Prince Hupcrt Daflp rectos Thursday, October 27, 1949 I , I . . , )ij sty mnnnqnnnn ) 5 1 " Tww A'" Y 'A : : ' - umI .... 5 VI ' V Jr. I. .teal Ml n?2 -V o'N'il, a ward of the Children's Institute ' h-jjs out his arm for a blood test which m-ame sn of Mrs. Arthur Thompson of Day. I .v oi iii veil kidnapped in October, 1944. Tom- ONLY ONE OP HER KIND AT LIBERY-Describing herself as the only member of the U. S. Communist party's ruling board now at liberty, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn is shown as she gave New York reporters her view on the conviction of 11 top Communists. Miss Flynn termed the jury's verdict "Hitler-like." .2 s.n. na.s uivKca ear ana wcDDca toes, j bi i. i tr.ts taken to prove his parentage, bruki'ii at the result of the blood test, wants nuy. I; 1 ' 4 i - j ia !e;r'"' - v V .a 'V..'. . 7s, I ' "V f iff- - -. V .ri 1 St:t 1 ' in Port ZEZnCePln au Prince, Haiti, T fTAGE W0R FAIRA Vlew of the exposition grounds showing of progress -nsVuction for the world s fair Which is to open OOOn the .In hW!,m 1 iWeaU RPUbllC With nly a 4'000000 IPUaUon is spending $25.bu0,- liaVVVer'thinglr0m industrial, agricultural and scientific exhibits to a gala entertainment area featuring, among other things, native voodoo dancing cocklteh't-IZZ y -Vticultural stars irm the U. S. Many foreign overnme'nuTreS -structing booths on the exposition grounds. - f ""i ,i:GHT IN GERMANY United States M-26 .he rrvlrw of some 30.000 American, BiltUh, S i Ai -iun troops takhiK part In combined si 'ii ar Sennclager. Germay. In background .;. a.Miy units which took oart. The Russians a Uic n view but not the exercises, ,.. . ... ; EXERCISE DEMOCRATIC RIGHT In the first national 'election held in Austria since 1945, Chancellor Leopold Figl is shown casting his ballot in Vienna. The 48-year-old head of the : Austrian coalition government, who was an agricultural engineer before going; into politics; Is leader of People's Party, predomin--antly Catholic. His party remained Austria's strongest political' W ..group receiving almost holf the ballots counted. T'f ""jr.'; 4 Tfcaf- i,'. f V "- s - I S4 - ' S3 r--. . -s. -fit:;,-v aw A PKOLLEM -Some Berlin women are l! b:rni. ot'ii'rs wrestle with each other. At ' s; runti us vere forbidden by police, on mor-'b '.n was lid aftor police were sued by one .cr Here is the climax of n hunt n hieh aUrant- LONG COMMUNIST TRIAL ENDS IN CON- VICTIONS-Elcven U. S. Communist leaders who had liiieir nay in court for 33 weeks to be exact found themselves at the end of the road when a jury of eight women and four men handed dow i a verdict of guilty for all in Judge Harold R. Medina's New York court. The judge later sentenced all but one to five years' imprisonment and $10,000 fines each. The defendants are shown ph Uoiraphed as they left the courthouse. Left to riRht: A U. S. -marshal; Harry Winston, 35, Com nunist national organization secretary; Eugene " Dennis (real name Francis Eugene Waldron).44, general secretary of U. S. Communist party; Jack Stachel, 49, educational director of the party; G lbert Green, 43, of Chicago, 111., state Commun--1st chairman; Benjamin J. Davis, Jr., 48, city councilman: John' B. Williamson, 46, labor secretary of Communist party; Robert Thompson, 34, New York state Communist chairman; Irving Potash. 47. party organizer; Gus Hall. 39, Clevel nxl Communist chairman; Carl printer. 43, Detroit, Mich., chairman Communist party, and Juhn Gates, 36, editor, Communist Dally Worker man In polka-dot tic in background unidentified. . ... l:nrr L-.wii hn, 1 t n t..i- v jv muni iiiiiu.vu ll lrt ciiLliuaia.niv; vr. '-: -'O S - H my ii m ... mfKP wt 1 t - ft : i-TSfm ffyi:3t,4 lllW.' v - ' f .j. Iff 3 A r- WAR DEAD UNVEILED AT CAMP VH5vmP'llCrlal to membe'"s of t,he Royal Can-fc" ln World War 11 was unveiled re-Con ,frd McCreery. at he R.C.A.F. school in ' Ml'Creery, who was chief nf staff to Vls- Stories of ritual murders ln Basuloland. South Africa, have caused a police investigation that has resulted in 50 natives being sentenced to death but has not stopped the murders: Shortly after two native chieis nau been hanired for murder the horiv nf (t3ihuumnvandcr of the Brltlsh army on the V. ' 1)r and guest sneaker ot. the annual H C. SUNNY SOUTHERN ALBERTA A mantle of snow covered Calgary during the week as the first snowstorm of winter swept across the Canadian prairies. The storm brought three inches of the white stuff to Calgary but in the Lethbridjre area of southera-Albei'ta, the fall was as much as 20 inches. Six-foot drifts blocked man f rural roads. , - , (CP Photo) another mutilated corpse was discovered. This Basuto woman, implicated in one of the deaths, signifies native mentality by saying she considers ritual murder a natural appeasement of supernatural forces. 4 d in the camp. Here he is shown dur- , tinny