|e' ll d-I Oll d: 8| Ill fl: y: I t! II - ..... _.-.- ncsrra-JIW-‘Qflw i l l i 2 ‘. J-av.-r.".'.~.'.'-_'-"-'----"-'.r-'-'-'-Fi"~"~'-‘-T-*';-T.-Ta-‘ " .-T.-‘I~,T-F.Q5l-u-a’ “mi” -_ PIISINTING NEWS Woodatll remalaa the beat lIMAIlllhtmlfl¥UlILI$llUl€¢ in house construction. 15W!" finish, and furniture. Amen: f-hv valuable bY-Pfmil-W“ mad‘ ‘mm weed are wood alcohol. charcoal. and certain kind! 01' iiyu. Wood pulp ll m4 mat satisfactory material for newsprint. The forests filth!!! vast quantifies of tar. resin. 8H4 turpentine. Forests are-of value cot alone because of the products they furnish. Perhaps °l Qqilll importance is their work in reg- ulating the rate at which water runs off into the rivers and thus in preventing the erosion 0f the soil. The surface soil in a forest h largely humus. composed of de- rnying leaves and other vege- IMPORTANT FIGURES OF THE WORLD TODAY 1 ‘ UNITED KINGIOI War Cabinet ' M‘ ' i r and Minister "of misfit. Hon. Winston Churchill. Chancellor of the Exchequer - Rt. l-lon. Sir John Anderson, Home Secretary -— R!- Herbert Morrison. Foreign ESiecrctary —- Rt. Hon, R. th ‘ ‘l. Allvliriiger oilLabour - Rt. l-Ioii. Ernest Bevin. Minister of Production — Rt. Hon. Oliver Lyttelton. Minister of Rt. Hon. Lord Woolton. Lord Prosideuit cl _ Deputy Prime Minister is Rt. Hon. C R. Atlcc. H011. OTHER. MEMBERS OF THE NATQONAL CABINET Secretary of Dominion Affairs — Rt. Hon. Viscount Cranbornc. lord Chancellor — Rt. H011 Viscount Simon. Secretary of the Colonies —- Rt. Hon. Col. Oliver Stanley. Secretary of War - Rt. Hon. Sir James Grigg._ Secretary of India and Burma- Rt. Hon. L. C. M. S Amery. Secrctary of Air — Rt. Hon. Sir Archibald Sinclair. Secretary for Scotland -—- Rt. Hon. Thomas Johnston. First Lord of the Admiralty — Rt. Hon. A. V. Alexander. President of Board of Trade- Rt. Hon. Hugh Dalton. Minister of Health -— Rt. Hon. link. of Agriculture Fisheries — Rt. Hon. R. S. son. President Board of Education — Ht. Hon. Richard A. Butler. Attorney General — Rt. Hon. Sir Donad Somervell. Minister of Aircraft Production _-Rt, Hon. Sir Stafford Crippls. Minister of W ks -- Rt. on. Lord Portal. Minister oi’ Town and Country Plmlning - Rt. Hon. W. S. Morri- son. nerd Privy Seal - Rt. lion. Lord Beaverbrook. Postmaster General -— Capt. Rt. Hon. Harry Crookshank. Minister of War Transport - Rt. Hon. Lord Leathers. Chancellor of the Ducli of rovm‘ n and I-Iud- _ OI‘ Lancaster - Rt. Hon. Ernest Minister of Supply — Rt. Ho Sir Andrew Duncan. Minister of State — Rt. Hon. R. . Law. Minister of State. Resident in the Mltldlg East — Rt. Hon. R. G. Casey. Leader of the House of Com- mons - Rt. Hon. R. Anthony Eden Minister of Information — Rt. Hon. Brendan Bracken. Minister of Economic Welfare - Rt. l-Ioii. the Earl of Selborne. Minister of Pensions - Rt. Hon. Sir Walter Womersley. Minister of Food - Rt. Col. J. J. Llewellin. Solicitor General -— Major Sir D. Maxwell Fyfe. Paymaster General -- Rt. Hon. Lord Cherwell. lVI-inistor, Resident iri West Africa. — Rt. Hon. Viscount Swin- bo . ‘Minister, Reslduit in Northwest Africa — Rt. Hon. Harold Mec- of Fuel and Power - _ . Hon. G. Lloyd George. Minister of Supply. Resident in Washington —- Rt. Hon. Ben Smith Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministe of Reconstruction — Rt. Ion. Sir Wm. Jowitt. ALLIED COMMANDFBS (Weatem Europe) dot-Geri. H0!- Depuoy Supreme Commander — ‘Air Chief Marshall Sir Arthur Tedder. Commander-in-chlef. Tactic al ‘Air Force for British theatre —- Manlnl Traflford L. Leigh- _ U. S. Sh-ateglc Air Lleut. Gen. Carl Spaatz Commander British Ground — Gen. Sir Bernard L. any. Senior Gmund Commander of I-Il. Forces-Limit. Gen. O. N Colnmhaldai- o. . Eighth 1m- Bgme — ejor . Jame: H. ~ l- INTER-ALLIDD CONFERENCES (1948) 1. Caeablanca Conference (Mo- Ioaol). January 14 to 24. People : Churchill, Roosevelt and aidea; Giraud. The lirpose of their meeting was to pan for Al- lied offcnslves, military and poli- tical. on the world's battlefmnts. ‘Ihek objective is to bring about the “unconditional surrender” of Axis powers. _ l Whlhihflton Conference (Washington. 1.7.6.). May l3 lomatlc discussions with ion‘a representatives. . Quebec Conference (Quebec) August 10 to 24. People: Roos volt, Churchill, W. L. Mackenzie Kinl. Hull. Eden and military and Dr. T V glitlcal aides: . . Soon. Minister, U. Dopiin- l ina’ Ibreign Seoretmy of War Stimson and U. VALUI OF FORESTS gums and the cheapest- m Reconstruction — L. Devei-s. council and Gen. Ira C. Eaker. Vice Admiral Thos. C. Kinkaid. Major Gen. E. C. Whitehead. —Lieut. Gen. Walter Krueger. Frontier — Vice Admiral A. and the groundwork laid for the r Moscow tri-partite conference. cow) October to 30. Secretary of State Cordell The meetings ended with the pub- that set specific goals before the Allies. Th -‘ necessity vague on w l , b t my indicated m. p N“ u long a source documents were THE EDUCATIONAL Homzozv CIA SA TURDA Y PEA TURE- AND VIEWS OF INTEREST TO TEACHERS AND ALL OTHERS SEEKING IMPROVEMENT IN EDUCATION u. ' , l.....:.“a ‘some... . Chiang Kal-Shelr, Zlflbfl-gfilllhlflfllllbflllll not the punishment with which the agreement threat- ened Japan. but the r tion both granted and promised to mine. The historic comunique of- the Cairo ‘ outlin the intention of the United States. Britain and China in regard to Japan. The several military mLs- slons have agreed upon future military operations against pan. The three great Allies ex- pressed their resolve to bring un- i‘ " g pressure against their brutal enemies by sea. land and air. They are fighting this war to restrain and punish the ag gression of Japan. They covet no gain for themselves and have no thought of territorial expansion. It is their purpose that Japan shall be stripped of all the islands in the Pacific, which she has seized or occupied since the beginning of the First World War in i914, and that all the territories Japan has stolen from the Chinese shall be restored to the Republic of China. The three Allies will continue to persevere in the serious prolonged operations necessary to procure the unconditional surrender of Japan. 6. Teheran Conference November 28 to Dec. lst . It addl f0 of the flood; 2. It fills up stream beds: 3. It cuts new and deeper furrows in the land; and 4. It covers fertile valleys with stones and other material. Forests greatly reduce the probability that damagin floods will ~ occur. Forests n earlier times were re- served and protected because of the hunting they afforded rather than for their other values. 0 fl- invasion cf Euro Ramsay. Commander U. S. Naval Forces in Europe- Admiral H. E. Stark. Lleut George S. Patton trans- {ferred to European theatre of op- lerations. Naval Pmmander-in-Chief fu- pe-Sir Bertram Mediterranean i Commander-in-Chief -—- General ‘Sir Henry M. Wilson. Allied Commander in Italy — Gen. Sir H. Alexander. of .JI Deputy Commander-in-Giief (Iran). American Forces — Lieut. Gen. Peo- ‘shit: Ja- of inteeets Churdiill la- met lnonu of Turm- 5811101 presidents Roosevelt and menu and e Minister Churchill re- viewed the gemral political ritua- at ti‘ the tion and examined 1i to be i’ ll d. king into m cyt the fintmasnd several ia- t countries. ‘Ih tgdfv of all roblema e e u D a t of understan and loy- allg‘ showed that thlgmtziocest unity existed between U. S.. Turkey a Great Britain in their attitude the world situation. The identity‘ r and of views of the great American and British de- mocracies with those of the So- viet Union. as also the traditional relations of friendships isting between these powers and Turkey, have been re-affirmed throughout the proceedings of the Cairo con- frence. London Conference. May 1044. People present: Prime Minister Churchill of Britain, Prime Min- ister Mackenzie King at Canada? Prime Minister fan Smuta of the Union of South Africa, Prime Minister John Cur- tln of Australia, and Prime Min- ister Peter Fraser of New Zea- land. Mr. Churchill described the conference as “one of the most important events that has taken place since the ‘k ' of war. It has a threefold p : 1. A review of the plans for the Allied launching of one oi’ the greatest military amphibious o! . Stepping British Commonwealth up of the part in beating the Japanese; 3. Reshap- p Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin, Allied Air Commander — Lieut. Eden, Foreign Commissar Molotoff, Marshall Voroshilof and top- C0 Handel” 0f U-S- Fifi-h Arm)‘ ranking military and diplomatic —Lleu. Gen. Mark Clark. advisers. Resuls: l. The three‘ Commander of British 8th Army participants declared they had —Lieut. Gen. Sir Oliver Ioese. "reached ‘ ‘ agreement as Commander of the U. S. l2tn to the scope and timing of opera- Alr FOF¢9——M8Jcr Gen. J. K tions to be undertaken from the Cannon. Commander of the U. S. 15th Air Force-Major Gen. N. Twining. _ Middle am Commander-in-Chief — Gen. Si!" Bernard Paget. east. west, and south" against Ger- many: 2. They invited Germany's stalellites to desert the Nazis and join the United Nations: 3. Rus- sia. Britain and the United States assured Iran in a separate de- claration that they were at one with its government “in their de- Air Office Commander — Air sire for the maintenance of the Minister of Agriculture, Hon. W. Vice Marshal Sir K- R. Park. independence, sovereignty and ter-l F. Allan Stewart. Commander 9m Air Force — Major Gen. Ralph Royce. ITALY Persian Gulf Gen. Donald 1-1. - o M 1. '11 o. s. b be Commanding General Newfound- n fly “w om n based in Italy crippled Nazi- land—Mfllvr Gm J- B- Bmke controlled Macchi fighter plane plants at Uarese and Bresso. smith E85! 55h Genoa port was also hit. May 3, ground fighti was re rted as Commander-in-Ohie! — lord still confined tongatrol 018133105 and Mills Mflllnlhflttflh- raids. In tihe air, bomber action Commander U. S. Armies in W35 wjdggpfggd’ with heavy a5. Bllrmfl. India, China —- Lieut. saults on Spezia. Livorno, Placenza General J05. Stllwell- and Parma. and other railway Cbmmhhd?!‘ 14th Ah’ W?“ centres. May 5, British and Am- (China) -— MBJ- 66h- Glfllffl erican bombers smashed the huge Chennault. Pacific Cormnander-in-Chief of U S On April fl. General MacArthur Pacific Fleet —- Admiral Chester W. Nimitz. Commanding U. S. Air Force — Vice Admiral J. H. Towers. U. S. Commander of Submarines —Vice Admiral C. A. Lockwood. Southwest Paelfle Commander-in-Chief - General Douglas MacArthur. Commander of Allied Forces .- Gen. Sir Thomas Blarney. Commander Allied Air Forces —- Lieut. Gen. G. C. Kennedy. Commander Naval Forces announced that the biggest Allied military operation of the South- west Paclfic war had resulted in landings at Bollandia. and Aitape New Guinea. This brought the Allied land forces to within 1200 qmiles of the Philippines. On April 24. the Allies seized an air- field and the Humphrey Bay area of Netherlands, New Guinea. On A noun "them 1a, of plural num- ber In daily use from here to Humber. Now almost any noun you take By adding “s" you lural make. But ii’ you add an ‘s" to this. Strange is the metamorphosis. Plural is plural now no more. Commander 5th Air Force — Commander U. S. Sixth Army South Paelflo Commander in Chief — Ad- ira.l Willi m F. Halsey. mCommantIing General of Army GRAMMAR librces-Lieut. Gen. M. F. Hannon. wow; Commander of Ground Forces- Major Gen. O. W. Griswold. Commander U. S Navy Air Voice in that form of the verb _ Y Force — Vice Admiral A. W. Fitch. w we show whether the subject of the statement denotes the doer of the action. or the can"; yum, object of the action expressed by ti; vfirlmAahere airethtwo voices c dmoe 1_L;;_v: eovoan ePassve n?m£lnn_ fimhuggi c“ In the active voice the subject . C Commander 7th Air Force —- Major Gen. Willis C. Hale. Commander Central Pacific Naval Force — Vice Admiral Raymond A. Spruance. stands for the doer of the action; in the passive the aubpect stands for the object of the action: thus. Active “He cuts the wood." Pas- sive "The wood is cut by him.” ‘ Note. There is in English a. Nu", yum‘, kind of middle voice: "The wood cuts easi1y”;' "who book sells Commander North Pacific Fleet Well" These verbl- thvvsh active Md Northwestern 5e; yimnflu-_ in form. are really passive in Vice Admiral Frank .1. Fletcher. meenins- Intransltlve verb: cannot be A1,,“ used in the passive voice, because Commanding General - Lieut. General Simon Buckner. Deputy Commander — Brig. Gen. l". L. Whittaker. farmer used candles Bermuda , Once the for light. Now he uses electric lights. Once he rode in a wagon drawn by horaea. Now he has an auto- mobile. The farmer sows his wheat in rows. When he has cut his“ wheat grinds it into is shipped away on the railroad to the c ties. The farmer has hay, too. his nary is cut. it must be raked. lit la un to see a farmer raking ay. hnmanding Officer U.S. Anny Air Forces and Base Commander is Brig. Gen. Alden G. Strong. Comma/nder Caribbean Sea B. 000k. Governor of Panama Canal genes - Major Gen. G. E. Edger- Oll ‘the President of Argentina la lldelmim J. Farrell. Admiral of the Fleet. Great kl- ttiain — Sir Andrew B. Clmnfng- am. 1. What are its chief islanrk? Ans. North, South and Stewart. 2. Its total area is over 100,000 square miles. - . What native tribes inhabit these islands? Ans. Maorls. 4. Where is its chief mountain anger . It runs from the south-wee‘; corner of South Island a e to p . ll Why is Mount Tarawera im- S. Secretary of Novy Knox. Re- sult. The Allied Southeast Asia Command was created and Lord Iouis Mountbatten made its lead- er. Strategy for the Pacific front was discussed. The problem of Ruasla was considered seriously 4. Moscow Conference 18 (Mul- People :- to n u r ' . - - 31st. i043. Peo le: Roosevelt. U.S., Anthony Eden of Britaili. V. Rfnrdyltit ignlmtlilirtfangnbmrilge It! $35.12” “ma” o! hemp and Churchill and adv s. Resultz- M. Molotoff of the Soviet Union its great volcanic eruption not 9 15mm vllugblg u” t; They broadened the work done at and the Chinese Ambassador at many years ago. m‘ c. Casablanca. The talks brought in Moscow. Results: The Moscow s. Describe the climate of New lo. Its chief minerak are gold . dhrlomatlc matters. They includ- meetings the Allies more Zealand. Ans. It lies in the md coal. “oblliems girth ‘gihingstr reggae gggelgndwggti-hivlnhoiiigwéhlgmgiegtllee Errata‘: Mvtit-wtlrlestislawalrlgd‘ llmtllr n I“ nut-om". "c: “m. gtivoe. They also included dip- ' p De e n l a 1m.’ "Mn" I200“ ication of a series of document: mountain, brings shun. Naturally, the rainfall is heaviest’ upon the western coast but no part suffers from scantty a supp n e uments were of that a decision had n made on a second front, of controversy. The mild and l ln the north it is warm Irowth enough to admit of the of IIIOIQ COIN}! on other points. THE v PACIFIC ers near Palan and Guam. WORD PUZZLE SILENT READING-GRADE II Ilovv the Farmer Llvea NEW ZEALAND sub-tropical fruits. Evan in the south In year round. and which cooled by and low. hides, hemp. fruit and cereals. and o Orange Chief icflgtonifcap.) ‘ghrlatohurcla Dung a . Popula on (i081) 1,11% i ing of the concept and machinery of the Empire so that the British Commonwealth can both tighten up its internal ties. and at the same time expand outward into a working partnership with other nations for military. political, and economic collaboration after the war. PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND Lt. Cmdr. Frederick A. Large. RCNVR. is now Attorney General. Pescara Dam in Italy, releasing flood waters which menaced Ger- man strongholds near the Adria- tic coast. American heavy bomb- ers blasted railyards at Ploesti and other places in Rumania and Yugoslavia. On the night of May 11. Allied armies, after extensive regroupinr and intensive pre- paration, ..aunched a full-scale of- fensive waich later smashed the Gustav iLllB and broke through the Adolf Hitler line. April 26, Australian trogg: ca - tured Madang, New G ea. y April 29, {our l-follandia airfield-s had been captured. On Ma 6, the enemy base of Pona e in the Central Pacific was ht. From May ti to 18, Allied bombers at many Japanese held S i positions - minor. the ceiebssfirgund h,‘ neck L, a swam,‘ the Carollnea, including the wet: Useless what useful was before. ANSWERS T0 LAST WEEK'S PUZZLE l. The Village Blacksmith: 2 The Rainy ay; a. The Bridge: A The Day is done; 5 The Old Clock on Sairs; 6. The Children's Hour. they have no direct object: but if an intransitive verb has alt- hed to ft a , e phrase, the object of tlon may become the subject of the verb compounded with the preposition: e.g.. “They la hed at him" becomes "He was aughed when changed to the passive. either the direct or the ndirect object may become the subject. while the other remains and is called the retained object. Note carefully that the passive voice of the verb has the following cher- acterlstics: 1. Always transitive: 2. has for its object the subject of the sentence; 3. Always consists of the auxiliary verb be, follow- ed by a perfect participle. Bf. YESOI N0 1. The railroad is made for auto- mobile to use. Yea-Nb. 2. At one time the farmer uoad oandlea for liprt. Yea-No. a, m; farmer plants his wheat in rows. Yea-No. 4 The farmer often liven many miles from town. Yea-mo. 5 Hay must be raked. Yea-No. The mill makes flour from H . Yea-No. '1. Haw; you seen a farmer rak- ing wheat? Yea-No. mild. loll)’. the cli- that of Great Britain. 7. Where la Canterbwy Plain? Ans. In the eastern part of South Island. It has excellent graaa lands and fertile soil 8 indus- . Dairy the winter h . What are the one! tries of New Zealand? Ana farming, sheep-railing; fruit grow» ea, lemo . peach it r fruitsmabound. u o m towns. Auckland, Well- toa WITH AIN, May 3i year-old PO~ Bob wlienham of Wit- ésizlw, Alta, was posted to an R. squadron of Coastal Command Northern Ireland when he lJlTll/Ed from Canada reoen got the biggest surprise of hi, life. he was alloted a room in a Nissen hut and was told he'd be sharing it with another officer. U~ipacklng and getting atihed no “r13 °§“" wneflmhh n. 1 ti. n, (3,, . . . - am, 0's a er, e is the ROLF. attached to the squadron, and Bob‘ thinks it's a swell idea for father and son to serve together. and bunk together. on the same squadron. for Squadron, reports Sqdn- lVllcCall of Simone, Ont. trips logged, five of them to Ber- lin. Joe is continuing his operat- ional career along with his Sqdn . PC. of (B3 York St.) Fredericton. who has logged l0 sorties on his second tour o ops cmoanies Kenny on all his | and as second. oilot. wear< a pair of silver-mounted wings of the U. attached to his collar to bl- ' ' Th]: i Department ducted [III bllllar MaeFadyen. s l-I Fal- llng St. Charlottetown.‘ um Roam Chatter BY LOUIS V- HUNTER Canadian Press Staff Writer THE R.C.A.F‘. IN BRIT- —(CP)— Nineteen- Sunderland flying-boat iii blv. and there he when he reached his new station himself generally acclim- disoovered his mate was his own faiiher education officsr| None of thi "screening" Joe of the Canadian Bison Ldr. ‘Ibm With 30 skinner. lbdr. Del Kenney, DEC. A. f . Joe. a miniature Scottie. acc-, trips . Army Air Force. plus the whistle fl- use the event of a "ditching." A- Out Our Way of Stanley Bridge P. E. I operates somewhere along the eastern Canadi to men like WO2 lemingnmen who work at stuff Nations have been able to prepare for the bone and c. string of be which each indicated by an additional bead, VIOTCI it’; "the little wcman" who's tackl- ing the lob ller husband says is too heavy for him l Seventy-five wish. working gifl; made ‘history recently when I In this picture is completed sortie is WOMEN TACKLE ' MAN-SIZE JOB ma. June 1 —(CP)— Now! housewives and employment they took it By .1. R. \=1=='=~m§ on. "n-r CHAIR? were, _ rrs easlaa PuLLm-"m CHAIR AROUND THAN escrow ALL "runs STUFF OVER "to "n-r TABLE, AN‘ A castes MUCH amuse»: "to cream OFF --oou'-r vou sea? Bringing Up Father WHY MOTHERS e21 snav 4,; m "m 8d; 0n u personified the strength nadian Armed Forces. Here is Warrant .. who is first mate on thefileob. Barnacles and sea-weed had | 0 |shiips washed down and the bilges demueked. The work was dirty. Oil. muck. -watei' and rust-colored ed in bis lhl. done but still the women pon themselves battered v tasks such as todo animal ed from the hulls, thelseveral S013? and painted docked paint da- p- and little blotaches. 012?}:- hair and oocnlpleit for after a few hours’ '01‘ scrubbed until their bones aohed bv Our Boarding House’ r-f oourage and determination of :- Officer2nd. Class Paul Fleming, an R. C. A. F. marine craft which an coast. It is due in no small part cracking of Fortress Europa. w lean -ami‘uio|r “' in c dookuplm mam.’ u“ w B.C. ooaat sgruvioekhav. ha‘: SEADIN’! CIIURC-IHBS LOIT were Swedish sea ‘ was: Rottergazn. bee t an erque av n to l destined _ bombs} H? y With Major H00n'e his-that the United (lg c. A. r. Photo] lad! u‘ H131“ m: ' ov mills: f shi 1.3.2?“ P“ s men H131" Kiel. Calais. and Dillkk- ’ . ......s;.;.r...a;.;" mire PRIZED ANTIQUE 1 LEND 400051.50 '6'§§o\l-°°cveeoize,an PICKED UP AT A BATAAP. rre eaaeeme FOOD our FROM MV m TURKEGTAN.'-'~ ALL own FAMlLYB Mouu-U-w- u=1ue ro LIKE TO eoanow on Lieu-re co ON seam ALL oven-rue AT "nu;- NiOMENT‘ IS VORLD suu. uoaoov suouw as , 3o. W- You PLEASE. tool-tine FOR eoMsn-uno e0 OLD MAM 1 , REPULSNE! a, F, _ N #1 \ . ,0 y, g . y‘ ' it’ I.“ / ///. t, WAR mos \ t (_ ._ / \ ' A. o / l l I ' g i "I I . ' , m. ‘ l f . ~ . "" - - . r Amweunv . - amulet-nus . ... x - Fmlb! STARVED-v- i . i NOT TODQY-‘THS l5 ME DRY G=F -AN‘ I'M LATE NCIN FEB TI-E ‘iso cumasnr you vs REn/R-R-grvlro! "m 5 l)’ p“ c" ‘ fig; I i» . » er"- Dy George McMunus thi. . I’ fly FAw-‘n