E rec UARDIAN GENT: Mrs. John Pond. 8i Church Street-Pb 2 I SUMMEBBIDI! and PRINCE COUNTY m. u Adrmlw-n. should be left with m", p,“ Gunilla mar M Mvrhslqr so: o! n» following no", l, subscriptions lore, Water Street. gnu], Water Street. Ill Marl Gnndet. l7 G vfll (iusrdiln will be delivered to us; ha" u, an . Mn.‘ H 5, st 2o pa day. or 10v p8! week. Phone m m; order tn the boy responsible for deliveries on "m. ma“ 9'1"“! "Walloon. Water Street, w" 1* '.=".":" t" .111"- "' .. T “sf intcre. . ll l VG!’ n; —-' lIE SWASTIKA B t .,, pansy nature may be inserted sea. View Monday, June 3m“ at m1" 1 “"“"‘- ‘mm’ P"""" L-55-5-3l-2i. fllllllit. ..- jgrys 2 inch 5 ply rubber 5m like Victory Bgniif. a good m,,5,_,,.,,,_ 5-31-21. ur Bade-Tans, Raw l-lide Hal- “m” “m” 3-‘ Brria-cfirrs-ai-zi. prescription gets every 101' Drug 60.. Kensing- L-5i-5-31-‘Ii. IOU! It Til‘ gxvltllriiflf‘: U. ccmpetl nhill. Jllllf‘ 2nd. 8 P. M. ‘1’ 2° “nd m ctmi-oa-s-ii-zi. ETTRNED orrawa , m. and Mrs O. Utman ‘huurnrd to SWITIIIIPYSiOE after gpjpllblt‘ \l5- i 1'» 0ttawa.—-S. .\'('F.k'l' at itleanors hall,- av, June j. auspices Scarle- . ind MlfldlPtoll Womans In- 155, Procrcris in aid of Red ,,uiiniss'on 25c and 15c. L-70. ticn Ad- M r Wednesday. June , Cape Traverse; L. 30-31. l1 -, Cailttcn. rr ron ronoxro _Mlsses 1d smith, John Mulligan of rm, and John D. Macho: left Winnipeg last week where they taken positions. --S. REAT SUCCESS WITH ~5__\1|-_ and Mrs. Fred Mill-- s; had ; 5a s; with their fox pups year and now have 66 pubs 111 r ranch. They have some izifuiring necked specimens. llfflffi and crosses as well as 1st-my silvcrs. Mr, and Mrs. ' ' |l’i\'€' fi1.\\'il_\‘5 been known in‘ fox ranchers and individual interest in the . Tnrv have not lost faith in fix industry and feel there will 5'1! Bil 7s be a markct for good fox =.-s. (‘IIARLOTTET-(TWN arau: llf GIVES PERFORMANCE SUMMERSIDE AIR PORT — c1 tetnwn Male Choir un- ctinn of Mr. Robins - . . t) tho Western Capl- m rr..a~ evrnlilg and gave a. ' rlrlid ncriorniancc 1n the. Rec- lnn Hall at N0. 0 Service Fly- School. ‘The airmen appreciat- nry mu ll the (lifferent num- pu: on liv tho choir and hope lee them again in the near fu- .»S. ll.\(llS'l‘R.-\’l‘E‘S (‘ O U RT - slratc Darbv hold Court at Al- icii and Suninicrside last weck i lieard several cases, Al. Alberton iisherirs cases came before the st e the charges being "1 m ncssrssion of small sized. leis 1n carli case the fishermen i iiLied ten dollars and crisis ~» A party lrcm Pctersville was - 8300.00 and casts or fcur ills icra second offense. against Prohibition Act for unlawful oi intoxicating liquor. 1W0 men n. Alnerlon for the unlawful con- piion of liquor were fined lien is and ccsis. A merchant. at leer was fined twenty dollars i costs for not keeping a proper rd oi ins sale of extracts. A case theft was dismissed. A case nst l man charged with being the possession oi a still was ad- 11 ed. An ‘rlfir-llllli case at Alber- vas also adiouriicd. At Sum- ilde a man was fined a nominal loi operating a motor vehicle cut a permit. A case against s cwoman for being in possession r Was dismissed. A Summer- oartv charged with possession tor was lint-cl $25.00 and costs. inn from Kcnsingion for a sim- (illirsnsc was fined $25.00 and >1 4th. n _iT—.\i—iFi~u-.in of Tyne 1 Si?» Vblilllg in Charlotte- ..1. sum critic n. c. A. n. ocl aft"r spend- .1, in home in as. ~lar , . .< i ‘rtrccltr, Qym... "111. and Mrs. H31?!’ Brown I k"-_1\'.>S.. are aursts for the $41 c l\'ir=. ll. R. Crlckctt, *1’ 511"". summrrsidc- S. ‘x15 t‘. sliclton shim of Tyne v 1 Fwlcy in summer- tfg o rn_ hcr wav to Char- 11min visit. friends, __$, ~\ . LflM ""_'_G1‘1'1r"~ I-cwis returned on a ‘ 1" "‘rr‘1*n after spand- "11 "ms with her mother, ~ 1' w , T‘ Cuhviiniflgiiftfl 11nd aunt, Mrs. ‘brlrriiiis nwiifhsrd. manager M’ rnv nrial Bank at Surn- Nlgs as recent visitor to 8t. 2:21,?‘ 1,1111 regret to learn that jghgr-v Lockhart of Coleman .1,‘ ,," 11 her home thrnurrh H”; ‘hl-rrkhart is in I-er ,5, ~ -* h" many trawis “"11 Soon be rnstovcd to r1 '. iii-aim. _s. ~__.. _ 11 D. McIvor. son of fdldnfilrn 'r. A. MrrIuny-fi sum. r ‘ 1r. Gerald Smith. son '*‘""‘,11r-=- Wm. smua. K111- qHhQTQundnv for Winnipeg , l ave accepted positions. ‘\P' M h“ "“1‘ “Mret. tn lerrn that i». F """Nt'11l. wife or Coun- WirriarNNn '11 Summersldn ls ‘I’: 11"‘. Prince County flos- ” vndsrcono m one“. ~“,.,'“.“'""~ '1"- P" mlmv w h__1 1t. abs will Wm he 11 11811111 good health.- W ., “If 0s i u I I MONARC eil-ntestorage IQ..Z‘},°L_.G°,‘,’F"§§‘ DE i batt . Amati. BraegcxsNew fffslfgéflglf’ —-THE STORES of wm_ §8.l'.“'ifi i.“ 1111a nmnq duty l close v1 dnesday at 118 the summer months, commencing June 4th, L-59-5-31-2l. --KING GEORGE . sinstvn. Friday June ’ 5E‘. i-fand of the Liw" by Fort Augustus payers. Dance in McMahon House after show. Refreshments. Usual admission. L-43-6l-2-4-6, —SUMMERSIDE Ch under the direction ofohtflrssoiiliiéfl Hunter-Smythe will give its last concert of the season Tuesday at 18.30 p.m. in the High school Auq. .torium. Proceeds in aid o! Red Cross. L-7B-6-2-2i. ' —-GIVEN SEND OFF _Mr5, N A. Shelfoon of O'Leary was kindly remembered by her many trends befflre her departure for oitaw. to 10in her husband, “to is 1n the civil service there. A number of friends gathered at the home or Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Ramsay and presented Mrs. Shelfoon with a beautiful travelling bag and r0115, SE11. which was accompanied by their hearty good wishes, __s, M —GO0D PRICES FOR. LIVE. STOCK-Farm stock sold well at i119 auction sale on the farm of Mr. LeRoy Adams at Bloomfield .ast week. The auction was con- A. A. Ramsay. sheep brought from $12.00 to $16.50 per head. Some good horses fetched from $135.00 to $l48.00_-S. ‘ —BRlDE-T0-BE SHOWERED — Miss Jean Simpson, who vras for sometime stenographer at the office of Mr. E. I-I. Strong, K. (3,, at; gum. merside was tendered shower at the tome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chester smpson a, Malpcque by her many friends. Minn she rc- cclved some very lovely gifts. Miss Slmp-‘Onfils to be married in the near future and her many friends gigs? hser every happiness and suc- SHAKES H IS HAND Canada's Minister of Munitions and Supply, Hon. gnstulates beading Airtvoftnun 0. B. Legurgey, of Albert,“ p g 1 an" P"°"““"I 111111 Wml "W1I1SI” at the No. 2 Service Flyingnlrhining. 51111001, Uplands Ottawa. Ontario. C. D. Howe, con- —I:‘.MER.ALD PLAYERS AT KEN. SINGTON - "Go Hollywood" three act ccmedy drama was pre- sented in the King George Hull. KCIISlXIRtOIl. on Wednesday evening by a group of players from Emerald. large audience were in attend- ance and their continuous laughter was proof enough of their keen en- joyment of the play. Every member of the caste interpreted their re- spective parts in professional stylr. “Go Hollywood" is replete wLh funny situations throughout the three acts depicting the trials of a bachelor who decides to marry. To Rain the interest of the ladies. he is obliged to fake a love affair in his past life and then his troubles be- Rm, As the Dlot thickens one thinks of the words of the poet "O wlisr. a tangled web we weave W1"; first we practise to deceive." Pleasing spec- ialties between the acts were feat- ures of the program and included vocal solos by Miss Dorothy Crokcn and Mr. Reuiriald Smith a somz and dance numbcr by two black fa‘"ti corneriiens and instrumental music by Mrs. Alonzo Cameron and Rod- die Cameron-K Alberton v Mr. Osborne IcFurgey, L. A. 0., who recently received his wings from the R. C. A. F. is home on furlough. Mr. Arthur Malley was a recent visitor to Charlottetown. Messrs. Charles Llewellyn and Bill Gay. Summerside, were recent visitors to Alberlon. —-FAREWELL PARTY -- A very Jolly family Durty was given last. week at. the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. McIvor, Fitzroy Street, slllfi-t merside in honor of Miss Carrie, Kelly, R. N.. of St. John. N. B, and. a daughter of Mr. John Kelly of Emerald and the late Mrs. Aeily, who left for Toronto later in the week to meet her fiancee, Mr. Ein- mett McIvor. Miss Kellv was pre- sented with a. lovely gift from the family before her departure, Mr. Harold Mclvor making a. snurt speech, while making the presenta- tion. Miss Kelly and Mr. Mclvcr were married on June 1st in To- ronto-S —FORMER S‘SIDE BOY GRAD- UATES FRUM DALHOUSIE -- Mr. Thomas White a graduate of the Summerside High School, was a member of the graduating class of Dalhousle University this year, pass- ing his exams in dentistry with four. distinctions. . White is the! youngest son of Mrs. White of Bridgewater, N. 5.. nd the late Ven. Archdeacon C. de Wolfe White. who for over a quarter of a century was pastor of St. Mary's Church. Sum- merside. Thom has many friends on the Island who will be pleased to learn of his success-S -KENSINGTON PLAY AT EM- ERALD-Jiensington players staged their play entitled “Correspondence Courtship" in Eimerald Hall, 'I‘liurs- day evening, Math 22nd, before a large audience. e play. which la a. three act comedy was splendidly acted and the cost and director are deserving of the highest credit- Rev- Fr. Trainer. P. P.. of Indian River and Kensington. capably BR55111911- The specialties between acts were also of a high order, Mr. Urban J. Pines“ sang "Mother of Pearl (en- coredl between the first and second acts. Mr. Kenneth McLean delight- ed the audience with step 61111161115- Mrs. Mcbean sang “Mother Macree .- 'l"he accompanist for was Mrs. Urban Plneau. Followin the play, dancing was emloye’. music beinfi supéagied by M1111 81"" Orchestra. God ve the Kine 0 Ol- ed the entertainment-K —PRESENT FINE CONCERT - The Hi'l‘l School auditorium was packed to the doors last night when the Prnce County Victory Loan committee put on a patriotic con- cert amd sing song. which was in- m-spgrsed by taikln by various speakers on the reasons why the Victory Loan must go over bin- M1‘- Lowell Hancock hao char e of the program and opened it, wth a few remarks. Mr. John Walker led ‘he sing song. Those taldng p!" 111 "19 ins rumental and vocal numbers were: Bummerside Girls Band, Mr. John Walker, Mrs. n. G. I-Iunhson. Mr. J. M. Logan, Miss Beatrce Gal- lant, Messrs. MacLean. Forbes. Ewen, and Harold Nicholson. Miss Dorotly Wyatt. Mrs. C. Whalem, Mrs. Creeirnan MacArthur. —8- IIIIII I001 PILLS for LAZY LIVERS Oouyourllvwts hnllhy sellout Htlp It lreepihe llle iulee llwlnp with “Dr. Mom's" — the Im- wovodveeetlblllusllvs. Ask for this rsllnbte remedy by nuns — l! wwfirminw. n the GVETlIhI " Mr. Wilbur Gray. wa_s o. recent visitor to Charlottetown. Friends of Mr. J J. McQuaid wi'l rem-ct to learn that he is a. patient in the P. C. Hospital, Mr. George Hamish left recently for Charlottetown where he enlisted in a mechanized unit. Mr. William Mallett was a recent visitor to Summerside. Miss Marv McQuaid was a recent visitor to Charlottetown. , Miss Colleen Matthews. strident at P. W. College. was a recent visitor to her home here Mr. George Purdv, Summerside. was a iveekend visitor to his home hora-A Two are drowned,’ Third swims ashore MUILGRAVE, N. 8.. June 1—(CPl -'I‘wo men were drowned today and p, third managed to swim a half-mile to shore when their fish- ing skiff upset at Mattie‘; Lake, seven miles from here. Captain Daniel Fougere, 59. of Harbor Au Bouche, Antigonlsh . to train under the new plan an- ' of London. a cadet in the fleet air t Notes on recent Arrivals from Great Britain he SUME SIDE G AND PRINCE. COUNTY CHRONICLE Drive Will Open Today Big parade to usher in Victory Loan Campaign at Summerside. 'S’sid 'I‘he casnpsign for Victory Bonds will be started this morning at summerside with a big parade starting from the high school and conclu ing with e. ceremony at Memorial uare. The town has been decora d with flags and streamers and a huge victory arch with s British lion mounting guard on top hB-s been erected at; the bot- tom of Summer Street opposite to the campaign headquarters. ORDER OF PARADE Marshall (flanked by City Pol- ice); RCMP; Veterans Guard- A. 3.0. Band; R.C.A.F.; Nurses; g- fon- Dominion and provincial re - resentatives; Mayor and Councl; Scouts; Guides; Loud Speaker car; school children; Summerside fire brigade; citizens. The route will be along Green to Central-Central to Church—Church to Spring-Spring to Water-Water to Summer-Sum- mer to Memorial. When the par- ade arrives at the Municipal Build- ... ._..____.__.._.___ ._ _i_ T - the salute will be taken by Wing Commander E. G, Fullerton, Officer Commanding No. 9 Service Flying Training School. Hon. Dr. Thane A. Campbell, Premier of province will also take the salute at this olnt. The parade vr'll ar- rive at. he square at 10.15. mocrtsrvi AT souaan. O Canada bond and assisted by school chil ren and assembled persons in memory of those who died in lost great war and the pres- ent one; Reading at Prince County Soldiers Monument by L. R. Allen. Summerside chairman of Victory Loan committee; Address by Maynr Campbell on the theme "Honour pledge flags and pennants"; break of flag to place in Flanders Fields by R. L. Mollison, M.M., provincial comand B.E.S.L.; Reply by airmen from No. 9 Flying School; Address by Premier on Victory Loan; fol- lowed by "Keep Home Fires Burn- ing" and The King-S. OTTAWA, June 1——<CP)-- Seen and head aboard a British trans- port which arrived recently from overseas:- Land-huxigry travellers whose answer to a newsmans approach for an interview was a bombard- mcrit of questions about Canada ."Ho\v far is it to Toronto" . 1 hear your trains are huge" . .“Is it always this cold?" Many, many Royal Air Force air cadets bound for the United States trounced May 20 at Wasliiuztwn . eager chaps, anxous to get on with the next stage of thejy training . . some will be selected from the ranks as commissioned officers. Member of the Royal Air Force group was a former British repor- ter \\I n discarded his pencil for a joystick . . he wants‘ no boat back to Britain . "My main nb- ject is, to fly back and pay Jerry in knd for his ruthless bombing of Britain." The airman said he had four days furlough at his home In Wales be- fore sailing but the war stayed with him . . . noise of German bombing a. few miles away depriv- ed him of his long-awaited rest and neacc of mind. Enthusastic about his war ca- reer was 19-year-old Malcolm Nash arm bound for Ontario for further intensive training , _ _ s white band around Iis pie-plate hat. which topped his ordmary sea- manis uniform earmarked him as officer material provided he made the Irradc ‘n h‘s studies . . . he re- garded hlmself and his family as quite fortunate so far . their‘ Imndon home was bombed twice but was still livable. Girls of the women's auxiliary air force were represented on the pass- enger list . . they were most unusual in that. instead of telling all thev knew in their first sen- tence, they absolutely refused to tall: about themselves, their calling or their destination. British artillerymen who will re- turn to Britain aboard convoys as gunners also were much in evidence . . . one member of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers sported several black ribbons sewn to the back oi’ the neck of his battle dress . . questions drew forth th‘: story'—- ...__ ._.. -———r—-= ‘an our roll _ Yflllll LlllEll lntllnootimporhnllo health. llpourlotl We to digest food, gefid of vuh, supplies 1 “The odd arrangement is known as "F'lash." a. decoration awarded to the Welsh reeiment because it was the last to discard pigtails - . purpose of the fiflill was to prevent the. oily pigtail from soiling the fighting man's uniform _ , _ men of the reg‘ment had their pigtails cut when they returned from ser- vice in China . . the gunner couldn't remember the date but ii zvas before "my or Iny fathers ime." Leslie Thomas of London was ari- othcr convoy gunner, drawn from the Royal Engineers. .his home is Southampton and his first coni- mont on SiQiIiiHQ Canada was‘. “Odd. seeing huildims on -t e coast, As the ship__yvas bcinn nosed into her berth by tugs, the cheering thrnnrzs wow dcubled up with lauahlei" at, the antics of an urchin selling newspapers, a slow-moving nczro cf 10 years. . several of his attempts to fling s paper aboard the ships were unsucces=ful and thav went fluttering into the watrr —but he finally succeeded in toss- inlz one aboard. It was the most profitable paper he ever parted wi‘li for the boat- load of men pelted him with ii-aavv English pennies . .he stopped scratchinz ifs kink" head ‘an; em ough to fill every pocket with mon- o V. Inevitable among the passengers was the swap of ferry pilots who shuttle bombers across the Atlan- c . .a group is aboard prac- ticall every ship that reaches can- ada i/rcm Brtain. The passengers had a (mince to see Canadian seamanship at its best . - .a British freighter sailed blithely up the harbor and dropped anchor .but a strong wind swung her stern around and she grounded . agonized toots from her whistle summoned a tug which lillFWNi her in the right, snot and will: n 20 minutes had the freghter 50'1l'l"lllg free again . , unconcern. ed, the tug waddled off tod an- other job. Even though Canada is some dis- tance away from actual warfare the men said it w_as comforting to 5B9 neflrby a grim Jack-tar on guard beside his warships . . 3.11s 8on0,- was in full fighting kit. A small-scale drama. ran under- current to the excitement of dock- ing . a news sauced the seventh guard that ask- ed him for his waterfront p35 , , thereafter he was busy dodging the Royal Canadian Mounted Police constable who stuck to the troll doggedly to give the picture-man s piece of his mind, War—25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) JUNE 2, laid-Gannon troops erced British and Canadian asi- irm; on a front of 3,000 yar s in severe attacks in the Y res Salient between Hooge and e Ypres- Comines railway. Fort Vaux in Ver- dun area. threatened by German advance. County, and Quartermaster Pierce min, s1. ma of the Canadian Nn- "gm; whfwuwwfim t'onal Railways car ferry sootla, m , hp“ . . Y“ b‘ were drowned. James A- ’ . an an . 7N2,‘ m] “an” m.‘ ‘mfiiirilisifiiesiiririagiiarih flittin- ~11 rzflr- 11w 1-1 “~11-"—1'="1-.='v- ed, apparently when someone at- hfihlbrr dilly: if!!!“ "i In u" h“- iemgtedhto saint posrittion, ‘placid the P1$m flrri-cevorheiiidoii erocrrflson-iiipstiriie will‘ 50mm Mw- Try Fwil-l-lim-rwflh said. ' lilqslyeluligiwsdherlvlsickl yolflieellilll --___--_-_i_. ‘scwpsnunlilppy Itlrlnin- 1505911- - - nun-r w: Axis facing Shipping crisis y GOOD GOSH! IDNDO Jllhe 1—(GP)—The Ministry tonight that the Axis faces e shu- ping crisis because of British naval action against French ships 1n the Mediterranean. In what the Ministry called s "commentary" on Vice Premier Ad- miral Durban's recent Ftstement that. Franco has lost. 792.000 tons of chugging to Britain, the Ministry "I does the Admiral choose this moment to attack? The Axis is facing a shipping crisis." SHAMROCK SCHOOL Report. of Shamrock School for month to May. Grade IX-i. Margaret MlcDon- sld; 2 Frances Duffy and Helen Graham teouali; 8. Boy Msyhew.‘ Grade VIII-l. Theresa Trainer; ‘l. Gloria. Duffy, Grade VlL-I. Aleths Graham: 2. Agnes Campbell; 3_ Jack Gra- ham. Grade V--l. Wilfred Trainer: i. Rufus Weddell. Grade IV-l. Elsie Weddell; 2. Myrtle Mavhew. Grade III-i. Flora Graham: 2. Anna. Trnlnor: 3. Rita Weddell, 2 Grade II -~1. John Mntheson; John Trainor; 3 Doreen puny, Grade I I--l Una Trainnr; 3. Junior Mat-heron: 3. Don Gillil. M. McCarvlle, Thacher, N. of Economic Warfare said_ FOOLAROUND 5O TH‘ "TIME I MUCH, WHY DON'T "IOU GET YOUR you Y LlSTkP-BY st’ll standinfl" . . he said manv British coastal cities were badly1 batterrd. photographer , ‘crop, the report added _,.__ ' . R. Williams v infirm; Q14 m. I, , f n. CT-Qwituswig FOPE DEFENDS (continued from page l) “Society is not In end in itself," the Holy Fctther said. The right and duty to work is considered imposed upon man in the first instance by nature, he said, "not by society n; if man were nothing more than a mere slave or official of the community." It follows. he added, that "the duty and right to organize labor belongs above all to the people immediately interested; employers and workers." Only when the fail to fulfil their functions s ould the stare intervene, he said. The Pope defended the church's right to say whether any given so- cial system humanized with the "unchangeable order of God" and laid down a series of moral prin- I ciples to govern use of material goods, labor and family. BRITISH REPORT _._;<3 likely would hamper tremendously the fleet/s three-fold task of keep- h1g1 the Mediterranean open to Br tish shipping, preventing Axis supplies from reaching North Africa and forestallirig German occupation of Fmench-mandated Syria. : With only Z00 miles of sea be- tween crete and Libya, German bombers may compel the British fleet to rel entirely upon submar- ines and pianos to keep heavy re- inforcement of tanks and supplies MISS EitlMA-ltfAClhNIS The parishioners ofvernon River and SHXTOLIIIGIIIE districts were greatlv shocked and grieved on May ed and high respected resident, Miss Emma Maclnnis. She was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Francis McInnis of Cherry V- Tlie deceased will be dccply missed by her family and fiiciitls. The large number of Mass Cards, letters of sympathy. spiritual offerings arid telegrams received, bore testimony“ to the high estccm in which size rvas held. The funcrzii \\'ili\‘i1 nos Saturday, Milv im's Church, Vernon River, nor Maurice McDonald who also lian, at homc. and Mrs. J. S. Huron, Mrs. E. J. Foley and iVlrs. R. En? right all of Saskatoon, Sask., Airs. J. S. Horan arrived hcnie Tuesday evening but too late for the funeral. The pail bearers were Messrs. Deri- nis Rooney, Leo Praught, Jamts McEachern, George Irving, Wilfred Praught and Furncss Mathcson. (Patriot please copy) Fire at B. 0. Aircraft plant VANCOUVER, J1me l. -—(CPl—A two-alarm fire today dcstroyPd the administration blllidlllg of the 1t,d., airplane plant at Sca Island 9 miles south of here and for a time threatened iljc plant itself where P B. Y. flying boats are to be built for wartime use. Stanley Burke, president of the company cstimnted the dnmaue at between $60,000 and $20,000. l-Ie said the blaze began in the second storey of the frame administration building, but he did not know what caused the fire. He. added that work at the plant will not be dis- rupted. Rodents caused Damage to orchards OTTAWA. June 1—-(CP) —Ad- verse weather conditions during the winter caused "little or no damage" to Canadian orchards. but ro-ient damage was more serious thou us- ual in Quebec and eastern Ontar- io, the Dominion bureau of statis- tics reported today in a review of fruit and vegetable crops in Can- ada's main producing areas. Heavy snow in‘ the Vearitime Pro- vinces which lasted well into spring was credited with prwecting straw- berry arid raspberry plantations from weather damage, but early frosts caused some "spur" injury b0 Nova. Scotla orchards, the report svd. McIntosh apple trees in the Mari- times "appear to be carrying c heav load of fruit birds," but. it. is st ll too early to estimate the mm BOA enzAT Ncwsszuec! m AH-ER— YOUR Forums I6 MADE! MANAGER ‘lyi )'l’/;,,,',"',i_',",h -=~ MAYBE = _l 15, 1941, when death claimed a luv-; largely attended and idol: place on, 17in, toSi. Joacli-, 1 Requiem Mass was hililf! by MOIlSLQ-i faithiullv attmiU-d hci" during her: illness. There are lclt to mourn one» brother. Ernest, and onc sistci". Lil-i huge Boeing aircraft of Cmada» wlsues vou To REPORT TDMORRON-- FOR ATRYOLTTfTt-lkf is!“ u; 5km, JoKlNew OF COURGEJHNT u: was oveizsoveo n-urr YOU m: A soon-\- oAw BECAUSE HE'S some CRA1Y from reaching the Axis forces in North Africa. Now that crew's suds Bay is lost, Britain is left with four scat- tered naval bases in the Mediter- ranean, of which Gibraltar is far tremovcd from the scene of recent , operations. . All the other three bases-Malta, Cyprus and Alexandria-are ex- posed to Axis bombers. Malta is a scant 60 miles from plane bases mi Siciy; Alexandria is 400 miles from Crete. and Cyprus is inside a SOO-mile range from Italian-coined Rhodes 'l‘hcrc is a. question whether sur- face ships always will find tenable i the Malta base which they used in ])l'f‘-\\'l\l‘ days for refitting and re- pairs. The battle of’ Crete was "s vast rcarguarri action" into which Bri- i rain was forced by the German preponderance of aircraft and" 11106118111200 trovps, authorities here | said. I Helped Britain The Crete diversion, it was point- ed out, enabled Britain to spend the intervening time on these Jobs m__ l. Wiping out the Iraq trouble. 2. Winding up the Etizioipian cam- paigfl. 3. Preparations to meet the Axis threat to Suez from Libya. ngiurm Bucki i -0141 u i... r- leaving planes on the Crete sir- fields would be needless sacrifice without important eficct, on the battle MaLGen. sir Frederick Maunce, writing in the Sunday Dispatch says there is ‘flvsry lirtle parallel between conditions of the attack on Crete and conditions of an attack on Great Britain." "In this latter case both our ships in the Channel and our troops on land would have im- mediate, powerful air support," he said. "Experience of lost autumn SHOWS W8 hBVB I13 T885011 1,0 {e31 ,the result 0f another air battle of 1 Britain for our air power at , home is relatively stronger than then" HOW Decided Third Day In retrospect, it appeared that the battle fer the IGO-mile-long Greek island was decided on the third day of the Nazi intrusion, when the RAF. announced with- drawal o1 its fightcr planes The Nazis held bases on the Greek mainland less than 100 miles away. British long-range fglzters did what they czuld frcm western des- ert bases in Africa bu; their com- parntively‘ small numtuv: wcze no match for the swarming Nazis. Day by day the ferocity oi the German air assault grcrv, sufpasg- lbflfinytiiing ever before seen in aerial warfare. An R.A.F spokgg. man e.~i.rnatcd the Germans used 1.000 pianos. Greek Premier Em. marine] Tsouderos. who went tn EEYPI. reported “not a stone was left standing" in Canes, Crew's capital city: Candis, its largest city mth a population of 32,000, and Re. time. From Malemi airport, 10 miles fl":m_ Caries and the first foothold obtained by the Nazi paratroopers and glider troops, the invaders spread from this westcm end of the island. Virtually unchallenged from the air after the RAF. withdrawal, the Germans lost homily to the Alicri ground defenders, but still they kept coming. streaming in from Greece with timetable regularity. The Royal Navy rolied back the first big German troop convoy of 3O ships and no furthcr large-scale 4. Resting, reorganizing and re- equzpping Gen. Wavells forces af- ter the battle of Greece. Indications, that Britain may have been spending the tune effectively in other directions were seen in Foreign %retary Eden's state- ments of sympathy rcr Syrian na- tionalist aspirations and words of friendship for the whole Arab world. ‘ Informed quarters declined to go beyond Mr. Eden's words, delivered Thursday, but there was reason to hclicve a native uprising against vichys apparently weak hold on iyria hardly would surprise Lon- on. Military quarters nid the more .. ‘ ' developments in the Balkans, Libya, Crete and the Atlantic tend to obscure on; of the world's major ac- complishments — destruction o! Mussolini’: Fascist army 250,000 in list Africa. Like the withdrawals from Dun- kerque, Norway and Greece, the abandoning of Crete was another consequence of the battle of mn- chiries, in which Germany got a long head start. Excerpt for long-range fighter planes crating , the Royal A r Force could not aid the troops againsa 111% assault because the RAJ‘. ha withdraw it; fighter lanes from inadequately defends si orts on the Mediter- ranean islsn . Anti-aircraft gun: were not there in abundance because o1 the heavy world-wide demands for that type of artillery. “For 1o years Germany had guns and we had butter," said one cu- tihority. l-Ie added that the fighter planes were withdrawn because they oould not operate under those conditions within his shadow of the "very large" German sir con- centrations in Greece and the Do- _decanese Island-i. It was felt that RDING HOUSE MQKECHNlE OT: ‘ME REDS t-llMéELF AND critwss COMPANY .- HAW.’ attempt at a sen-oxne landing was reported. It was said that nothing more than an "odd caiqueW-Greek fish- ing boait—got through. Although the Nazis used against Crete a whole circus of methods with which they have threatened Britain herself, one big difference is apparent. Britain has thousands 01 fighters ready to work from second-line bases if those of the front line are knocked out. In the Cretan invasion Hitler un- covered tricks from which Britain has learned valuable lessons. After landing thousands of Ger- mans from the sir and in the lust stages of the campaign, m, my. 1am landed sea-borne forces- sp- parently from the Dodecanesg 1s- lands. The Fascist units moved wast from one and of the island whfle the Germs!!! moved east. The 4e- fendm were caught in n vise. 5T. PETERS LAKE SCHOOL Honor roll for month of May:- Grade VIII-l Rita, E, Byrne, A ltimvgolinbsriiei 9. '* A. Con I Melvin C, Byme. i Joseph Nolan. Grade VI-I Norman J. Oonohsn, I Jean E. Gunri. Grade V—-l. Mary T. MacDorisi 2 Marion C. Gimn. S Mauflce Deagle. Grade IV-l Verne. M. MscAdsm, 2 Robert B. MacAdam, 3. Edna rnuclc Grade III-l Isabel ‘Irsinor, l Inicine P. MacDonald, 8 Raymond F. MacDonald. Grade 11-1 George N. Roache, 1 Chester Deveaux, 3 Owen J. Train- r. Grade I (s) 1 Mildred Roache, l Alice Gunn, 8 Dorothy MacCoi-mack. Grade ¥ (b) 1 Ross MscEvi-err. 1 Jean Tra nor, 3 Francis MacCorm- d- J. ack. Teacher, John T. Valley. (Patriot pleasewccpy‘ ___,_. _ _.____ Wit h - .\l"1nr I-IMDIO BE CRAZY ABOUT ME,AU. RIGHT, wueu HE ease moss " cues sruuatin‘ AROUND TRVN‘ "n: e21" A =oui_ Ti? OFF OF MY BLACK-OUT BALL’ _ i‘ fin