MAXIMS OI-'A. MERE MAN gram..- 11. gives mu who gives met. A MAXIMS or A MERE MAN Punctuallty is the soul of busi- . Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . -'-"-"""'T"'” 3” 3'i's"-I":3i"'ou... ?...'.i':':'.2"'.'3: '3T'&'a”"si;3.?"?.. ”.”.2I.'.'i:3 CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1953 16 PAGES .i?:.S?i:f.'.?'i5Jl:.f:"i:... - OREAN East Germans Propose All-German Elections BERLIN (Reuters)-The East German cabinet Wednesday pro- posed meeting with West German representatives to prepare the way for all-German elections. Earlier Wednesday, East Ger- many purged its Justice minister, Wax Fechner, and appointed A woman Judge. "Red Hilde" Benja- nin. to take his place. Premier Otto Grotewohl said Pechner. 00, was fired for "activ- ty hostile to the republic." but iid not specify what this activity was. He apparently has been chos- n as a scapegoat for the anti- government June 17. Fechner's fall was made public lust six days after Moscow an- nounced that the soviet secret police chief, Lavrenty Beria. had been stripped of high office and Coming Events "Dance Iona East school, Fri- day, July 17. "Rollo Bay Tea. Wednesday. July 22nd. "Corrsn Ban picnic, Wednes- day. July 22nd. "Dance in Millview hall every Friday. Cross Parish Picnic. July lilth. "Kelly's rhursday. "Reserve Wednesday. August 5th for Belfast Church Tea. "Dance cardigan North school Thursday night. July lath. Alexandra lath. "Dance in Lake Verde School postponed until further notice. 1 '-buuiiuqv-L-c.. ' ' "York hall Friday, July 17th, ice cream and strawberry fea- tival. , "Ice Cream social, School, Thursday. July show. "Mr. Crosby, Kin- "Come to the Music" with Bing kora hall tonight. "Children's amateur c o n t e s t. North Rustico. Friday, 7.30 p.m. Adults 500. Children 25c. "Tonight St. Marks A n gl i e a n Church, Rustico, Ice Cream Festival an the Church giounds. "Dance in Vernon Hall. Thurs- day, July 10. in aid of the Bel- fast Home Association. "Concert and dnace, Bonshaw lnn, Friday. July 17. 8:30. Music by Pine Tree Boys. "All taxes due Sinnott Road School not paid by July 31. will be handed in for collection. By order rrustees. "Ice cream festival on the rroundswiruloe station 1-fall. Tues- day. July 28. Auspices Highfield. "Remember the regular Thurs- day night dance, Mount Stewart Legion Hall. Rollie McKenzie orch- estra. Canteen service. "There will be a meeting of the New Haven Liberal Poll Com- nittee at Richard MacPhee's Thursday night. "Postponed dance and ice trearn in North Wlltshire to- Hllht. If weather unfavorable dance will be held in hall. "Donlt miss the repeat per- lormance of "The Life of Riley", Fort Augustus hall Friday. July 17. Curtain 5:30. Dance after. "Show. Morell Hall. Friday and Saturday "At War With the Army with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. You'll laugh your eyes out at this one." "Master reeds-Another car ar- riving H. I. Willis Inc.. 0'Lesry. For complete line phone ouary l. Feeders who keep records use Master. "Farmers ask about the Shur Gain Feed Finance Plan. For par- ticulars t your local food mill. .!'a.rmora who break records Ills Sbur Gain. . "Earnscliffe ice cream festival Saturda July 18th. Enjoy Lads and Laasles pipe band concert. DIMHII. bingo. 6 p.m. Postponed from July lat "Master Feeds unloading car at Remington Thursday and Friday. Wlnuty lots delivered. Arthur Gtmabou. mach liver. Phone New London 14. "Wednesday August isth. Lob- WP lesser at'lt. sun:-a mun Irina !OIsr!siande.'l'bare'willbs lot-seflabstesstosomund. riots which began- set down for trial as a traitor. Purge Expected The same fate apparently awaits Fechner, the first satellite politic- ian to get the axe in what is ex- pecied to be H widespread purge in the wake of Beriais arrest. Fechner's son was reported or. rested earlier Wednesday on un- disclosed charges. The East German announce- ment coincided with a Moscow radio declaration that Beria's crony, Vladimir G. Deknnorov. had been purged from the Communist Party in Georgia. .1 Soviet repub- ic. - Fechner was last. in the news July 5 when he disclosed that 50.- 000 Germans had been arrested for tContinuedgoiiFpFa;eAl 5.F(c'.Foli.Wl)-F Soviei Ax Falls” On Beria's lieuienanl By SEYMOUR TOPPING LONDON, (AP)-The Soviet Com- munist ax fell Wednesday on one of Lavrenty P. Beria's lieutenants in a. move that may signal a purge- of collaborators of the ousted police boss. Vladimir G. Dekanozov was dis- of the motored to loader Pi'ogressive and Charlottetown, Conservative Leader In Charlottetown lion. George A. Drew, P.C.. being welcomed on his arrival in the City last evening. The Conservative Party had prev stopping briefly at Kensington enroute. iously spoken in Summerside Barier's Film Lab. Bodies of Three Missing U. S. missed fmm his job; as a central commlttesman of the party and minister of state security Georgia. the home republic Beria and Joseph Stalin. The Moscow radio announced that the fall of Dekanozov, .1 pre- in il.' and former deputy foreign minister who has been Beria's No l. man in Georgia, came at a joint ses- sion of the republic's Communist party-committee for Tbilisi. capital. Georgia's .Premier. B. M. Bak- hrsdse, was quoted as accusing Berla of "appointing his friends and followers to high places in tm Georgian Soviet socialist Re- public." Dekanosov took his job as chief of the republic's security forces only three months ago. Moscow announced at the time he was ap- pointed that his predecessor. A man named Rul-ihadze, had been arrested on charges of pcrsecuting innocent workers and plotting to amuse dissatisfaction among the Soviet people. ' v R.C.M.P. Trmislers Announced OTTAWA, (CPikTwn shifts of -R. C. M. P. officers were announc- ed Wednesday by Commissioner L. H. Nicholson. nisi. Ont., islon in the Ottawa area. pointed to command of depot div- ision at Regina. He will be replaced by Supt- ision. Nova Bcotla. ODIHAM. England, iCP) -The R.A.l". unveiled its jet-age might for the Queen Wednesday in the biggest serial review ever staged in Britain. For more than an hour. Queen Elizabeth. the Duke of Edinburgh and a crowd of 30.000, eyes shaded and necks crsned, watched the M0-plane aerial parade over this. fighter station known to Canadians in peace and war. It was the Foreign Mini LONDON. (AP) - The Unilcd Btaoiu. Britain and France asked Russia Wednesday to join in new Big Four foreign ministers' talks aimed rat restoring freedom to Germany and independenc to Austria. - In identical notes, the Western three foreign ministers said they will be ready to meet with the Russia foreign minister late in September to discul: I. Organisation of free German elections and the restoration of all the basic freedoms to the whole German people. Without so speci- lying they wQrQ- f'OfQI'I'll'K in DI-I'- war ambassador to Nazi Germany party central committee and the the Su . J. F. Thrasher. 48, of Snr-. N now commanding A 1)wgll2lFllOVf'(l htn men were found by. is up, isearchcrs on font. . i J, H. T. Poudrette. 45, native of 5.31110” and R 1.-n,,,ie nssv Rockland, 0111.. 110W in charge 01 stubborn and not as sturdy as the Cflmlnll "1V95l11mll0” for Hr ml" 1111119. 1Ontai'io and led to the discovery! Britain Unveils Her Jet-Age Might in Review, For Queen Russia Invited To New sters' Talks I Hunters Found I ' asses. Quin, (CF!-Bodies oil ihrec United states hunters. miss- iing more than .1 month in woods west of here, were found lnlc Wed- iicsday. The '.lll'Pll hunlcrs were identi- fied as Eugene ll. Linclsev, 47. son, Robert. 17. and Albert Claik. 520. all of I-iolidnysburg. Penn. ' ; The bodies were reported found about three miles from their aban- doned truck. Se:ii'chci's found the truck about 65 miles west of here last Fi'idny. Condition of the bodies was not known immediately to Quebec pro- vincinl police who cut off all roads leading in the scene. The men entered the forest about If at June 12 on H. bani"-hunting ii':p along the St. Joan River. Thry ydrove along an old logging roiid inloilg the liver. planning to stay in the Gaspe wilderness nbout two weeks. Thor hnrl no guide. Only police officials were per- mitted near the scene. The hunirrs were reported mis- iing only last week when relatlvcs called provincial police here. ask- ing the whereabouts of the three men. The older Lindsey previously in the area. The truck's battery was run down when it was found. Most. of the hunicrs' provisions were siill in the truck. The missing trio became the ob- ject. nf an air and land search. It is had hunted I r The hiim,v, hybrid offspring of no is lessl s l Queen's day wiih the RA ., the last big service review of the Coro- nation )'('Hl'. She saw helicopters. trainers. Spitfires of Battle of Britain fame and Sundcrlnnd flying basis. But the Queen and others were most inlercsted in odd-shaped jets, many just off the production line. which screamed by at 600 and 700 miles an hour. These were. Britain's toe;-.ii.T.;a'.m'5a;?a;1ai 7 y... tzculsr in soviet-controlled East Germany. 1. Conditions for setting up an all-German govermnent free to make any son of foreign alliances it pleases. .1. A final sgrcemeni. on an Aus- trian pact nf independence. , The note. had been handed to' soviet embassy representatives in Washington. London and Paris earlier in the day. A text of the British communica- tion released by the foreign office made it clear the proposed four- power psrley offorelgn ministers could clear the way for a wider East-west settlement. ilYearis Progress Reviewed At PEI Co-op&SHer&vices Meeting Prominent Resident 0f Souris Passes A prominent. and highly esteem- ed resident of Souris. Mr. Patrick St. John passed away at his home yesterday evening following A brief illness. He had been in his usual good ncalth until a week ago when he was stricken with a severe cold. Born in 1865 Mr. St. John was 88 yours old and the oldest male resident of Souris. Tliroughout his long life he had devoted much of his lime and ciieigies towards the csiablishmeni and improvement of numerous community enterprises. He had served on the Souris School Board for inany years and was a member of the Town Coun- cil fo; several terms. He was the first man appointed and sworn in as a member of the Council and he was also it member of the first School Board appointed at the nmnlgamaiion of the Souris River Body of Liiii? Girl Found Beside lake TICE TALKS RECESS UNTIL SATURDAY .Toi1g1ienin-g llleclares City Getting Unfair U.S. Stand Deal From Federal Govit Apparent - iii as-” h.gd7Rl1Fd HiNl'rltFlll 1;. ,, Cal lYill::'lTf'lS1a'll0lln. Cfdrrrxlgae lmiupl hocnuse people unprnui ICC-' Progressive (lrmscrvaiivn lrarirr. ;?"'”hol::V0n:5vP6:1E1i1:11; l"hplll;gd1”l';; PANMUNJOM, (AP)-United Nae 1 snirl that "M CIT Prminrial Gm- ' ' 1 (ions comm”-id and Con1rnunL,t(:Fl'hi"Illllll must have a hctirr fin-lwch momhly Cheques" truceinegotiators met less than a :::':"'m?::'l”::a:10ix, Armed Services halbhour today and Fecestwd lmi ihrivmrii Fcrloivil anrli l)llOHrll'li'ill .. . V . 4) also rnir-iind to lwliofs lwirl W Salllldiyi July 13. 312 l3-m- ll-00 lmillioriiins in ho spnltc lwfnin H ' h , H by 1 am. EDT Saturday). 'onr of tho largnsi political; Eduscongeg Ilriatm(;n:::eqi)Ker:1l:ron 1h; The" W” 5' 15'm”"”e delay 1” -moTTm'7S hp." 1," lqiomr 1';nmC iArmcd SCFVIPPS if the Pr0iZl't-s- , , 0 I10 l(' l' l - the start of todays meeting, which "mni”V":.nn:':f wqg :l.Mld:d 0131,; sive Cons:-rvatix-rs xvrre elect:-1 had been Called a ”l70-isible shut-lnv xir Mrlxin .1 xi.-Qiimri xmi-3” l”””"'” l)” lh” "K”"'"'"”';" F” . -- - ,' ' ' , . ' .' ' siiiri lhnl (JP rcIn:ir x more 75' down session. - - . us. who aslmil Ali) P. ll. -Boll, MM” Gcnmm Pmrknx Ycp rm The llx delegation app:iimi.ly is-mini of lllr' (ippmmoii hero, in I ' 1 . .F g T mlpnm was responsible for the 15-iniiiiiirpinimrluw: ihr gunsi spcaiu-r Mi. "rim" 0 ”w'" H” 1);”? d rm. lllrriu. ulm uas met on arrival Hi F M pm” up 1' n 9 delay in the start of today's talks, Wrmwr Mppnduure on "W R C, "The successor of the Island Co-op Services attests the need and desirability of a strong move- ment in our Province," said Pre- sident Louis O'Connor in his re- .port submitted yesiciday at the ninth annual meeting of line Co- operative Union of Prince Edward Island Ltd. "We should take pride in what iilce remark upon our success that we realize that our movement has come a long way in the past 10 years. This was told us repeatedly when yisitors call at our office and were shown through the is- lnnd. We had on different occas- ions to call on us. several from India, Pakistan, Thailand. United states. and other parts of Can- ada." At a meeting of the board of directors the following directors were appointed for the coming year. Messrs. Brendon O'Grad)'. Ch.1ltl0!tel0WllI. Alex MacAdam. Morell; Raeford Locke, OlLeary, and Louis O'Connor of Clinton. Mr. J. G. Dennis, Clmrlolleiown, WES 1'9-hDD0lf1lCd S('Cl'Clal',V. During the year the Services took we have achieved in this Prov- l ince.” Mr. O'Connor said. "It is only when visitors to our Prov- to give it time to receive a mcss- ihr Flmrlnircioun Airport hr, . age denverpd by helicopreig .'ilrv.sre. ('lini'lo-; NlL'Qii2iivl. Frc(idAh' ICM1l::P(.:1:1:n':1'::; zip The LEV delegates huddled around IJPCH.-in illlfi A. H. F. Gill was nl ," , .1 ' ,.,, r H mm... :1 table, reading the message, for grncivnl ill ilin ilniviiixiinity (ion- 0” dilmn ms! m(HnF1'I:En 1nd about five minutes and than iro by tho Lllinrluiiivioun Pill” ::Ix.(,db;:,:::nS1h: i1,i:.O;n:. 1-in ID... walked int-:1 the conferencg hut, iB;in(l iiiitlnr Pipe .ii:iJnr Albert l V, V fl .. North Korean can Nam 11 mpltvlnclmorl rind formally plpO(l intolpanmcm Ton” N) 'm "m 3;”? - . . . . F ,. Red negotiator, priced impatleiitlyfll" 11311. :',:sSnmT:,FhUnn1,:;:.d H'm he H louiside the Red delegations tent. 111 "11 "-V"111ll01'1'1119”11S 3f1P”i"l1. e Mm i n ' gazing frequently at 1115 u-H51 inlInu1nL' illV main uilrlross pro-l , u ' g watch, during (hp demlyv pun-(i for lwriiirlr-:isi lion. Mn: lnmlr T""m"nl "(fr A well-informed source said M, in-mv Eiiia('l(r)rl ulmi hr tcrrnui, . Gen. William K. Harrison, chiefi"”f'l'1'”” -alwmcnl" lwne sir-.F.T,f,,,?'”;nf.l;Q,Lf,,j,L?l””w;';” UN tllllce delegate, laid it on memiiiniod licrc rngarrling llin polic,vidm1m fmrh, Mm Hm (Luv Of line at wednesda).-S glpmimnelnf his pnriy in tlezilmt: uith Oliiychmqjtmowh 1nd "h'(.u'hH': meelinilr AF" P("m0'” "M Family "mow meniirmcrl that (in (iii: inoderit The source said today-S 5eSsi0nl?ln1'l'S. lip icrmnri llin rnniarlxxggg , , igg ,- --might, make 0,. break the taxksivlllhnl. hnlli would be rnrlui-ed nrl (Continued on page l5. col. 6t i Peinuigls Red radio said that, ,Ilarrison abruptly ended WPd.l'lfd. . o 0 o pdayg parley without asking if this? 'Reds concurred and ”walkP(i nutl I of the meeting." ; Tougliening l'. S. Policy 1 . I ......1lsland Fishermen Announced typo-licy atathe truce table coincided iivhitii a 'big Communist offensive on I the last session of Parliament. t Ke eas -ctentrsl fr0nt88311'1Sl50111h. OTTAWA. iCP)-The Federalantllwhen it becomes effect.ve in Aug- orean Micops; The l)1i1 ('1-19-1Prince Eduard Island govern-l List, it will provide prntrction Oilened 00113:. 9100081961 S1311Nl menis today announced a jointiagainsi storm losses. .fnr the moment but could breaklpim, for loans ,0 p. E. 1 lobster; jg: 101” anew 3'5 3113' H1119. liislicrmen to replace traps lost mi l Th9 UN SOUFCE -Saldi severe storms during May. I "This is a showdown. There is M.Angtm'm0:.nC:mem by F;-,5h”i." Ii 11. very distinct posibillty the talks Mm,” i ".1; mg and ' femwrl may Come out of s"r"yl" 1Fr-i:t:f(gIi:aiFaii'aslalgnnriiiiglmdiidniirik Official secrecy has been clamp-,'11511a11.V 1311!!” Qllalltilles Of 901110- IF YOU'RE nth CioiiER Look out For. flu: Bees pd on thp talks for two morphs, mcnl. mil have lo be replaced if -&;2 broken only by the allllolillcemenl the fishermen are to carry 0” ill?- that the two sides signed on June! crallmis. X 0 8 an agreement for handling more.” The loans will be based on the than 47,000 anihned prlgom-,rs.ie.iiinbci' of traps lost in May and bM hulking at a return 10 Communisil-Jun”. For the P.E.l. area, an an- (:1 (9 J l lmiai rcpliiceinciii rate of 2.5 per Iw 91 rule. South Korean President Syng- fccin is considered normal. Loans ,; i , man Rhee upset that agreement will he made on the number of 4-1;) June 18 with orders which fr:-ed.Ii'aps lost by each fiserman abovo ,3-.3 more than 27.000 anti-Rod North-lino 25 pnr rent of Imps set out Korean prisoners. 'at the beginiiing of last season. .--.------------.4 Th" maximum loan will be on l.'u0 traps, wiih the cost not in ex- reed .-; ;.. A ...,.... sfi I-ach. The loans will be , ' interest-frnc if repaid in regular ”1-slit, 21-st, instalnients over three years. sf" 7. J. 4 'ti”'” The illlll(i1lllCf'lll9lli from Mr. ,Siiiclaii".s (lcpnrtnieni. noted that H iledrml plan nf insurance lnv Mari- SEOFL. MP1-13V F0m- 'n3no:x"r0. iC'P1--Mininiuin and MINAKI. O-nt. lCPyCA pmgpgc. lnr's hunch took him in the shoresl of a lonely lake in northwestern: Wednesday of the mauled body of little Geraldine l-lu-ggan of Winni-I CE The fivc-year-old girl had been lost since Jilly 5 when ghe wandered from her grandfather's summer cahin at Wade. Ont, six miles west of here. i The remains of her body were found near Long Lake. about two miles southwest of Wade. Indian scnrcii:-rs said the child evidenlly died several days ago and the body ii-id been attacked by wild animals. Wolf hair WII5 found on nearby bushes. There was no blood on the clothing. When the child vanished in dais ago a huge search got under way sparked by her father. Jared Hug- gan, who marched with searchers night and day. A party of 63 soldiers, Indians. ll helicopter, 51 police dog and scores of volunteers struggled in the mosquito-infested bush for nine dsva without finding a clue. Tuesday. as the search neared an end. prospector Harry Hawes of Kenorn. who found two children lost four days in the same bush in 1947, pointed to Long Lake on a map and said: "There is where the child will be found." Friends chartered a float-equip- ped plane and liawes and plumber Joe Byiiskl started their own search. Late Tuesday. they found is footprint in lakcshore mud and is piece of cloth. I-Iasves camped all night in a V-shaped neck of land between two lakes near his discovery. At down, he set out again, At 12:30 p.m. CDT, Hawea and other searchers came upon the remnants of the rhlld's clothing, her blue jeans. shirt and under- ?Ke”'s:f;l;I sciilenatgilllfll 9&:”pI'J'::j”LBl?dl mander Gen. Mark Clark ar- 'lE.'IlE iobsicrinmi was adopted at mnxlmum ignipcmiun-5, 1 . ' ' rived in Korea from his Tok- --H - ' rA'---r -- -j Min. Maw. are MW Oper.Mmg n pouitry plimn Y0 '1CldIl11B1'i"!1 1!! "11" 13”” U. S. Ambassador Dawson 53 T3 chick haicheiy mid enlarged giad- Mum p "M, It l-.,nmunJnm- . Vmnm 53 66 mg smiion, slated Presideiit O'Con- He immwlmy wens", Hm 3P;-esem-5 Credentials Edmmmm 52 H "M m his FFDOFL The”. Pql”p' Communists of violating 1190- I --'- Cnlgarv 5: 71 Tf:”::1l;lj':1?::'L"?w:" jgllfjlllf racy of the armistice negotia. OTTAWA lcplwkv Dnugmsi Regina 64 H4 icnntlnued on page 15. col. 7) tlons. SHIN... my lm.mm. m.E.S,d,,m ml Winnipeg .. G5 r'-5 ,Qunkcr Onis Company. today pi-rt-,T”r”"'” 35 M C d0 D b T lsontrd his ('l'P(it"lllli'llS as l.lnit9rl.?I”:ITl':a1 S..:l...def C. i.. 1:-1 ”' ana 13-11 6 utalltes 0 a.:::::. ::l;.:.”::..::..."...:;.:;: ea iQiinkcr Oars after his npiinliii-,”:;l(::3(EI(;'!:7hn 6-? imcni. siirccnrls Stnnlnv VV()n(lu'nl'(l t i' 1 i H Um, hpgvm lH.'illlRX . on 74 1 C Charinw-rnxx-n 62 71 C: l-vc)TE”m”-Pl. debs lnrl:-7ud6A11l1i'p ME; TOFOHTO BOY Falls SwdnFi' no :5 By ALAN HARVEY 1 .h Cl k L, Kndeu F t T D Xoimmiih 59 i Cnnadinn Press Staff Writer dd: M061” 5 a;,”e,' -”mfe,r F ll. ee 0 ea St. John's 63 72 LONDON. ice:-Tim-Ly-six Can- ;'gr:::,eLJ”ni:fd ('.”:::l3gi1m:llfr” 2; -- - --"V --- adian dcbutanivs will curtsy before i g , , 1 U V , . iiAi,xF,vx, Icpl--T118 ii-omininn the Queen today at rs presentation ll”mll(:”'!.L'"ftsf4”J”;f .:”i;,”';lfid1IO510”,l,? Q;f",lNJ”11”lVc;'”l'p Public Wnsilier Office here says party in Buckingham Palace. Some 1:": .i ii; 'h” ? R” ." ', P m;;.1.P;. d”; J”. M M, Sm lithe weather Office llPl'P, says the 250 women fioin other countries 1" By 0 ';5I2")”V egx;nC"' E1” v .l'l;5v”-" 'l';j” ””mH1” .l:""t”L,'V,p”'iweather was SllllIl,V nnd uarm 131 M9 11150 PXP9Cl9d 10 bi? i31'9SP11l9d- gnm "F-3-wnl 0 legmmh F " B 7:” H-" PF. mlili , 1 M);” '1” V f PVT l iinrtlicrn New liruiisnirk and ”P”5911”1”0"" 111 "113 C335 95”" E k ;y our 0 B.FmC inn; H FINE mm:,.F' . m'md”hd .1 ",1 "T .,'"id r-os'.ci'n Quebec ivndiinsdny. but in si.-us of curtsying to the Queen 5” " 5: Q” ”"FA 0 do ill Film", ””','1d5 M I” (,”';)”..l” 1””:-;ilie reniaindcr oi the district more and the Duke of Edinburgh as g'”"1”Ilw F"C0”g'1f ”" mm (W TF1:-Pplfillllvrlit-1-1 0-19d l”'"iu:is rain and lcnipcraiiircs did not they sit on chairs on A platform W” ” '”””' "' ” N''"' m: 'T”' ”'F”' -ign much above 70 dog;-cps, in the Palace ballroom. The proper place for the cui-isy is designated by tiny marks on the carpet be- fore each chair. . Included ill the Canadian group are. three Montreal girls who do- cided to fit the presentation party into it thre-month tour of Britain and the continent. They are Willa Benson. Magtha Mccutcheon and Mary Ramsay. Miss Mcculcheon, buyer in a Montreal department store said she will wear navy blue lace over taffeta with a matching navy blue jackei. Dark-haired Miss Benson will wear light grey tulle over the same shade of grry silk. with a dark grey fitted jscltr-t. and Miss Ramsay will be in light mauve or- gandle with appllqued white but- terflles. other Montreal girls planning to be presented are Anne Aitkcn. a relative of Lord Beaverhrook. Mill'- ion Mackenzie. Sonja Reford. Jane Perkin and Mary O'Toole. Two sisters. Elizabeth and Msiri Mac- donsld. list. their hometowns as Montreal and Halifax. Victoria is another city well rep- resented among the debutantes. From Victoria are Elspeth Mac- donald, sheila Johnson. Margaret Nixon. Beryl Nation and Margaret wear .snd her remains. 1 Allen. 1 A distiirhance centred cast at lcape Cod had A l1."ll7fl of rain ex- Canadian Airmen Have 1 Troubles At French Base lending nnrtlicnstunid aver Nnvii Snoiin. and Pl'lllCP Erlward island Wis this disiiirban.-n nmvns north- east. of Nova Scnlia Thursdav, the rain will end and the wonilinr nill pm” g ggggwnug gv improve in oastcrrr Maritimes OTTAWA (CF)-The Ottawa millions will have to be Dburrd iiiliuflllxjv l”lg'Tlu 1;:”l';2"andi5 ifffjfflff Citizen. in a 4,000-word dispatch hen before it is nnyuliere mnr aicgzmiegw l ” C . ti i from Grog Tenquin, France, re. satisfactory pcrniaiirii: l'SlllbllSl'l-1 ' , . V Ports that facilities at the Cnnnd- rm-ni." imn';';f;:”E"':;'(;l '::',':1'".”':f,",'.: inn let-fishter hm 1111'" "11"" "GW '"'”11”" 15 W": '" h” l wl dr .4. hi Tl st charioimnwn given the RCA? more ronsinni cost for were to mine if " ” ' d 60 and 7X. Eastern N R. (lI)llli'lP-, lnuri St. Silnny lVl'll a hondnclios than it has had at any air staiioni anywhere. at home or abroad.” The dispatch We-dnesdny was witten by Ross Mum-n, assisiani publisher of the Vancouver Pro- vince reporting for the Southam News Service. It says since the three squadrons of No. 2 fighter wing nrrivdi .ir. Gros Tenquin last October Ihrl Csnadlsns hsve been confront:-d'.pr'rv with a multitude of "dllllcllltlelil'PKllI'lR(3llli. the Cniindians rcriinin ihnrr Tile. vcrgcsl ywhnlr rlrprrssilliz liiisliioss Hmhn HWY mm": "H R smndnl lfew clnudv lninrvnls niiri unrinri. Munm sins iiini insirad nbngm wmas. lmwhmh M Mnmm.” trnublo ”n'lnch easily could Iiavcland F1.(.dm.mnn 50 and an. S”... resulted liorr. the difficulties nnvcl.mhn 6" mm 75- pullr-d the ("llill'P air station close Upper 5'. John TH," mllvw Rn tngethrr duo In cxc-cpiioiinl lvadcr- M Cmlmr; sunny within lru ship and gnarl discipline." irloud-.. hm.l.W15: mnnmmm ..I.,n,. Ho rum mud. hucklcd and r-iip- lnwhigh ut Edmllndsmn Md yam. mm 25': uhich alrcndv ncnd pbrmon 50 mm 30 ”F"""V'h"l""' ”””"k”- Fury of F1ind,V: Light uinds: var- ond frustrations. ranging from a mess linllll and: other hiiildiiigsilnbl, r1m,dm..,. wph .vi,,mi,n- it faulty runway for their lightning-'and unflnishrd hangars nmong the,mn,,; g,mp,,m.m m fhrv gag. fast planes to near-impossible llv- faults of the base. 1 .... - .....n . ing conditions on the base in a He reports some United states High tide godly at chm-imte. sea of mud." fighter bases in France are worse mo-n gt 2.1: gm, and 1,53 pm. The base was built by the French than Groa Tenquln. The other two High use today at the North Shore at 0.30 am. and 027 pm. sunrises today at 4.81 am. and reels at 7.56 p.m. Canadian bases. in Germany. are ”completed and are splendid jobs of construction." during the last year. Munro says. at a cost estimated "as high as 35,000,000 and 00,000,000, and more .. ..., s