Maxims 01A. MERE MAN Am,- nineteen “,1 and ilvinl 10'"- centuries of (‘hristilin teaching it ll still I WW"- y The Peop|’s Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ,,/.,// W,"- m! r-----"‘ "*'---_....--\ Read by Everybody fsulldlllr 7'"? 09:58 n" tiunriilnn, Founded ill ding trainees '-\>< Q15 5':- ‘E CD = U! 1-. O = 3 CI IT .»\\\'.»\. June 4-101’)- noggcnate voted 31-19 toda! Inst a decision of its blink» is,“ conimerlle committee miending the 9319.9"! hm t“ qelude compulsory service re- mit; from compassionate pen- flm hcnisfi‘Q during their four months‘ traiiiiilf; i'""'"'d- Th, gommlltefl, studying the bill which brings tin; pension to into lllle with conditions o! m present tvnr. voted Il-d YE!‘ "my for the amendment ‘Mel; urns proposed by Conserv- fllvf lender Arthur Meillllm- 71,1“! rczirli-ig was given the bill rfter a 20-17 vote not to concur In another committee amendment which would ha" excluded service on "l9 01d 99"‘ IIIiil tribunal from the retire- merit pension qualifications of members oi the present pension mission. ‘Treeiion of the set zrsnts the pension commission discretion- |rv poners WIIII regard to dil- ‘yiply m- deitlh suffered in Canada, and not attributable tcserviee. by mfmb"?! 0| u" irmed forces in nccessiwus cir- IIIIIISHIIPCK. Tfiillevq should not be eliti- M, gm- nu-ertis under this sec- ilan, said Senator Melghen. Government leader Dlnduriinil. urging non-con- currence by the Senate in the committee's decision. said the a- mendment would constitute the placing bv the state on trainees gt": siinna of inferiority." lie said it would bnve a “psy- rllolozleol effect on thousands elmen" and might injure cur- rent ri-crnlii-if: offorts. Trainees lmi active service recruits in common (‘amps were "friends" sshnemherr of the same army." IIONTRIZAL, June 4—(CP)—- Adcublr funeral service was held with iiill military honors today at Si. Peter's Anglican Church in the nearby town of Mount Royal for LAC. Glen H. Fletcher anti LAC B. L. Robertson who were fatally in- Illred in n era<h of their train- ‘lnr plane lit Cavendish, P.E.I. Sunday. I Th; service was attended by iRonl Cnnudinn Air Force of- Illrrrs and men. relatives and , tllds of the deceased airmen. ihtboiiv of LAC. Robertson w: buried here, but the body of ‘LAP. Fletcher will leave by lnln triuuzlit for Btratford, 911i» for interment. lurch bomber l Reaches Windsor millulfscn Qnk. June 4-401»- wit»: Lo cctl Hlhlnn bombing mnfltfl the torch of victory Ih:n=C.i_li.i.l and then .o Prime m liter riiilrchlll in Britain land- mlice tori r and 5.000 citizens‘ m, "0 lijiiil to take hart in the it: CIIIIHAI reception The tcrch ‘"5 IInWl] to London, ‘Ont. Coming Events an - "0' ' for .\o.ices in this column 3 cellis per word, Within and Oleltmfietd‘ ‘will um. ri-laay. June 8th. "s ro. ""0 °i¢h<_ L-l-ta-s-s-zl. "5" “Aunt Bessie Beats rh £014‘, hr Milton Players at. victorl: line our L-l45-0-4-2i. “Cake s, 1 i... .l."c.*lrlzc“lh.niilid“' L-IBI- -5-3I. "3- 0 ‘f1 a1 | . .. ummnge Sale, 1-! ly 66"; w". Saturday. June 7th. ‘ ' L-137-6-5-3I. F! Hunter River Play at Travellers million 52h. It not‘ flne. foliowln L-{O-d-B-l . . >___ 5m“"°d_ to buy bologne cattle m“ f write for price. signed rlvhm"! 008s at Albany every “wail afternoon. Pride at mmélfitll 11:30 a.m. O he ‘mi- G C. Green, limer- urnume‘ m“? Dilly at Travel- “mi Friday, June eth. L-lfl-G-I-Bt, “Illicit “_'_"'" plusbcfiiiyvaiid Bridge. Basilica. .. liol Nam Hall, Pri- LJune GlIl. fIcfreshInents. L-B6-0-4-3L ienwk —M ephnw“ Nqulre oine hundred _ Jum R-imrit Charlotetown Fri- lfli "...I§.“.2I‘;““n‘€l""° lie s nee. m“ Marketing Boss-d can Ir-liii-ti-i-ILI for hundreds of cltiutls, '.i a. IRccommcndations 0n defence of Canada rules UITAWA. June 4—-(CP)—Fstab- lishment of three-mun advisory cqnmlttees to replace the one-man bodies which now investigate ap- peals of persons taken into cilstody with a. view to preventing acts pre- judicial to public of state saiet was recommended today in the fin- al report oi a House of Commons committee set unto investl ate the Defence of Canada Regulat ons. "The number of (advisory) com- mittees appointed shall. in the o tnion of the Minister of Justice. adequate to deal promptly with the cases arising in the different parts of Canadai sold one suggested sm- endment to the reputations recom- mended by Mr. Mchaudb group; The committee. established st March under chairmanship of F1511- eries Minister Mlchaud. tabled its report in the Commons just before dinner adjournment. It. suggested furthcr:— _ 1. That one-man committees be set up to deal with appeals from orders by the Secretary oi State preventing or restricting publica- tion of material considered prelud- icial to the safety of the state or (Continued on page 11, Col 2) Report new Buildings for Local airport 1 , recently been call- edTiilohqetrfie lsifccctlon of seven IBYCB buildings st the Charlottetown Alr- port at a cost of snnroxlmw-IY $300,000., it was learned from s rc- llable source last Eighty u_ The new buildings WlII be bu ~ close to those wnich are at. PIXSPTI? occupied by members of the ROY" Air Force. They will be situated back of the present barracks to- wards the Union Road and It 15 understood that the airport DYODEY- ty will be extended. The new bulli- h1g3 will be used for an ulr naviga- tion school ili connection with she preseltilfi reconnaissance school .n opera on. It is also understood that there 1s n possibility that the runways at the airport will be extended from 3.000 fest to 5.000 ftvt- The direction in which these wouldfic extended has not been lndica cd yet. There are four runways Mid appIOXIIDBIKEIV 40 buildings, includ- ing 51x irangars, at the school DQW Tenders for the seven new bund- tngs, which were called for by d1’! Department of Munitions and Sup- plies, were closed this week but tiic contract has not Yet b91111 award" The proposed buildings will be large wooden structures similar in lngs at the alrpmrt. There will be five one-storey buildings and two one-storey buildings. Erich will bf‘. shaped like the letter "H" wl'h the outer parts being about. 120 bv_40 feet and the cross section varying from 40 to 60 feet in width. Elected Moderator 0f Presbyterian (‘Iturch 101101019, Jung 4-tCP)—Rev. , Skene, pastor of Central Church. Vancouver, was elected Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Canada at the 07th ' general assembly toniKhi- Mr. Bkenes name was the only one to go before the assembly as a nominee. His nomination was moved by Rev. Thomas Rouistob, president of the New Westminster Prcsbytfry 0f khliffihgkcezlite succeeds Rev. Willlflm Barclay of Hamilton who conducted divine service as the assembly open- ed tonight and who officiated at the election of the new modcratflf- Creeks, Nazis fight ilvcr supply train IDNDON. June ll-tfl-Pi-Fiehi- lng bmke out between Greek and German soldiers at Lcvadla, about 60 miles northwest of Athens. when inhabitants seized a sinmlv from. geéiflters reported tonight from r0. . Ger-mm police fired on the Greeks who were unloading the train despite threats and mm rsons were killed and wound. . ueters said it. had oecn reliably informed. _ After the incident. the German local commander issued a wamlnB that.‘ anyone approaching ware- houses or goods trains would be shot. Emergency measures in Alh- sns. the rt said. had resulted in rt ma lsl and death sentences type to some of the present build- , CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA THURSDAY, JUNE s, 1941 LONDON, June 4 --(CP Cable)- Brltlsh labor, drawing up "blue- prints" for a new post-war Brit;- iiin, was told tonight that the sec- ond great war will not hatch war millionaires such as emerged from the conflict of 1914-18. Addressing the last session of the , labor party's annual three-day enn- j ference, Hugh Dalton, economic ivarfare minister, said.»- "There will be no ripetition af- ter this war of the great war for- tunes which emerged from the last war." , He disclosed that the labor par- ty executive has established a spec- ial committee to work out the plans which labor hopes to see g0 into effect when peace returns. The conference. usually produc- tive o! violent discussions during Britain's Whitsurltlde, closed on a mild note. With labor forming n vital part of the government‘ there was little occasion for the criti- cal fireworks of thp past, and al- IhGllgli some criticism was expect- ed. none materialized. A memorandum on post-war re- construction was approved by the delegates who heard Arthur Green- wood, Minister without portfolio in BRITISH, ARE PUZZLED B Y Labor‘ Told War Not Hatch Millionaires Jthe government, charged by Prime- liay’s objective In loan drive P. E. I. Totals Reach $386,150 In. Third Day Of Campaign, OTTAWA, June 4 —iCl’) — Canada's 1941 $600,000,000 Vic- tory Loan crossed the $100,000,- 000 mark today, the Victory Loan committee announced to- night but actual figures of to- day's subscriptions were not a- valiabie. During the day Victory Lnnn officials reported that a total 0i $08,777,350 was reached dur- in Monday and Tuesday oper- at nns. Tonight they said “field reports today indicated that the day's objective of at least $33,- 000,000 would be reached." “Throughout Canada the torch, rsymbol of the camapisii. has rckflh- ed into thousands 0f homes and the response to date is described et na- tional headquarters as ‘simply mag- nificent.” said a statement from committee headquarters. Largest subscription recorded in the campaign today—and to date- ‘the committee said -came from [Imperial Oil Limited and its sub- sidiaries with an order for $5.000.- 000 of victory Bonds. Earlier T. Eaton Comlrany and subsidiaries had trcckuri in with s subscription of $3.al.0.00(i F'rom Montreal. the special names committee reported a subscription of $i.283.200 from the Canadian Na- tional Railways, which includes $900,000 by the Canadian National day subscribed $105,500. towards the .V1ctory Loan campaign bringing the total up to $386,150 for the three days of tize drive. Most of yesterday's applications were for small subscriptions from a large number of people. The objective for the province is $1,500,000. and oi this Charlottetown and Summerstde $225,000. The Western Capital has subscribed almost 50 per cent of its objective already. . Figures obtained late last nigh revealed the following amounts sub- scribed in the campn gn: Charlotte- town $195,400.; the remainder oi Queen's County $18,100.: Summer- slde $109,450.; the remainder of Prince County $36,650.: King's County 024.550. These figures are for the toinl ansonnc up unrtl seven o'clock yesterday evening, Anything taken in after that. will be included in today-s figure. Toronto suburbs were making plans to Join with the city in a ceremony tn Rtverdale Psrle Bun- day when the victory torch. being flown from the Pacific Coast to Prime Minister churchlll s; s, gym. Toronto. loan headquarters whoiehssrtod support of Canadians John area. ” "I'm "- Widow." one woman fold n canvnsner. "My husband died to do iPat I (Continued on page 1i, col 4) has been given a quota of 8550.000. . bol of Canada's wsr effort, reaches said the ‘ fnr the victory loan was cxcmpll- ' fled in two incidents in the gsln- - two months sso and I've two chii- , dren to support. I'm barely able, . as much as I want ‘ t Will Minister Churchill to deal with post-war problems, ask them t0 “trust in my honesty and sincerity to get from this work of mine the maximum in interest for the com- mon people of this land." Mr. Dalton told the delegates that inst as labor is resolved to win the war so is it resolved to win the peace. Moss unemployment and distress- ed areas are intolerable in time of war. he said, but they should also be intolerable in time of peace. He sold that even as many bulld- fngs had been bombed and pnrned so he hoped that many old ideas and conceptions hntl been blasted away. Results of the election for a na- tional executive, the governing body of the labor party, brought s surprise when the delegates learn- ed that Susan Lawrence, '70. per- enninl executhe member. had been dethroned by Alice Bacon, 30, a Yorksrlrc schooimistrcss. Two other well-known labor members were defeated, John W21- mot. and A. M. Wall, They were rc- placed by James Griffiths and wil- linln Dobbic, both members of the House of Commons. Walter Green M.P., succeeded James Walker as chairman. Million Mar g-Attairthirtly British blast German-held French coast LONDON. J1me 4 —tCP)-- British alrcrnti. were believed to have bombed the German-held French coast for the second successive day iviill a series of heavy attacks vi lch had the port of Boulocnc as a princi- pnl target today. Toward evening there was considerable activity in the air over the channel. German planes flying high attempted to raid ‘the English coast. Authori- tativesourccs said that British flu fer planes shot down two MWSPYSCIIIIlItIS, and that one of the defenders was missing. Bevel-n] times during the day the rumble of loud explosions was heard across the mist-cov- ered Dover Strait. Almost con- tinuous explosions were heard for n time from the Bonlogne region and the ground was shnkcn on the British side. Earlier the air ministry re- portcd that British coastal com- mand bombers had attacked the Gcrmnil-nccnpled port of Le IIIIZI VANGUARD IN SYRIA IS BEING Will refer Insurance tax To Supreme Court OTTAWA. June 4—(CP)--F‘i- nance Minister iifiley. in a tele- gram to Attomey-(leneral Con- ant of Ontario, said today that if passed b Parliament, Domin- lun leglsiatIon imposing a tax on British and foreign insurance companies without federal au- thorization to do business in Canada, will be referred to the Supreme Court for n test of its validity. Mr. Conant yesterday wired Mi‘. lisley requestlnl either that the Dominion Parliament should not proceed further this session with the enactment of the pro- posed legislation, contained in the budget presented April 29, or refer the proposed legislation to the courts. EG YPTIAN ' M_0_ VE ‘Break off all Relations with French Mandate Call Syria “German- Occupied” A r e a ; Cabinet Shuffle In Progress In Egypt. LONDON, June 4—(CP)—— In the absence of more detailed information, Government sour- ces said tonight they were pllzzIerI over m1 Egyptian Gov- crnlncltt declaration that Syria is _"Gerlnau-occilpictl territory." Egypt is non-belligerent, ii was pointed out, but when the Turns outfit) Tanks daily BERWICK. Pa., June 4—-(AP)— _The American Car and Foundry Company, now in full production here, is turning out 10 light tanks a day of a type that had their first trial in Greece where some now are believed to be in German hands. Construction experts at the fac- tory told a group of returned Am- erican war correspondents today they believe the iii-ton tank pro- cluccd here is as good as anything the Germans build of this type, and may have better armor plate. They still are waiting word from Brit sh authorities on their per- formance in action. JilffidIIS to Reach verdict TORONTO, June 4-(CP)—Fate of Aircraftman Hugh Alexander William Newcil, charged with the murder of his 22-year-old wife here last fall, remained undeter- mined tonight as n supreme Court Jury for the second time in six months failed to reach a. verdict. The jury was dismissed by Mr. Justice W. D. Roach late tonight when the foreman reported that after 10 hours’ consideration no ngreement could be reached, the Royal Canadian Air Force and veteran of the Russo-Finnish war. was charged wifhmurder after the body of 1th.- Flnnlsh wife. Anne, strangled with her own silk stock- Hmm. and m, nil-aroma m,“ ;ing.s. knotted about her neck. was Ciicrbourg Tuesday‘. The ministries of air and home security announced that an enemy plane bombed the northeast coast of Scotland this afternoon “and machine-gun- ned other points nearby, calls- ing some damage and inlliring n small number of iacopie.” It was nrmoilnccd also that three cnemv bombers were tltot down last. night. Buntl camp in ' iicw Jersey sold TRJEZNTON. N. J.. June 4—(AP) —Four stormy years of waving swnstikos and resounding‘ hells at Camp Nordltind ended today with sale of the cam and surrender or the charter of t e German-Ameri- clin Bund Auxiliary Counsel for the Blind disclosed that the auxiliary. operators of the ztXi-ticre tract at Andover, had sold‘ the camp for $23,500 to 217 individual mortgagees and then re- iriirned its charter to the secretary of Slate. The ltnnouncclncnt came a few hours after the New Jersey State Legislature passed a lnw re al- lng the aux 1isry's charter an in- . found in n secluded part of Tor- l onto last Oct. 6 Conferences at llichy continue VICHY. Julie 4 - (AP) -— Pierre Bolssm, the “defender 0f Dakar", arrived in Vichy tonight. presumably to loin in conferences of high im- vol-t to the defence of the French empire. Gen. Maxims Weygand, commander of Vichyb North Afri- can forces, ts still here. Boissons arrival was as unexpect- ed as was that of Weygand by plane last Monday. Weygand stayed on tonight utter holding several Lin- Dcrtniit conferences with Petain and taking part in two urgent cabinet meetings. Organization of an "Eurafrlcan Autarchy" excluding Great Britain was reported here today to be planned for the next phase of the war as a result of Monday's Bren- ner Pass meeting of Hitler and Mussolini. The controlled Telemondial news agency said of the plan:- "Francc. which has turned to- wards a clearly European policy. can play an important. role in this organization because of the African situation. corporation. Governor charles Ed- ison slgned the measure. ‘The Bum-l had held numerous rallies st Nordianci and in earlier years pictures of Hitler were prominently displayed. _ i» l0§SOM / / “’ILI / ) F BESI FOR ALI "Eurafrlcan eutarchy does not necessarily mean isolation of the two continents, since inter-contin- ental exchanges will be useful for every ne. For the moment. however, Euro must be self-sufficient her- I self." CANADA lOUR BAKING! ivar broke she severed diplo- matic relations with Gcrmzmy. The declaration of Syria was Interpreted by some as an am- plification of that fiction, es-. _ iiecirilly since a large Wigrvpiinn frziilc 1's with Syria. I CAIRO. June 4- tAPl-Egypt listed Syria as "German-occupied territory" and broke off trade and other relations with that uneasy French mandate today soon after the Egyptian Cabinet resglned, The cabinet resignation un- rier pressure for a government of wider base “in view of the present grave circumstances" came apparently as an urgent measure forced by the approach of Axis forces from across the Mediterranean. Egypt's present status is that of non-belliger- ent ally of Great Britain. It was understood that a new Government intended to meet. that demand would be formed tomorrow under the some Premier. Hussein sirry Pasha, probably bringing in the Saadlst Party, the largest of», position group. Tile new effort underscored] Egyptian feeling that the war is getting closer than ever. The ital- larls advanced last fall as for as Sldi Barrani. in the western de- sert. before Britlshjorces drove them back across Cirenaica. but the Egyptians always expressed confidence that the British forces could handle the Italians. They fear that the Germans who have toward Suez will not be so easy. Britain has pledged that if any air raids are made on Cairo, Rome l will be bombed. §42 survivors Ncweli, 27-year-old member of Nfld. t _____ ST. JOHN'S. Nfld., June 4- (CP Cabin-Newfoundland gave of her hospitality tonight to more survivors of the battle raging out on the Atlantic-n men landed at an cast coast rt from on un- identified vesse sent down by Ger- man attack. Few facts about the seamen. their nationality or details of the sinking of their craft. were known here although reports from the point or their landing said only four required hospital attention and that health of the others was remarkable, , ‘Their arrival swelled to D8 the i number of seamen brought to New- , foundland soil recently after their ishlps were sunk beneath them Fifty-six men in two groups reach- ed safety only a short time ago ; after tossing about the Atlantic i nine days in open boats I They reported on arrival that 22 ' shlpmates were still missing but it I was not. known here whether they were among the 42 landed at the . east coast port later. ,c,ooo soldiers llllissing after {Crete battle SYDNEY. Australia. June 4-. i0P)-More than 6.000 Australian - and New Zealand troops were un- accounted for after the with- } diEWal from Crete, it was estimat- ed today. Percy spender, Australian Army Minister, announced that of 8.486 ‘ 5 of the‘ Australian Im- perial force in Crete before the German sir invasion 2.887 men. |lnciuding 218 wounded, were re- Imoved to Egypt. This left 3,599 men unaccounted for. I Acting Prime Minister Waiter iNssh of New Zealand announced [yesterday that. 2.800 New Zealand troops who fought in Crete were unaccounted for. He said that. among arrivals in Fgypt were 7B0 wounded New Zeolnnders. BERLIN. June d-tAPi -— The ‘German high command claimed ltoday the capture of 8.000 Britons and 4.000 Greeks in Crete. and Nazi spokesmen asserted this brought the total of captives taken 12 PAGESAI part of y’ Annual Bubscrtptlon Delivered, 80.00 B] llllll P II. L. $4.00; Canada and U. l- $3.00 EINFIIRGED in Syria, it was added. hospital ship are manning the French side of the border with Palestine. They are‘ mostly pro-British and the French k .loincd the Italians in a new drive g have been forced to increase the wzumbcr of pro-Vichy officers to the proportions of l0 officers to 100 men, the dispatch said, Mosul. source of oil supply for the Mediterranean. was received here with satisfaction, it was disclosed at the some time that there has been “serious rioting" in Baghdad after British force-s occupied that Iraq capital. Declaration of martial law by the Iraq government. to restore or- Britain's troubles in Iraq were all settled. Resignation 0f the Egyptian cnb- inet emphasized the icnr 1n Cairo that Egypt now is nearer the front y line of the war than ever Before. llr. Bonncll says brought an ever-increasing spirit of co-operatlon among the various reg liglous bodies." wee-ks on a mission of oodwill on beilalf of the libderai uncil of] the Churches of Christ in Amertcai and other religious organizations. Six Missing As Plane Disappears LONDON. Julie 5 ~i'l‘hursda;v)— (GP Csb1ei_Flve members of one family and a pilot are missing lrl a British civilian plane which left the Scuqv Islands Tuesday ailer- noon for Penzance in Cornwall and since has been unreported. Names of the passengers an- nounced early today were Mr. and Mrs. John Ieggltt, their two chil- dren. Jasmine, 11 and RWTIRIIIB, 9. and Mrs. Georgina Orlfllih. moth- cr of Mrs, uggitt. Mrs. Ieggltt la secretary to Sir waiter Moncton at the ministry of information. The plane was piloted by Capt. cler aroused speculation whether. Although British occupation of z I I [Mosul 6-171 Field In British Hands‘ Is Welcome News Reports indicate “necessary precautions” are being taken in Middle East to deal with new German threat. LONDON, June i-(CPL-Reuters news agency quoted the Ari- I kara radio tonight as saying the Germans are believed to have sc- » cumuiated one division (up to 15.000 men) in Stu-la. y This force is reported to have arrived in the French mandate by various routes and in civilian clothes. Turkish announcer was quoted. However. ‘ stood to have been offered the use of French nar equipment stored without weapons. the the Germans are under- (By Noland Norgaard. Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON. June 4—(AP)-By land, sea and air, a Nazi vanguard in French-mandated Syria is being steadily rein- forced, British press dispatches said tonight, while in Lon- don British quarters declared the “nccessaryi precautions” have been taken to deal with this Middle-East threat. Announcement by the Middle East command that the lliosni oil fields in northern Iraq once again are in British hands was welcomed here as improving the tion at the rear if and when trouble breaks out in SyTia. A Reuters news agency dispatch from the Syrian fron- tier sziid more than 12 German planes, most of them fight- ers, are arriving daily at Syrian airports. About 150 empty troop carriers landed on the airdromo at Rayuik on Iiionday. the dispatch said. The dispatch added that it was believed 400 so-callcd wounded who recently landed at Beirut in Lebanon from a members of a Nazi tank detachment which now has taken control of French armored cars and tanks which have been idle for many months. Three times weekly the Taurus express unloads at Syrian depots batches of about 50 Nazis who have crossed Turkey with false Balkan passports, the news agency said it was reliably informed. These forces are disguised as Jewish refugees who carry‘ cheap suit- cases bearing the large letter “J", it was said. Under cover of darkness other Germans who have commandeered small ships and fishing vessels slip in to shore, it was said. Although most of the Germans arriving in Syria disappear into the interior immediately. it was said three of the lending hotels at Beirut have been reserved for German use only. Senegalese troops were reported ‘- = Iiritis-h posi- Now is Tat: “TIME To BEGIN T0 SAVE UP F00. THAT VAcATiorl TORONTO. Julio l itjPi-Min. imlLm and maximum temperatures: s Bombctl Churches in Dew-w» o o Victoria 40 64 s s Edmonton 30 08 Britain carry on Reno o o Winnipeg 45 72 Toronto 59 60 —~- --—- ‘ Clttayva 1 40 77 , __ A on rea. 50 '12 odoocrhxdiciliggehflantaiililiav Qmib“ 5‘ 7" been destroyed or damaged serlous- Sam‘ John n M ly by Nazhboinbs and many male? Hahn“ 40 6n have been slightly damaged, Dr.‘ mmrhttemw“ 35 65 John Sutherland Donnell, pastor of‘ Ftfctih Avenue‘ Presbyterian Chifiich,‘ 50359551‘ - um‘ 33nd,?“ “ “ m" “s Gulf, North Shore and Bay on... The bombed churches carry on, 1""? M05911"? Wlfldsi 96m? said D13 Bonnen and added may cloudy with much the same tem- "the destruction of the churches has ilfffltllfe. Maritime West: Moderate winds; partly cloudy. followed by IOmO Dr. Bonnell. formerly of Wlnni-, showers in south portion; not much peg. has been in Britain for some change in temperature Maritime East: Moderate winds; Partly cloudy with much the same temperature. Synopsis: The weather has bee“ fair in most districts of Ontario and a little cooler in ti-e lower lake region; scattered showers have 0c- curred in soilthcrn districts 0' the west and there has been little change in temperature over the Prairie Provinces. High tide thl. r". t 0.15 and this evening Radial?“ n Sun sets this evening at 7.42 and rises lmnorrow morning at 4.15. Pull moon June 9. 8.34 am. Suonmerstde tide i8 minutes 1st- er than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SAILING! on the island to about 25.000. l W.D. Anderson D.F.C.. 1n Austral- ian. Royal Alr Force pliiiv, anti , specdboats are continuing search. Leaves Borden 9.85 AM. 1.00 P-l l l5 EM. leaves Tormentfne 1100 A. M. ii i- i rus e. m. 0.20 not inn} except isunusy. é 3‘ i \ . t i I i u