City Softball League Clubs are experiencing a tough time in get- ting their scheduled games played due to weather conditions and as a result the number of postponed tilts piling up is getting to be an imposing one xvith the Collegians suffering themost. + ... H‘ Tuesday night's encounter was the latest one to get the “red" signal from old man weather. but notwithstanding Navy and RCA. F‘. Sergeants are scheduled to tan- gle in tonight's tussle in what should be one of the brilliantly pitched. well played encounters that have been taking place ever since the league go; ‘underway. .. . Tl- And while on the subject of pit- ching, the hurling end of l! has flayed no little part in the victor- es chalked up by the different winners to date. In most instances tltey have been losv-hit-affairs tha-‘M the whining hurler has dished up and if an opposing team can lxirely perk awe!’ a’ the offerings being dished up to them. then there is vcry little chance. unless 1' other team is in the same nos- lt .1. of punching thrcugh with a_ victory. game. Navy, who after twostraight ivins over Air Force teams were sat back on their heels by the Col- legians and who have since wit- nessed the Aircraftsmen slam their. way into a first place tie with‘ them, will likelyo go all out in their encounter night in an ef- fort to break the deadlock. + =l< Sergeants, however, should prove to be plenty, plenty tough all th way against the team that are, being considered by many as the. squad to beat out for league hon-f 0T3. Right at present one came away from the l: zuo leaders and stiould ‘they- come lhPCllZll with a '\'lCIOl'_V to-t n.r:ht against the “Tarsfl then a» three cornered tic will exist for the league lead, as the writer uu- derstands the smnding is being conducted on a point basis. they are ,4.“ '1' -r | 721a: is the setup for to ightls encounter and it can easily be‘ seen how close-knit the league is in this. its early stages. and judg-l ing by the performances we havei witnessed so far this seasoi this s: e of affairs is very liabe to exist. riahr up to the final game of the schedule with ‘he battles for; playoff positions being very much in doubt. =1‘ Pi‘ But in addition to this ev-l enings game there is another en-i counter on tan this afternoon‘ that should provide plenty of in-l trrrst to local softball fans. and‘ that is when the team from the é HMCS. Charlottetown. which ar-l rived in port last night. meets an l all-star team from city softball circles in an exhibition encounter that gets underway at the Victoria Park at 3 dclcciosharp. T.“ W‘. '.' Usually those ships that arrive in port have pretty capable teams that go to make up the various branches of sport. and Charlotte,- town's squad should not prove an exception. Just what players cam- ose the local squad could not be earned last night but it is pos- sible that a strong band will be picked which should go to make for a close-knit struggle all tho ivay. Lou Boudreau of the Cleveland Indians and Dixie Walker of the Dodgers are fighting hard against the ‘hitting slumps which are draw- ing them farther and farther a- way from the batting titles they won a year ago. d‘. 5K 5F Bo‘h are the victims of the fickle fate which makes an athlete a - ‘ \ quidwr. gfiflfflfiwhé i’ BlueGildlie l a sat-mgr ~ 6 U ""“i§.’.?i°'{.i€i.”° Gillette Lather l . fr 6rd. h . Trout says ‘ o 0 0 11%: jtilistwmllglngovllegledw start this c _-_I- Lou Alter. 126 night gained a six-round decision know what I'm doing wrong. of hits which lifted him above the lsoo mark. -lcy Field he also left the charmed .300 circle. not alone. iCinclrmati Reds and Diz Trout of (the Detroit Tigers, Inland American League top pitchers n place thll season. .'~ + |man, won 23 games while losing eight last year. has won only four while losing back at the hot corner. ‘across the junior circuit last year ,in winning 27 games wiile losing 214. has manager to spit even in 12 appearances so for. Never at a an .senon and will any day new. ,- Place lVith (By The Associated Frail) New York Giants inaugurated n long home stand sweeping both ends oi’ o double- header from Pittsburgh 10-4 and 3-2 to move past the Pirates into third place in the National league. A thrilling three-run rally after two were out in the last half of the ninth won the second contest ,for the Giants after the Pirates ihad forged ahead 2-0 on home runs by Lee Handley in the first and Bill Salkeld in the ninth. George Hausmanns double ac- counted for the tying and winning THUS. Hausmann was also the hi‘tlng ar in the opener, accounting for four of his team's 17 hits off Al Gerheauser and Xavier Rescignr. Van Mungo registered his eighth triumph, yielding seven hit. all .n Pittsburgh's two run soor ng la- rigs. Leonard Rings Up Seventh _ Pitching Victory With But selling! $.31.» tonight's! 9'1 (By The Associated Yresa) l With Emil (Dutch) Leonardl scattering four hits, Washington Senators walloped Detroit Tigers. 9-1 before 24.366 fans yesterday in a twilight American League game at Detroit. Leonard, feeding the first place (Tigers his knuckler with rare ef-lweshlngwfl lhtiveness. allowed only two mealnfllfflll» to reach second and retired the last 15 Detroit batsmen in order. Paul (Dizzy) Trent's third inning, homer preven‘ed a shutout asi Leonard rang up his seventh vic- tory against three defeats. ' Lou Alter Gains G-lluund Decision . N._J.. June 27 - 1-2. Montreal. to- ELIZABEH over Billv Johnson. 1165. Wilming- ton. N.C. Jersey City Take Two From Toronto Leafs (By The Canadian Press) . Jersey City Giants capturedboth ends of an International League double bill from the Maple Leafs at Toronto yesterday. romping through the opener 9-4 and taking a 1-0 decision in the nightcap. A 6 run. 7 hit rally in the ninth after Whitey Lockman had evened the score with a homer in the sixth gave the Giants their first win of the current flve game ser-i S. l The only tallv of the afterpiecel came in the third. when Leston- gray rolled a double over the flrstl lnise cushion to score Russ Weim. ' champion one day and an also-ran‘. the next. Walker won the National Leaguei swat title going away last year; with a .357 average. while Boud- reau annexed the American Lea-l gue crown with a .327 mark. Butt you wouldn't recognize the per-i cegtages they are carrying around ay. élé 5K 9K Harassed by the troubles which come to a manager of a seventh place team, Boudreau is hitting .282, while the pride of Platbush is putting along with a .276 aver- age. having failed to find the drive which ,hos lifted the Dodg- ers into the first place in the Na- tional Leagueak 3k And this was supposed w be a hitters’ year, too. Considering the big leagues’ ordinary pitching. such established hitters as Boud- reau and Walker were expected to create mayhem with their slug- Elngr Walker during a Dodgers’ recent western tour. remarked. "I llglft‘ 've tried.eve hing. But I can't nnd thot ' - it! if it! A lefthanded hitter, Dixie bor- rowed a couple of bats from the Cubs during the series and promptly broke loose with a flurry Yet when he left Wrig- Ciar-z-fs Move Into Third Over Pittsburgh three-run explosion. I Double Wiin Pirates yesterday by ‘ Cincinnati's Vemi Kennedy, 36-year-old rlght-handeni won his 100th major league pitch- ing triumph and Boston's batting leader Tommy Holmes hit safely- At Boston in 23 consecutive games while the Reds were sweeping a doublehead- er from the Braves. 5-4 in l0 in- nines. and 4-2. , Kennedy. who has ‘performed for seven clubs in both_ leagues since breaking in-with the Chisox taking the overtime ooener after five nrevious failures this season. 'I‘ribesman Bog Logan -held the Reds to two hits until the night- cap‘s sixth inning, when two pass- es, a single and Steve Vfesnei-‘s double to right Baseball Results AMERICAN_LEAGUE 10o 0oz 003-9 1s o 001000 000-l 4 2 Leonard and Farrell; rell, Eaton and Swift. ' I New York ooo ooo 205-1 a s1 s1. was, ooo ooo 101-2 s o lee-ms and (larbark; mamer. Muncrief and Hayworth. in 1934. hit his century mark bvl resulted in at ; c ' TH curi-zrd ‘i §.rueArncs I revues 1 a COMRADE GINGER ROGERS . l '| ROBERT RYAN RUTH HUSSEY Patricia Collinge l Mady Christians - Kim Hunter Jane. Darwell .' Richard Martin i 3 a I l _ycar, presumably With , 1 l (n. The Cmullufi ‘ Prep)‘ OTPA headquarters announced in the M1817. NBVY Mid Al! I‘ Fgr the period up to May ‘l. the casualty had ing that in es. Casualty rates, which monthly totals of bet and 10.000 in the crucial ilghtin between July and mOctober in w from natural causes: Navy 160; ggmy 1,455; R.0.A.F. 341; u» s- Latest Casualty (Figures, including 37.904 dead andJpM gissinagl. for thrwnr period up to the Pacific. some Air Force per- , eve Ind the cruiser Wanda». whic of the end of thewar in Europe, has already been reported in total already tlom. been announced u 108.876, show. the remainder of the mittod glOIIl/h there were only 79 casual- until D-Doy last June 6. had the reached including 21800 d ween 8.000 F. had a total of 20.564 casualties. total 1,- I tho. Japanese. From nowflfiaglle WA. Jun ’ 27 — Def nl th n r a1 casualties of arm- ‘ r0310; gdyforceco lgimtraininu and in hos- Canada suflercd 100.064 casualties pitch. Then are. however. a smattering that undisclosed date there 0g: 0mm!“ y observers sonnel serving with the R.A.F The not generally corn- Arm , in he European theatre heaviest casualty total at 80.064. ead. The RCA. including 14347 dead. while the Navy had 2,336 casualties, includ- remain atiing 1.911 dead he low May rate until Canadian Here is the official casualty table forces destl ed for the Paclflclfor the war period up to May 31:- theatre all re in action against! ‘ XX-Prlloner- .. X-Dend Wounded Missing interned T011! Navy 1.911 918 l0 9f! 3.336- Army 21.806 50.4% 361 6.469 80.054 R.C.A.F. 14,247 1.8M 2.505 2.4M 20.564 Total 07.964 53.078 2,868 0.051 102.954 (X-Includes the following deaths‘ (XX-Includes the following re- patriated. llberated and escaped prisoners of war: Navy 95; Army 4,917; R.O.A.F. 2,254; total,7,265). Never to be forgotten in this story of the gal- lant zirl who lives next door - - - and the boy who lives in~her heart! Matinee 3:30 PM. ‘ Montague Fri. 8:30 P.M. l Montague Saturday 1 ms - 9:45 l Notice To Members 0f Boston 101,231 003-11 17 2 Chicago 030 2001 030-9 10 1. 0‘Nc2ll. Hausmann, Barrett and Garbark, Walters: Grov. Ross. Caldwell and Tresh. Philadelphia 000 010 010-2 8 4, Cleveland 101 21B COX-B l4 0. Christopher. Berry and Rosar,l George; Smith and Hayes. NATIONATLEAGUE Pittsburgh 002 200 000- 4 7 0 New York 120 200 23x—l0 17 1 Gerheauser. Resclizno and Lopez; Mungo and Lombardi. Second Game: Pittsburgh 100 000 001-2 6 0i New York 000 000 003-3 11 0' Roe and Salkeld; Brewer and, Kluttz. g Cincinnati 110 002 000 1-5 11 l, Boston 000 100 300 0-4 9 2| Kennedy and Unser; Hutchinson. Hutchlnfli 8nd Ma5~ Second Game: Cooper,‘ oocoo211o-4 v oi lluoit Club All members of the Rocl-iford Square Quoit Club are asked to be, on hand at the Club courts to- night at 5 o'clock sharp in order to start play for the Warren Lord prize. Carter 6t Co._ and J. A. McDonald, Ltd, have also kindly donated prizes and the compeitlon promises to be very keen. aseliall Standings (Not including tonight's games) American League Cincinnati , I - Pv- Boston 000 000 200-2 5 1\Det.roit IP14 Fox and Unser; Logan, Hutch-.New York . *8_ ings and I-Iofferth. gostnn ‘gig’ cage - y Chicago ...... .. 111 002 000-5 9 Ziwashington “"'°“‘l" " "s°l°ri°° “J3 Zolfiizwtiitiifi Derr nger. r c “Cm - _ - ~ . ingston; Gig-rag, Baker. Rudolph Philadelphia . . . . .. 57 20 37...3a7 and Beacon ' i National League First Game: st. Louis 20o 000 100-s 1o mBrwk-lvn 1.5g; Philadelphia 020 000 OBx-B 15 0i 51- ~- '25s Wilkes, Jurisich, Byerly 6.: Rice. NEW Y0“ - - 537, O‘Dea;Sproull. Karl and Mancuso,|¢hl¢i8‘° -- '53.. ssem‘?i>dl' 002 ioo 210-6 1a ..‘.§‘.."€§.§"‘“ ' '- ~ 3135'! ~_ us s _. ..... (U, -_‘_ Philadelphia 00o ooo 000-o 1 ofciuvir-fl-etfii -- g2 f2 7:; 31-31 Donnelly and Odca; Leon, JuddPllllfldelll B - - - - ~ -- -~- i andrriijrilacifrmfir. LEAGUE Imemathnal ha!“ I ~- ..........o442 22 c" Jersey city 00o 012 cos-a 1a ‘zl Plfllggetllgiglly 62 3'6 2"?‘ '93‘; Toronto on 10o oa1-4 1o oiNewerk 3f 5'71 jg? Polliémg Toricofl; Smola, Stenoi-I gigging" 58 25 30 I433 (9) an rue . "" geefigelird £01m" 001 ooo o-1 '1 glllcinellg! 2% i; $25 Toronto ooo ooo o-o s ‘Bllifew 55 19 36 '“ Pru . Syracuse 300 100 0-4 7 Buffalo 000 121 1-5 6 Bosser and Just; Brown and Mordarskl. Baltimore 000000000-0 4 1 Montreal .. .. .. 110 041 10x-8 Hooks and Lollar; Banta Brlttain. 0 0 Rosso and Toncoff; Crowson and et 2 1 12 1 and 1 Newark . . 000 000 000-O 8 Rochester .. 000 00I CCx-l 5 l Drews and Taylor; Radler and McWeeney. Syracuse 042 000 000-6 l0 l Bufialo 030 010 000-3 8 Bebber and Just; Pierce, Gilles- pie, Angstadt and Welch, Nordar- ski. Big Six Baseball's it if I Boudreau's slump is more under-l sendable. It's due to a late- soring start and managerial woes.) Cal/Erma. cub! 55 297 41 73 353 During previous seasons, hOV/CVCL; Cuccinello. W-B- 56 199 39 53 347 he has never let his bench duties: Case. 500M013 affect his ficlg pgrfoznances. ' Still. Boudreau and Walker are Bucky Walters of the the National 1944. both are also sadly out of Pa’: *0 i.'n.r""y“v Walters: a ‘cdnvcrted third bise- _..___. ‘ But to date he even. l-fe probably wishes he was Trout, who blazed a victory path b0 172k ‘on tnpJ (By The Associated Press) ) (Three Leaders In Each League Player, can. G AB R ll Pct Holmes, Braves 60 254 51 99 1555i Resell. Dodgers 53 218 48 78 .366 5.2 210 80 ‘l0 .333 Stirnwelsc. Yanks 57 282 46 73 .315 Home Runs -.- National Lea e:_ Lombardi. Giants, l8; Ame an League, Stephens. Browns, . Runs Battcd In — Notional Lea- gue: ~O1m0. Dodgers. 54; Ameri- can League: Etten. Yankees. 41. MONTY’! HIGH STANDARD Gen. Bernard Montgomery never drinks. smokes. or swears, and gives one-tenth of his income to chum . the BUG K/LLFYR Complete] exlefinin- at“ Bedbugs. Cock- roaohoo. Finn. Silver- ‘ fish. Crickets. Al Elton. pron, leading drug. ha Jeffn-ey Wins fiFirst Section {Cf Tournament Jeffrey last night won the first ‘section of the Brighton Horse- ,shoe Club tournament. In h ‘last three games of the schedule he scored 4B ringers. successively defeating A. Martin, Whitlocl‘, and Yorston. Starting i off the lay last night Yorston won from cLellan. Now everything is in readiness for the opening of the second section and all the players enter- ed in the tournament. a handicap ed to the winner of the merit. When the winner of the sec- ond section is declared he will play off with Jeffrey. If the latter, wins the second section he will‘ automatically be - declared the‘ tournament winner. ‘Both Martin and Yorstori put up hard fights last night Martin had 43 points to Jeffrey's 50 while Yorston had 45. Jeffrey had l8 ringers in hill match with Whitlock, l6 against! Yoraton and 14 against Martin. REMEMBER WHEN By The 6215i... Press J Vander Meer. Cincinnati R nder and only pltchrr in big league history to pitch two consecutive no-hit, 110-run games. voluntarily returned to thc minor leagues flve years ago today. After his amazing performance of 21 1-3 hitless innings in 1028. he ran into a streak of injuries. but returned t0 the Reds the following year. tourna- = m "W" m c l tta-K inc pipe- cooperntvc neurol- n: write 0m)‘; “n, NEW, ax...” olifnfigg miles, Pmdlm- Term“ 4- marking it the lonzest pipeline m 41th; world . l Many friends in‘ this Province 'tune. will be remembered as one I Souris Thur 7_45_9_45 ‘will be interested to learn of the i . l recently celebrated one hundredth anniversary of Central Falls Con- (gregational Church, Central Falls, Rhoda Island. the pastor of which is the Rev. James Davidson Ding- well. D.D., formerly of Bay For- tune. P.E.I. The occasion was also the fif- tieth anniversary of Rev. Dr. Dingwell‘: ordination to the min- lstry, the fiftieth anniversary of his marriage the and thirty- fourth anniversary of his pastor- kn ate of the church. Dr. Dlngwell was the recipient of many tri- butes and congratulatory mess- ages. testifying to the high eo- teem in which he is held in his adopted state and ountry. D:. Dingwelfs fa her. the late James W. Dingwell, of Bay For- llutch Press Critical 0f Canadian Policy UTRECHT. Holland. June 27- (CP Cable) - In order to combat “exaggerated and mischievous statements" in the Netherlands press. the lst Canadian Army to- night issued a statement. on the current shipping of food. clothing and other supplies from Holland to Germany. . The statement is a sequel to sev- eral days’ investigations following accusations in Dutch newspapers last week that the Canadian Army was exporting Dutch-manufac- tured clothing and equipment into Germany for maintenance of the German civilian population. The story received wide circul- ation in Holland, arousing strong resentment.‘ Gen. Crerar. army commander. ordered an immediate inquiry. and the Dutch press and radio tonight asked him to “state the true position and make clear to the Dutch people the extent to which the Allies assisted them sine: liberation." Movement of food and stores from Holland has been in accor- dance with capitulation terms re- quiring the 120.000 Germans in Holland to take their own stocks of food and clothing when evacu- ated to northwest Germany. ‘the statement claimed. It was appre- ciated that certaln of these stocks were Dutch but the policy was to ‘prevent maintenance of the Ger- man forces being thrown onto British resources in Germany. Export Permits Needed For Poultry OTllAWA. June 2'1 — (OP) Finance Minister Ilaley announced today that effective at midnight tonight meat and dressed and live poultry will be placed under ex- port permit at all ciutom ports a- cross Canada. A statement said the action was being taken in con- junction with the United States‘ to insure the filling of the Amer- ican contract for 30,000,000 pounds 1s of chicken to feed the armed for- C85. WASHINGTON, June 2'1 — (AP) -The war food administration re~. will be some cently issued an order taking con- trol over imports of all poultry im- ported from Canada. Mexico, Gua- temala and e1 Salvador. All such poultry imported must be offered to the government to help fill mil- affair, are asked to meet at the “My requirement" °'s‘;“.:u' .ti...'"‘rf..i°‘t.'.“.'it" ~=-P""‘“» m m“ - IIAPPY MARRIAGE MALVIZRIJNK, lhgllmd, June 28 - (C?) -— Get married every year but always to the same woman, was the recipe for happy marriages handed out by Rev. A. Hartely of this Worcestershire town, in a oer- mon culled, “Here come; the bride." “Every married oouplq should. on the anniversary of their wedding. 3o through the solemn service to remind them of the promise they made and the vows they took on the day they hoped would be one of! liters happiest memories." he sa d. Island Pastor Honored 'At Church Anniversary of the most enterprising and suc- cessful lobster canners of this Province. His grandfather, Hon. William Dingwell, also a native of Bay Fortune, was a Liberal member of the Legislature for sixteen years. arid was one of the most prominent shlpbullders of his day. He drafted his own plans and prepared his own molds. building ships of from 200 to 250 tons and sailing them himself to Newfoundland. He was also own as an ardent supporter of free schools. of the Franchise Act and the Tenants and Land Act. Rev. Dr. Dingwell has two sur- viving brothers in Prince Edward Island, Ernest. in Souris, and Clarence. in North Bedeque. as h w- It was a. BOO-pound bomb whist- l ling down from 2,000 feet that spelled doom to the of the Canadian Pacific fleet that day back in late October in 1040 when the Dnpress of Britain went down. l Y myriad smaller inccndiarico, crashed through the two top oun- decks, exploded violently in the luxurious main lounge tossed naming, bits of magnesium from a mace" "l..;l’.°" ur- t . e 05W 031D v0 bomb did its job-it put. the fire- well as many other relatives throughout ‘llnity or Belgium ThreatenedByllisput-e LONDON. June 2'1 - (c? Cable) T‘ The "Jilly 0|’ 3918mm. a complex little country with dlvlslflns of race 8nd IaHBl-WBG. is being lmperilled. bl’ 7-118 91010118901 crisis over Kingl 149011016. in the opinion of observ- eighhere. o ldnsb rasent. refusal to ab- d-lcflte in the PHCC of a demand from some sections has revived the age- old rift. between the Flamands, Flemish-speaking ' north of a General line thwuch Gent (Ghent), and Liege, and the miner's: "Eplé. °’ . 0 m e u e arm's - ulation. , ° p” Broadly speaking the majority of the Flamands are for the King and the majority oi’ lille Walloon; are wainst him. The split between these two sections is becoming ex. l-Yemely serious and it has broad- ened the current issues to one in- volvinz Belgium's future. At the beginning. the Flamands prebeblv could have been recon- ciled to the King's abdication but after the wrangling oi’ the last two weeks over the monarchy they probahw would not now accept the agbclication without vehement pro- s a triumph for Wallonia. If the dispute over the monarchy leads eventually to an attempt to form a repuiblic it probably will be ble to maintain any unity between the t/wo sections. However, 'the strong oipposition to the king, which is ociwsed in leftwilng groups, has not yet taken a repub- lic stand. Grounds for opposition to the monarch are generally that ho acted unconstitutionally by remain- ing in Belgium in 1940 against the advice 0f his ministers, that. the king's tendency was authoritarian, his entourage semi-Fascist and that; 1n various ways he showed a col- laborationist attitude. Efnould King Imorpold atbdlcate, the heir to the throne is his 15- year-old scn, Prince Baudoin, Duke of Braba t Ho. INCREASE FRUIT IMPORTS LONDON — (OP) - Arrange- merits have been made for increased citrus fruit. shipments to Britain. but Food Ministry officials say it time yet; before bananas are available. %iai ships, ed for bananas, are not Yet a lable. Most. injurious to crop pests and plant. diseases in America were brought from abroad. LONDON, June 27 — (CF Cable) - The Ioridon edition of the Maple Leaf. Canadian armed forces’ newspaper. today denied an allegation in the London Eve- ning News that "hundreds of de- sertcrs" from he Canadian Army. some pf whom turned to crime, were on the run in Britain. The Maple Leaf described the report u “muck" and "damaging to the traditions of co-o oration and friendship which are t e basis of the British Commonwealth of Nations." The Evening News story claim- ed some deserters had gone for crime on an extensive scale. hiding in London and passing the roceeda of their robberies to a 'fence" in Croydon "so powerful nobody will give him away." The Maple Leaf editorial said “L119 mystery the Croydon ‘fence’ is muoh more likely to be solved than the mystery of why a London paper prints such muck We do not understand why an in- fluential newspaper prints harm- lful inaccurate: and implication: ' windows had been blown wide open l The moi-cos of Britain our not They would consider abdication. Canadian~2irhy Paper Denies Press. Charges inR g sys out of order. The lncendiarie; then did their nasty work fanned by the high wind created where doors and by the blast of the doc. die quickly. She twisted and turn- ed, anti-aircraft guns firing stead- ll-Lwt». tmlilesnllllseiwltwe i=1 Believe Agreement At Indian Parley slMLA, India. June f! - (C?) Indian leaders conferred with the Viceroy, Viscount Wavoll, today on British proposals for a virtual all- Indian Government and then ad- journed until Friday amid specu- lation that. agreement on all points The picture SIIOWB the Empress of Britain in her Bone-time garb with her commander C: taln C. H. Slpoworth C.V. . (inuet).‘ The Empress of_ Britain was pct by enemy action 'rt1c500pouridex-.aocomponiedb'Can . nearly five October 1940, the sky which almost lam, swooped to lay i ' infemql em. the vulture was (nglly driven m’ but not before Uirwontfpliahié fires had been set in the mldshi nation o! this. e Wide of ti: adlan Pact 10's green, ‘m, Em zcss fleet Two day later, h; decks red-hot; her tho grand la be by 0101mm of 0689-11 travellers, two moan from a. lurking oer. man rlnecougmtherbelowm waterline a, she m; being WM the far distance to a cafe pom Wllthln a matter of , m, ress of klbafn. sore triad in this tenth yea: of her life, clipped beneath the icy Atlantic waver. The nub’; tirlumph we, slim. llvod Almost immediately a Royal Navy destroyer attacked and dis. trOYBd the U-boat. BRIGHTON. England - Tommy Bennett and his "tuppance a peep“ telescope are back on their old stand at th summer resort after ears of war service. The Adrnira ty requisltioned Ben- nett and his telescope as a special observation post and on several occasions he wu able to t eno- my planes and raise the norm in time to drive them ofl. Brandy was introduced into Franco from Italy in 1533 when gamerine do Medici married Henry might have been cached. The third-day session of the conference designed to bmmdm- Indiirs self-government was ad- journed ‘jto enable the conferees to continue their private consulta- tions," a statement said. It was reliably reported that these intro-Indian talks were cori- cerned chiefly with the question of whether Moslem representation should be exclusively chosen from the Moslem League. 9th Loan Drive In 0ct.; llext In Fall 0f '46 (By The Canadian Preld) OTTAWA. June M-A recom- mendation to Finance Minigtcr Il- sley that the ninth victory can be held late in October and that. after until the fall of 1946 was reported today to have been decided upon b t e executive committee of the ational War Finance Committee This would mean that. no victory loan will be held next spring. Dur- inz the European war period vio- tory loans were held twice yearly -in the spring and fall. While tihere will be no official statement. from the committee, which reviewed the situation hero yfstcrday. it was understood that pans are under way to make the ninth loan take cameof war finance public borrowing requirements for the full year until the 10th loan is held in the fall of 1946. DEADLY VENOM m hm widow miter’: venom ls six times as deadly as the cobra’: and 15 times as deadly nsthe nt- tlesnakeb. \ -~__'~-- a which can do not!" _ but damage the friendship that exists between our two countries.” v A further Evening News allega- tion wao that "of 100 prisoner! who made a mass break-out from the Canadian milita prison near Alderahot on V-E n ht. l! are still at large." Thh. the Maple Leaf described as “an enum- tlitans "beyond oomparilon to the c . Apparmtly quoting official fig- ures. the service newspaper said _out of 370.000 Canadian soldier: ,(not counting the R. C. A. l". and ' . C. N.) who have come to this _countrv. there are exactly 280 men ,in the United Kingdom classed an dcsertcrs-and a soldier la classed as a deserter when ho ha: been A W. L. more than 21 dayl." Only 60 men were involved in the V-E night. break-out and only seven are still at large. the Maple Leaf said. adding "there is noth- ing to indicate that the majority of these dcserters are engaged in Imam: the citizen: of London.‘ ' nearly new. that no further campaign be held - AllCTlilN sift Al‘ YORK ITATION l SATURDAY, JUNE 80th, 104.! 3.80 0'OI40CK I am instructed by the Adminis- tratrix of the estate of the hi4 Melvin Jay, to sell the followlu Farm, Stock and Implements. STOCK :- 1 Stllllfln l2 you! (Pehr Frllwl I Driving More B years old. 1 Home 6 years old (I'm! Gnttan) Illlrbllimluriz- 1 rubber tired Bike logging can I Ifxpren Wagon 1 Ca Bollller. Souffle: Gang Plough, Spike Harm! Forks, Him and Shovels l. at Driving Harness i “'1'. ‘.i°l.'.‘..l"f“°'2. pa. n rac 1 gag floppies and other ndll equipment and other nrtlfllfl- 1 Barn l0 x 20. l Granary 1° l‘ Terms of farm made RIWW" Sale. All other articles Cash- nms. MEIAVIN JAY- dmlnistratrll- LESTER KEIZEB. Auctioneer- 6-26-41. h. Flt Foot Ailments consum- H. J. A. BROWN. DJ’. Orthopedic BIIIBOPUPIST u: arm 0mm We" CBARIDTIITOWN. P-l-l Dairy Bows Wanlfll In a number of ch01 “Olllflll who and hill"!- a lieu to any port. of this [:3 P as ulvln by 711°" what you have to vi!"- Sllnod: '- MYIION lloAfllélilli-ln‘; "4 C MPIILL. OIJVII A "w" lcnullllwfl-