t t; togetherwith llwaiia been chafing the past two or three going to have . “n _ e 19:’ edit- swirls! .. en "m; tll in I35 ' 1m rovemonts 1' dfampjfglfi. IIKDIOVCIIIBDB w weather would come in “flown was decided finally e would get under present conditions hold up matters any this was a move that entirely satisfactory d guns alik the lie-v" under than , And pfOVElI . w villi!‘ ‘if how strong the diflercnt , are is still not known. The Charlotte team in their ‘ on tussle last Sunday at showed flashes of both offen- rid defensive form that mark- flm as e stronger squad than yelll‘ went to the finals but wpi-evnilinlz conditions and it their first start of the sea- " m” qqmparlsofi could real- b, made between the i944 and _ ds. aqua a‘; e offic s appear to be iartlgiled rrltllalthe four teams 1 “in send into the leaglllk .. iherc will be some players p; from lost year's teams is a my}. but replacem nts that n been posted to t e station expected to flll the gaps that "been created in an adequate, lent manners}: teiim in the league this _ will be Gordon Bennett's .. oi Wales squad who are re- , g last year's civilian All . And the band of oung .. ris should odd lots 0 irlt- lind pep to‘ thew league. \ C. with Bennett had his charges . for a couple of workouts be- li rninryx-ps lately and al- he i=ii't what one would i ioquliflollS on their strength trlllcless lic appears to be well tied that the team once they working as n unit will be able yiic more than a fair account themselves in the coming league tflrs. =~i-’ >+ >14 so taken nil in all it appears too-pile the late start there 7 be n iiotiv-contested league in ion that Kllollld add goienty of lest to the sports pic ure. Al- llzh our information is not oi- A‘. at all it seems probable that » Air Force ifillhls will be able complete their full schedule oi and ivith the Navy in the . Jinn everything shouldbe -- oil smoothly and efficiently. -“ >i~ =1‘ lilzt liow long Air Force players illd be in tho city was one of . big qllcsiiun marks surround- the oprrfiiitln of the league soflbnli first started to poke ..c into the picture back a- ta month ngo. Without the etlt oi their teams in the lea- r the outlook was anything but ht even though sports headsin l. citv \Vl‘l‘(‘ going to carry on hciviiirln looms. providing oi t se they could band a sufficient n» together. Officials might have struck a ~ when they attempted to l; civilian icacue going, Softball yen belonging to the city have t apprnrrd overly interested in till" into the game. Noth- ..vcr lins been heard irom Stairs of last year's league the entire matter seems on the fact that the players ‘ lethal: more or less tired oi ibill fiilll would much ratherr-ee ‘hardball lcngiic resumed, Butns ilir as baseball making nlind of a comeback this pres- ‘ WW0. \\'(‘ll, it seems to be out iiie question. We are not trying “Bil iliii’ cold water on plans tmay be lil the making, rather woulriwclccme them, but plen- Qllgtiiiilll is needed and needed ‘Mthwmins. a matter which ‘- the writer to think that very ebascbaliFwiiiy witnessed, Wt could be wrong. and have " ii 890d many times 1n the l. but if anything is to turn up 1115i has to happen right away. re cant be too many more de- l All .. =1‘ >44 it! 17118500 fine Manager Mel Ott iiifi Giants slapped on big Bill it for serving up a soit against orders and losi the e to the Cardinal's ween Y "veneered. New Yolk base- mwriiers travelling with the N; hinted that Voiseile was “ - liisicai and didn't have the i his earlier names in losing mflgwilfi appearances on the ‘i? iii as the first bis league game Mike m e White Box ever 1- bmkinlr in with Chicago “011933, he suffered a finger t-h hat taught him a lesson , “"0110! pitchers, and since "a l’ he never has had another inlurv. ‘I: attri *4 if ‘It flmdd biites his luck to the big. ., "d miiis modem-day cat- ,“ gzcativhirn he says the it- . ., iih like because the all i hanbllick loudly when their H Trips in. But that doesn't ‘ m csh as long as the "pil- Uiliirlcrikqep him m‘ cmchlsrllds cha n whose d u.li Piflht feed ‘bpaeg llespgrtg “M C kl/‘s hard-boots on oi. E. R. Bradley is so . hlswiflnlne his artli Derby m "iiqaikllbmed colt Burning m; Math he is lining up the l“ the 8 greatest money joc- busines, Eddie Aroaro. racteristio oi l li in " Kentuc b “lhgnk dangerous Eddie has m, m "e Brass gallop twice Wire" i941 when he set the . nuygllilugitczyoinzwh 1:3: the .. Q . l“ 193B 0X1 I-uwrln. aw.y SHT etI ea-O irom getting the P I! The Aueoehhi Pres St. Louis Browns battered three Chicago pitchers for a mm $0 Nil yesterday to win both ends oi an American League Qoubie- header. 6-0 and 6-2 before 2,881, 1M Me I iour mm series with the Whlta Co: 13m; 8-1 margin. ‘libs Brownl. t out the day We". 4-0. cams back to bunch their hits in the opener and take of three Chicago errors i th i htc as they shelled Johxrainy eliilnlphrlaeg fl;om the mound 1n the sixth in- n g. Ai Newhouser racked up his sixth win oi the season holding Cleveland Indians to five hits for a 3-2 victory which gave the ORTING NEWS _ ' St. Louis Browns Win Both Ends Of Twin Bill hftskill-Slunfnptobecharg- ed with the loll. . The Tigers shelled Reynolds from the hill with a five-hit tlIee-run attack 1n the seventh. Boston Red Box captured a 10- innlug decision from Phil eiphia Athletiu 5-4 wbliie com letng an 1 home stay wit a total of 3 victories. Catcher Bob Garbarkb single with the bases loaded drove in Pete Fox with the winning run with one out in the extra frame. The Athletics gained a 4-1 lead, thanks to homers by Bob Estaleila and Hal Peck, before starter Jim Wilson was relieved by the veteran Mika Ryba. Ryba then held the visitors to one hit over the last four frames. :33" in 991N11- Tlkers two games one. his fifth conquest, surrendered l0 a new course record here today by blasting out a nine-under-par 68 to carry a six-stroke edge into tomorrow's second round oi the $10,000 C.P.G.A. open. The pre- vious record of B5 was held by Stan Home of Islesmere. A crowd oi more than 8,000 turned out to witness some of the inest golf ever played here and treated to the personal‘ appear- ance of Bing Crosby. Stan Home. Islesmerds home club pro, finish- ed atop the Canadian entries by carding a neat two-under-par 70. Although Nelson's blistering per- formance highlighted the tourna- ment, Bob Gray, Toronto pro. thrilled tlhe gallery circling the 18th green when he dropped a 200- yard approach shot into the cup ior an eagle two. _ Ed. Furgol, the Rlverbanks, N. Y., amateur ler‘. all the slmon-puxes home with a brilliant 70. putting two 35's back to back. Phil Far- ley playing in the threesome with Nelson and Horne carded two 37's to finish up with a 74. Bob Gray led the Toronto con- tlrlgent with u. 71, while those hit- ting even par included Bill Kerr oi Toronto and Nick Wisnock of Burlington, Ont, Sammy Snead, vwho had been counted among the leading U. S. entria. didnot reach Montreal in time to compete. K. Zabowski oi Halifax, only Maritime entry, shot a 37-40 for a . Aneurin Bevan Calls Lady Astor “0|d Gas Bag” (Bgghe Associated Press) LON N, June 7—Arieurin Bev- an, the former Welsh coal miner who became a Labor member oi pladrliamerét. 031118110 Lady Mara “an o gas ag" n ommons ay. "Oh, dear." replied the nob!e lady irom Virginia and Plymouth. I Mr. Bevan was protesting that [Pflfllfl-fflfiflt h not sanctioned subsidies to encourage house build- irégilblvirhen Lady Astor made an a e commen . "Bhut 11D." went up the cry from the Labor benches. Lady Astor, B5, and a staunch Conservative. jumped to her ieet and appealed to the Speaker. "Why does Mr. Bevan expect ‘ ‘ silence when he repeats a hundred times?" Mr. Bevan retorted: “ft really is intolerable when this old gas bag gets up and gabbles away." Baseball's Big, Six ‘(By Th0 ATo-Jated new (‘lflree leaders in each league): Player, Club G AB B. H Holmes. Braves 4.1 1 Kurowskl, Cards 39143 154 137 B6 M flpmg L0 I16! Lombardi, Giants, 18; Amcrbifl League: S hens, Browns, 8. Runs But In: National Lea- gue: Lombardi, Giants, 39; Ameri- can League: Etten, Yankees, 91. Johnny Linliell To Bon Arniy Garb NEW YORK. June 7 - (AP) — Johnny Lindeli, power hitter oi the New York Yankea, passed his physical examination today and will don uniform tomorrow. His teamm . ’ 55991115" stirnweise. was rejected by doctor-s. Stlrnlweiss once be- fore had been rejected because of ulcers. ... , . By The Canadian Prue Whhiluwao’. riddw w Eddi “m, rmuped to u. three-length win 1n the 73rd runnlnil 0i "W Belmont Stakes at New York iour years o today. Whirlcwly be- came 11%: horse to wear the triple orgy“ thQ Kehtlllllw nappy, eakness and Belmont stakes. Count Fleet became the sixth ‘three-sleeker winner of rac- inn atom-v i! 194l- ’ EfilNDlN“ Byron . Nelson Has Llo/ing.’ Lead At C. P. G. A. Open IBLEBMERE GOLF‘ CLUB, Que.l June 7 — (C?) - Byron Nelson; Toledo’: champion par-buster, seti for an added attraction they were; I Ph I I nedy and Mancuso. 589cm a twg-bagger by Estalleiia in the e . Allie Reynolds. trying for. ight Baseball Results NATIONAL LEAGUE R H E Boston 003 000 000-3 9 3 Philadelphia. 000 100 000-1 7 2 Tobin and Masi; Lee, Lucier and Peacock. Second “ . Boston 100 122 100-7 l2 1 iladelphia. 011 000001-3 7 l) Barley and Kluttz; Barrett, Ken- 000 008 OHL- 5 5 8 New York 010 151 02x—10 7 2 Pfund, King, Seats, Buker and Sukeforth, Dantonio; Mungo, Han- sen and Lombardi. Cincinnati 103 010 200-7 1d 0 Pittsburg 110 000 100-S l‘. 5 Bowman and Unser, Riddle; Sewell, Rescigno, Starr 8s Salkeld. 000 008100-14 7 l . 0E 001 l00x—6 10 0 Erickson, Prime, Stewart, and Rice, Livingston, Creel, Brecheen, and Odea. ' St. Louis Cardinals collected l0 hits off three Chicago pitchers to defeat the Cubs by a score of 6-4 in the only game of their series not postponed because of rain. Rookie right hander Jack Creel, on the mound for the world cham- pions, held his opponents hitiess until the sixth inning. Meanwhile. the Cards had accounted for four runs, two oi than in the second. Then Buster Adams clouted his eighth home run oi the season, scoring behind Ray Sanders. AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis 000 10d 002-4 7 0 Chicago 000 000 000-O 7 3 Kramer and Havworth; Lopaz and Tresh. Second Game: St. Louis 020 040 000—6 13 0 Chicago 000 001 100-Z ll l Shirley and Mancuso; Humph- ries, Ross and ‘fresh, Castino. Detroit 000 000 300-3 11 1 Cleveland 000 000101-2 5 0 Ncwhouser and Richards; Rey- nolds, Bagby and Hayes. Philadelphia 012 010 000 0-4 6 l Boston 100 002 100 l-5 B 1 Gassaway and Rosar; Wilson, Ryba and Garbark. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Buffalo 002 000 000-Z 7 2 Newark 010 000 20x—3 l0 1 Roscoe and Radakovich; Maldo- van and Vangrofski. Toronto 100 210 001-b 9 l Jersey City 102 302 00x--B 15 2 Smola, Jordan, Johnson, and Pruett; Zabala and Clausen. Montreal 001 210 000--4 l0 1 Baltimore 005 00B 01x—9 18 0 Roy, Colentino and Todd; Jaini- son, Podgajny, Barillari and Lol- lar. a Syracuse 000 010 0-4 9 5 Rochester 250 110 x—9 11 (l Davilla, Springer and Kerns; Gardner and McWeeney.‘ Second Game: Syracuse 110 120 020-10 9 2 R-‘ester 000080000-872 Bebber. Hamons, Springer and Just; Trotter, Stommera, Radier and Pratt, McWeeney. Br yn Baseball Standings (Not including Thursday's games) NATIONAL LEAGVUE L P.C. New York 5M .537 .514 .513 5128532383 SIEZSEGEG Boston Philadelphia AMERICAN LEAGUE .447 .375 New York Detroit Boston cago St. Louis Washington Cleveland Philadelphia INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE .595 .510 GSSEEBBZEG 555165833!‘ Montreal Jersey Cit!’ Baltimore Newark Rochester Syracuse Toronto Buffalo §2I$S€B3i 55555555!‘ Amusement Tax ° To Be Continued ‘By The Canadian Press) AWA, June 7-End oi the war in Europe brought Irevision oi a number of Canadus wartime taxes and studies oi other; with a view to ivlso "um: YGIIB owll BEB" JACK CARSON JANE WYMAN IRENE MANNING Even if you're tied up see itl You're bound to enjoy yourself. Souris Thur. 8:45 P.M. MONTAGUE. SATURDAY 7:45 - 9:45 P.M. KTHIE , can. rlla CHARLOTTMOWN ouaaman Brooklyn Errors, Give Giants Easy ‘10-5 Win ByTlDAIloilklPtII ezor yesterd to York Giants grab a no v1 on only seven . The Giants chipped in with tum boots in the comedy of errors. WR- lréessgdmgy a fig? wefiduy mrnout . DB? i111!- ‘ ‘Van Mango earned his sixth straight decision at Leroy Pfund’: eixlpense but neither lbu-ter was arflexrnd at the firéish u Leo Dur- oc pended . ‘NI Seats and CY Buker t0 M11. drawing nothing but a series 01’ ‘wild pitches, walks and. fleldlnfl boilers. Boston Braves made u. 0% twin H]! l-l Ind 7-8. rapped B111 L“ for seven. Five of the Boston hits were made in the their mame-winniw runs in the afterpiece while Tom Early hold the Phillie; to seven safeties. Joe Bowman allowed his former ll Cincinnati Rode defeated Pitts- uad lune the Rods t cit d a four-Game series. mus milieu in on m nits! and ve Pirate errors to give Bow-' man his second successive win since he left Bostog} Red Sox to join then-i. RipbSewell start/ed against 0S sweep of flhek iour s0 with Pniiaaeipiila rallies by de- ieating the lcucue tuilendem in a Gov. Dewey Urges Cancellation 0f Softball Practice for the P.W.C. team this evening at 6.15. All players are urged be out as there is not much time left before the first game on Tuesday. Sport Shorts From Britain By ALLAN NICKLESON Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, June 7—A conference in London between the various national lalwn tennis associations to discuss the position of the In- ternational Lawn Tennis Federat- ion as the regulating force oi the game throughout the world is be- ing planned for sometime in the near future. Meanwhile, the British Lawn Tennis Association is working to- wards resumption oi champion- ships at Wimbledon at the earliest possible date, and also is working on arrangements to hold the hard court championships and other national tournaments including junior titles. -Tennis was one of the hardest- hit sports during the war, mainlv because service requirements made for a, great shortage of tennis rac- kets, balls and other equipment. Consequently the organized game rtuzilly died except for some ex- hibitions arranged among leading players for Red Cross benefits. The game was especially hard hit among the 511131161‘ centres and the L.T.A., in efforts to put it back on its ieet will co-operate with county associations. Meanwhile, experiments with synthetic rubber have been encouraged and manu- facture of balls from this material will start as soon as labor is avail- able. O O O Capt. T. L. Lockton, internation- al hurdler, will return to the run- nlng track this summer, fresh from ‘Z0 operations on an arm wound. ‘The injury, however, won't allow him to compete in hurdle races so ‘Lockton is training as o, quarter- imile straight runner. Lockton suffered a. bullet wound iin the arm three ears ago while on Northwest front er work in In- dia. Last July, he went to France but the arm continued to give trouble and he was returned to England for more operations. ‘Hi5 last serious race was when he ran a dead-heat with the Ger- man. Karl Pollimans, in a British- German match Cologne, just before the war; began. I O It will take a long time for sport in Britain to get but one of the first signs oi the removal of rationed racing came at York where the governmentde- requisitioned Yorik Racecourse. one of the best in Northern England in peacetime. The course had ,been taken over by military auth- orities. | Sufficient progress has been made to enable a meeting to be held in August although stands 155 and other accommodation would not by that time have been re- stored to pre-war excellence. It may be included in the list of meets ior the second half oi the flat-racing season. Rebuild Airfield ‘Cu Ckinawa ls. MANILA, June There will be a softball practice, to obligations arising back to normal in m B- (lfiiday) - ta Great War Debts Would Likctfqo See Early’ Settlement Of Lend- Lease Obligations. mow voax, June 1 - (AP) —V Governor Thomas I. ,Dewey 0!; New York called tonight for can- cellation of World War I debts and early settlementogi leéitd-letlllllig war He also ulaed. in a speech we- pared for a war finance commL- tee dinner, that the United States take the lead in reducing tariffs and accept the Bretton Woods proposals, despite ‘imperfections, ,as a step toward solving postwar {economic problems. “The 25-year-old foreign gov- ernment debts to the United States arising from World War I will never be paid because they can- not be paid,” Mr. Dewey said. We should be honest and intellkel" enough to say so officially and cancel them. “Along with this should go an immediate repeal of the Johnson Act, which forbids private loans to governments and nations now in default oi these debts." Urging that efforts begin “at once" to settle lend-lease obliga- tions, the 19M. Republican presi- dential candidate said "it may well be that we shall have to cancel a major part of the financial ob- ligations," adding: "We are entitled to ask in re- turn that our partners shall fully live up to the other part of their obligations by eliminating barriers to commerce and promoting the betterment oi world-wide economic and social relations, as well as the l. cause of freedom of the individual. for which this war is being fought." Mr. Dewey said the Uni Stator not only should lower its tariffs but also should "initiate a world conference for general tariff reductions" and should seek. with. Great Britain, “the long-term stabilization oi the all-important. dollar-sterling rate." Mr. Dewey said "the ablest brains of our country were ex- cluded" irom preparing the Bret- ton Woods plan and that "in many respects it was a clumsy job," bu: he said the plan should be adapt- ed as "a method and an organ- ization through which men can work toward solutions." l i Canadian Troops Enjoying Life In Holland All B! ALLAN NIOKDISON rother armed trawler and a naval R. .A.F., were a close second. wrrrr arm catamaran ARMY. IN HQLLAND, June 7 — (C?) -_. Canadian soldiers in Holland are e midst oi a whirl of enter- tainment and holney caution; foreign to their fighting histnry. In direct contrast to the grim si-i-iTiill-"dintls 01 battle. Canada's fighting men are having the most lavish time of their overseas career —and in between times am mulling over future plans, d tion, Far East service, varied problems of rehabilitation, Canadian election ues. And they are writing more letters home. Bowman ut was relieved by ézwier Rleeeigpn followed by Ray n. Messrooln Chatter WIT)! THE R.C.A.1'. OVER- SEAS, June 7—(C‘P)—A formation of rocket and cannon-firing Beau- fighters from the R. C.A.F‘. Buffalo squadron led by Sqdn. Ldr. R. A. Schoales of Fort Norway before Germany's surren- der ior a surprise attack against Nani shipping in Midgulen Fjord. They scored 14 rocket hits a- gainst u merchant ship-it was seriously damaged-and damaged an armed trawler. R._A.F., Aus- tralian and New Zealand airmen who also took part in the raid damaged two large ireighters, an- auxlliary vessel. Sqdn. Ldr. Schoales and his nuv-l iga-tor, Flt, Lt. E. A. Jackson of, Grlmsby Beach, Ont, were thai fiSt men to attack. After scoring rocket hits against one of armed trawlens the-y raked its deck with cannon fire. Another R.C.A.F. plane, piloted by Flt. J. R. Raiicoilrt of St. Vic- tor, Beuucc County, Que, and navigated b F0. J. Tomes of 602i Maryland ve., Winnipeg. carried out attacks on the same trawler and a merchant vessel, Entrusted with finding the tsir- get was a Beauflghter flown by F0. D. A. Catrano of RR. 3. Cni- mar. Alta., wtih F0, A, E. Fcord of 290 Salem Ave., Toronto as nav- igator. Armed only with cannon it shot up an electric power pylon and put the Norwegian island of Bremanger in ‘darkness. The cease-fire on the western front ended R.C.A.F. operations in northern Germany but the last few days oi fighting saw more successdul air activity than was reported by Canadian airmen for many months, Here are some of the incidents! involving Canadians:- Spitfire pilots patrolling in thei Hamburg area destroyed four op- erational aircraft FO. A. T. Gibb of 5690 Cote St.‘ Antoine Rd.. Montreal, shot. down two Focke-Wulf 190's while F0.‘ John MacLeun oi Iliverliess, N. and an. Lt. Robert Hazel of 121i Glendela Ave., Toronto, each ac- counted for one. l A huge German Junkers 52‘ troop-carrier landed at down on an R.C.A.F, airfield in Germany, ti-lxied to the edge oi the field near a Spitfire dispersal area, and the iour occupants surrendered to astonished groundcrew men. P0. R. C. Shannon of 343 Ciarkl Ave., Westmount, Que, swooped‘ down on an FW. 190 just as it was landing on a German air-_ {ire/me at Hagenow and destroyedl t. , Aircrew of the City of Edmonton squadron averaged almost two trains a night in a 13-day period, being officially credited with shoot- ing up 2B trains to bring the squadron total to 115. The same squadron in one lil"ll‘, scored a total of 51 German molor‘ ‘ transport vehicles destroyed and damaged, with at least 13 wiped out. Leading scorers were Flt. Lt. Vic Cherry of Lubbock. Texas rind his navigator, Flt. Lt. Dave Bird- sall of the R.A.F., Fit. Lt. Jock Gordon of Vancouver and his nav- igiator, Sgt. Jock Findlay of thc BACK IN THE THAIQS GRBiNHITu-TE, Kent, England - (CP) — The training ship Wor- cester has been returned to the Thames Nautical Training College by the Admiralty. Seven hundred ordinary seamen and 180 stoke-rs were trained 0n her. GLASS snub The purity of sand has a zzrerit influence upon the quality of glass‘ "l made from it. vyllllam. flew to -. ‘t of Germany's future, a Canadian is kingpin of the policy ivlilch will control the German Arlznlrtiity‘. of To1"lin‘.o, who now Lends naval s "Jon oi the Allied Control] of Britain, m one 5Ortie_‘ma.n Government. openeralmmlnlield the‘ third inning when the Braves scored ‘ The Braves slammed Dick Bar- , ' root and Vernon Kennedy for 2 hits 1 Hrate teammates ll scattered hits‘ ~ burgh Pirates 7-2 before 2,954 i-cmsl have viictori i » Though casual spectators may be bored by proceedings of the San Francisco C dfereiicw, the CCIlCL. ing figurcs lll the piirlcys is ; Those pictured are, top ii-ft, l- US; top right, Miguel Angel Carcario, Argent-inns ".1 1.110 Joseph Paul-Boncour, former French premier and _... _._._ _ __ _.~.-;_ ~ v 1*. Canadian Officer {Canada To Export lFerrets Gilt Secrets iiiiiiniiliiim To Spain 0f German Navy By MARGARET ECKDR FLENSBURG, Germany, 7—<CP)~I".1 the hiirbcr of .-zrey, rsmcc town four niilcs f . . the Danish border. where Aili..d', CXIJGFLS grapple Lth tile DTOUlEPIIIS He is LL-Cmdr. AAYT Wheeler Coniiliis on. The COXIlITlLESlOIL: headed by ltiIai-Geru. Lowell Rooks deputy assistant chief of staff at Allied Supreme Head- lquaiteis, has its iic-adqilarters iii two former German cruise ships, anchored in ilie harbor of the town which Admiral D0€lll£Z tried l l i i Role of the Toronto naval of- ficer is to see that the surrender" terms, as they affect iiie Ga-riilun‘ Nritly, are enforced. and (icrmriif authorities are given facilities tot pass on Allied commando" to thel scattered Nazi nlavy. j Cmtl-l‘. Wheeler has the job of‘ ierrctlrlg out the 5 ‘ Gflllllflll navy, of int cciv b them bclorc," h»: sa "will; the‘ eXCCptiOn of their rocket type gun‘ machines. i "Most. of their secret equipment; has ire-Jn lldnj): l ll‘l;1ll \\'.‘-l' ma- chines o1' the Bri N " "vy. W»: iiilve l wit‘ 1.1.11‘ to i: n from illlC Ger- man Admiralty. ' Started flak-d Way now is one of the s iczidln": illVIll c-x- .-.s to be in 11's curly. but lie run mvliy" from‘ school in England at l4 to join the British Navy during the inst war. H started the hard vi-xy. as an- ' cry sczilnan, and is one oi a ' fiiv men iii tile Eriiisli Navy‘ to collie up from the ranks to such| a post. He fought this vwr the hard \vay,! too. Twice during Dunkerque ships were slink tinder him. For months his ship. the Bramble, iv-as leader, of the fleet oi minsiveepers. as well, as convoy escort on the Arctic rout-e t0 Russia. Dining the Nommndy landing-S. the battleship of vrfticii he was gun- nery offi:er was sunk and Cmdr Wheeler was unconscious when he Halifax, British ambassador" Jllll Masaryk, Czech foreign minister; bottom left, the 5‘ tion evidenced above by four lead- OVlLiCllCf‘ of their intcaise iniezcst. to the ambassador to Great Britain; dele and gate to UNCIO. _._, June 7 (CP) — L amen-t announced o: . permim had been f§lfl ed the Aliimiilum Cam- pany of Canada for the shipment of "D0000 pounds of aluminum .- . .\‘ ill. iiicnt said tile per- l... ".\'...' giziiliixl lilltfi on Willi economic tvarfcire of- T"; o1 Brliziin and the United No fiirihcr details were given. ‘M; J- Cfliril» ll. 0.0.1“. leader. " lii c l speech at Will- . l1 ., . that he had been permits had been grani- tiie izninccliote shipment of O0 pozinzis of ziluminum l0 and charged that tile Do- i (‘- ."riri":i' iiwl started OTTAWA, u" T. l n .. i. S r I. l. r.i _ . ’J Sud Ito make capital of his siinm Ger-l 13'- I . Colonel F, X. Jennings, of Saint John, NB. for the pal-l ijco x1 1's director of Public Reii l_ _ the Canadian Army, who is retir- llig at his own request to become director of Public Relations ilid Advertising of Wzir Assets Corpor- ation. Colonel Jennings will b! stationed in Montreal. In _1f.\‘ll life, Colonel Jennings" was editor- in-chief of the Tclegraiili-Journdl in Saint John. His ivifc and daughter, Edith, reside at 219 Dukfl St, Saint John, N.B. (Canadian Army Photo). POWER. PIONEER. LONDON _ ice) — incision in risk himself and his tanks in C105! cour y and in the dark on i110 nortiiivcstrrn iron‘ is ‘ official citnilzni I» NLC for i’. Bnciwvn v1 no C 2i. son of Viflddlliit . Canadian Highlanders, located iin wooded areas around Hilversum, _ ix gaéiaydlans in Holland are doing a . Famed mttlflfl units such as tho North Nova Sculls. Regiment and the Highland Ugh-t Infantry of 00.n- adrl, are bllleted in large Dutch re- sidences, clubs and luxury hotels. Beyond a morning parade. which 1s little more than a roll call, regi- mental duties are few and the men ve many hours of - m in which! to entertain and be enter- n i e a typical example of what the- 500 harbors to use as Tokyo's 7 sight possible reduction but. re-. Hiiversum sports ground, complete with grandstand, has been renamed "Maple Leaf Stadi ' American forces on Okinawa lo- day rushed the rebuilding oi new-, , Xy-won Nah“ airfield and pl-‘gggfi l over by softball-mfied gldanadimgr? radio acknowledged that t e "finaii 503101111 BN1 Vi-Yiieybi-ll RN the I118]- end" of the Okinawa battle was in g; B191)?!“ 01 iilraalelilmiiiii- There agile also boating, horseback riding and some swimml meets are planned in local cans when the present spell of cold and rain breaks. Signs on h18hways point t0 Canadianfzed Beach Club," and “Haymarket Club", the The 6th Marine Division, which seized the airfield. drove on south- eastward towards a unction with the 1st Marine Divi on, aimed at finally cutting oil’ the Oroku Pen- insula overlooking the anchorage and thus stopping the Japanese shellflre which still could reach both field “and! llllllfltfbfl}. g r Remnan o e apanese a - 3301x1116", “m, resisting!‘ get-fly‘, 111g] spots for men on leave in Lon- esp 0s o many o er s - six and eight-inch artillery pieces. 5W1“?! °fl IEBW- "i" 3° i" uni Others of the defence force. now "'68 WWW‘! "1 Almmmim ‘l m estimated to numbe no more than M W 01d" 19'1" "nu" m Pa“ 15000 i1 hting men, had been and Brussels and there are Dlenty drlven lnlo last-stand positions on 0i Dumb 1°11" “l” rm‘ can‘ the Yaeju-Dake escarpment, adinns to stay at their muss. series of ridges and hills running ‘r/arlflii-Barixlgliithllige Elem tgmiaglel he u D11 95 - e-i-afl and west new” t so them makin . Almost every day there are sponsible officials said tonight the invitut s to parties or dances ar- Dominion’s 2o per cent amusement ranged -by Dutch citizens and to tux was not on the list for revision which Canadians either ccme now or in the near future. "stag" or take Dutch girls. Through As far as could be learned ncre it iiil the conduct of Canadian so.- Canadians will go on paying the diers has been highly commenda- unusement tax for some time yet. ble. t i latter two originally popular drink- i i 6-» - ' Jliasubislii 5:021 Vtflnits ‘wrecked by bombs dropped from N.. _ . planes. Carrier attacks u well as 13-39 being flllTiNl at sirai i" :ic Jap DQ100112! [prepare for knock-out blows. consulin- -