OBE. of Ottawa. election by the fomicr Dominion The 11th biennial con- vmtton of the canadlan- Legion was held in Quebec City. — (Canadian Army Photo). l l the. Assault, winner of Kentucky Derby and Preakncss. gels a loving pat from Helenlra Klthclii. tlfluahter of wit. Rob: L .1 Klsberg. after the Texas-bred cclt. sccrfd hi». lhi winning the $101000 added Btlmont rd mnj<r vlclory of the season by Strikes at BtlmOnt Park. N. Joc- . keg Warren Mehrtens looks pleased with it all. British gunners stand guard of The Jewish Agency in Jerusalem aifter the Bri- tish arrested seven officials of the organization and "Dave's Dream", the bomber which carried the first atom bomb to Bikini. and her crew are back The plane arrived from over- seas at Fulriield-Sulauu Army Air Base. Falrfleiii. Calif. Left lo right are Maj. W. P. Swancutt, pilot. W. in United Slates. Wisconsin Rapids. Wls.; Oapt. charged the Agency with connivancc in recent Palestine violence. (Exclusive photo by Emil Rey- nolds. staff photograprer.) over headquarters Odessa. Tex; Maj. W. B. Adam. Ban Bernardfno. Calif; Mo]. H. ll. Wood. Bordenlowm. NJ; Li. R. M. Glenn, Anderson, 3.0.; Capt. Paul Chenohar. Rock Springs. Wy T/Sgt. J. W. Coihrrln. Gadsden, Ala: Cpl. R. M. Modlln. cranium. Vi. old WI. I. B. Lyons. Decatur. Ill. 0. Harrison.