MAXIMG OIL- MBRE MAN Who k s sinful slips and falh. or the report? he who s who spreads Mali. $4.00; other Provinces I 0.8.5 86.1 , crown. census. MONDAY, JUNE 4, 194s ,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,, ,,,,,,,,,,_ m, i 0 PAR? FOR RAIDS ‘fliflfii Tokyo Radio Int i i Gloomy Broadca Gaillle charged Batu-flay De l ‘gfuiflliim u" mm" SAN FRANCISCQ,_June 3 — (AP) — Japanese of-l linden" and fioials today warned civilians to fortify themselves against If" a ‘l’ the 118; air raids while acknowledging new carrier attacks on the whole My, w“; --__,., u“ Kyusliise and virtual loss of Okinawa in a series of gloomy zvtléere British interests predcrnln- Tokyo bf0adgast§_ Acting Premier Jamil Mnrddm when “y; Two officials of the Home Ministry, after inspecting s fi I . . m. ""11 mnzw ‘huh damage inflicted on Yokohama by B-29s in a 450-plane raid 3mm d991,“, m4 “bum mm- May 29, urged evacuation from that city of all but “acutely hers at work in essential" persons. They also warned smaller cities that they should fortify thoroughly against air raids. ces in her profession in the ' ' _l five years than would come the In another official broadcast for Japanese home con Way o, we average cum“ nurse 10 PAGES oyal Navy Finds Big I apply Problem In Pacific ._¢_.,-:i Q {i ln.-I.dr. Tralner lick In England [QUINIIKJEI 12s» in. i De Gaulle Bays Syrians Given Arms By British .. . ...-._-_, k Syrians liive . Their Story I1 Alltliufilll BRITSKR P J HIADQU T138. a ‘(llzeutcm-ilan-ebglisiimfiosiu token thsIIri - ladand Local lliiree Hosie After Long Service '“'T . rscssic - American ' _ gin-lies hit Kyushu time in s4 '- ours; Americans on Okinawa ad- vance nearly two miles; Austral- inns and Dutch Indies troops mop up on Taraksn: heavy lighting on Mindanao. Philippines. CHINA-Chinese recapture Tin- irong in South-Central Chins; other forces as miles from Indo- thc China frontier. es from its BURMA-Jritish troops capture Iy FRANK WDIBN who gfa-ergth 2f the than Navy is turned u- m. aiadhsmmgairwmmflgbet nauseous. June a - (AP) --, O l‘ run loosen direct supply m x If Lieut. Nursin Sister Ruth. I00. MacLean of Charottetown, who arrlvcddldhome Saturday nlglgilt. never y m re nursing, s s hum; printing- has had magic thci-llling experien- "paeied up" and he was _ last down. But he related how finish wit ‘dlktals’ y. "We know the plot was muc and crisis," said the Rrench leader h greater than first believed." the Hie liarn Squadron of the 2nd Jhctieil Air Force when he Volt huh’: cum rip Hard ‘Hit MBA, 3a., June I — (A!) — men estimated that . one-third to one-half of mor- has been ing E vents Australi LII and must d the scene of operat- of the largest naval and air lore depots in the world covering more than 1,000,000 square feet and emplo lng som 1500 ls ed in needs thlssfoio and kg 3 is like From others , it. fleet-brain shim Will keep the fighting vessels fed, clothed and . of , the light guiitntmnlfiw g with the fleet). Upwerds of a score of vlctuallins ships will be constantly fer- rylng food and clothing from Aus- trolls. to the fleet. eachship 68.17a- bleofcenryingamonthssuplyof food fa- 80.000 men as as clothes and mess sear for 10.000. The problem of the supply officers is he/vlns the right thins arrive at the right place at the right time. They must think in terms of months and thoisands of . "We have been hand to mouth with supp and are still having some incmeriktsé the situat- is rov y um ‘agencies s/vallsbls and We ourselves fairly self-support- i. ' British fleet/s ability to sup- ttsclf in the Pacific was one of chief concerns of American officers whm Joint action was con- itemPlateduThe Aapocrivséi: mo? uirmien were 81' ' fir! much assistance with ma: 01' oné or the Sritlsh ileoifs cont-ri- oo Pacific naval warfans ls mobile naval air bases. which Vi? tually m on ilnlzeels ready to 0p; gfllg 8 l. GIMP/Will‘ maliterenin the EH01!“ until time to move an airstrip etshoritn i forward anili- e . persons. Australia for the; mountain stronghold of Thand- llorpu Ghrisiti Procession W Held Yesterday Over 5.000 B60819 Participated in the Corpus hristl procession held yesterday "wmns- may)“: St. Dunstaifs Basilica, the color- ful procession was added to numbers by the Holy Redeemer congregation joining lt at Rlcn- mond Street. Parish societies with their many coloured banners ajddedlmuch to the pageantry o t 8 so emn PT"- oession. The C.A. (B) T-C- bind was 1n attendance and members of the Knights of Columbus. Fourth Degree, formed s guard of honour to the Blessed Sacrament.- The Solemn h Mass o'clock was celebrated by J. A. Sulllvanhpsslsted by Rev. K.’ S. McMillan is deacon and the Rev. Howard Wight as sub-deac- on. Hls Excellency Bishop Boyle‘ married the Blessed Sacrament, and was assisted by the Rev. W. McGulryan and the Rev. J.P.:.. O'Hanley. The master of ceremonies was the Rev. L. A. Dougsn and the sermon for the occasion was preached by the Rev. J. W. Mc- Cardle. Troopships In Collision Off Newfoundland sctinl Premier said. W“ fllllilboled to meet Tuesday. The French file-ruled to attack the De- puties t ere on the excuse that Syrian Gendarmes 1n front of the Parliament Building, which ls Just across the street from French headqgsit-ltersl.’ did not salute the statements that the yrlans started firing were “ab- solutely not true." Death Yesterday 0f Mr. Peter Brodie 0f York The death of Mr. Pete;- meme yesterday at York has ienwved one of the Province’: m successful armors. The 1 te Po at Sm a utfrMBrodle was born of Donaldson and when he be hi6 10mg and successful f us. career. After her death 1n 1am, I late Peter Brodie moved ‘to York where he married Mix Nina Bern- Md of North Rilstico. Here he re- mained for the rest of his long and eventful life. Always interested in was eected to the Legislature ln 1919 as a Liberal and served out his term of office 1n the Liberal 101d. In the next provincial elec- tion. however, in 1926. he ran as an Independent but was defeated. Spcclallzlng in the raising o! pure bred 11085. the late Mr. Brodie was considered an. authority on s11 phases o! the breeding and finish- ing of those farm animals end his semces as a 1111180 H hogs were regularly obtained by the officials of the Provincial Exhibition. H»: was aha a large grower of potatoes "Parliament politics. he A 1H 0111111111118 to s press conference the French side of the Levant dispute which has found the Sy- rians and Lebanese refusing to negotiate with the French because of French wishes for concesslo 1n their homelsnds. "It would be a most monstrols jllblllfdlt ." said Gen. De Gsulie. 1!. ha ng ended the war against Germany, we should nnd ourselves confronted bv bloody incidents bet/ween the Allies." Cien. De Gsulle told of French- Britlsh political and economic clashes in the Middle East dating Great War and clearly indicated his refusal to submit the Middle East problem to a tripartite meeting of France, Britain and the United States, a chill in a. message Gen, Gaulle last week. He declared Mr. Churchlllbmen. sagefwlll change nothing," addw lng- ‘I haven't thought it neces- sary to reply to this message." Remlndlng his listeners that Russia was interested in the Mid- die East. Gen. De Gaulle said: There are many who are inter. ested in this question, first of all there are the Big Four-France, Britain. the United States and Soviet Russia. And there are- also De proposed bv Prime M$ister Churf, situation and distribution of correspondence. iimasonic »Party 0n Visit To This Province Sovereign Grand Commander D.G. Mcllwralth, 33rd degree Scottish Rite of Canada, AS. and~ A.S.R., and his party spent the- week-end in Charlottetown They’ arrived Friday evening. Saturday night they attended an informal dinner at the Charlotte- town Hotel at which Mr. La. hlin MbcKlJ-mon of Montague pres tied. the Arab states. “These constitute a group. If they want to settle the question a. normal manner-and I hope peaceably-they must consider 1t all together and not from point of view of stupid rivalry." Gen. De Gaulle said Franccwas entitled to military bases the same 98 311ml" End the United States and claimed that the “British attitude” in the Middle East was one reason for France's inability to give full independence to Syria and Lebanon. World's Hog Population llovm the Golf I Mcllwraith will return to the maln- Both Dr. Mclilwralth and his wife gave addresses. Saturday afternoon the party lslted the Provincial Building and to the Charlottetown Ootirsc Senator John E. Sin- clair of Springfield was in charge of the tour. Yesterday the Sovereign Grand Commander attended morning sor- vlces at the Kirk of’ St. James and in the afternoon the part went on a tour of the eastern sect on of the Provlnceoh Mr. Frank Vanlderstlne was in large. _ Tonight a formal banquet will be held in Surnmerside for the Scot- tish Rite and on Tuesday Dr. land doctor. At present he ls malciflil a. sumption, recorded by the Federal Communications Coni- mission, Japanese communications authorities, without ex. plan-ation, warned that “enemy spy activities are becoming more and more intense as the war grows in violence.” They repeated cautions against reporting troop movements or “complaints and dissatisfaction in the national economic r ilnfantiy divisions southward ruined towns and mud in a drive to cut off Chlnn Peninsula on the, southeast coast. Marine Division had crossed the Nalia-Yonabsru highway in gains of nearly a mile. American Head- quarters said Sunday. American carrier their Kyushu attacks into a second! day. striking 1n 14 formations be-l tween 8 and 9:30 time Sunday 7 to T.——8 to 9:30 day.) Tokyo said about 170 planes again airf lds Kagoshima and Chlran airfields! all on Kyushu. the Japanese home islands. O and Minami Daito Island, about miles east of Okinawa, also on Sat. urday. commodities” in domestic MANILA. June 4 -— iMonday) - AP) — Two United States army today swept on Okinawa through I On the western flank the 1st‘ Radio Tokyo reported that the planes cars-led; a.m., Japanese 8:30 p.m. E.D. p.m. A.D.T. (Satur- V attacked southern Kyushuei ie , Halsey Hits mire Wasting no time in implementing his plans for “knocking hell out of them wherever we find them,” Ad- miral Halsey sent his fighters and bombers blasting on Miyazaki, Kokubu, Kushira.‘ at installations l southernmost o1- attacked airfield installations on 209 ther fliers industrial ; United Church Short | n15 hcorie ls at Hamilton, Ontario‘ Of Mi where he is a well-known medical] nisters In Sask. in a century. For Nur Sister MacLean has seen men s er and die 1n many far-flung battle areas on the European and African continents iluring the past five years. But she has also seen them miraculously recover. tha ks tu the miracle drug, penicillin. Hild- that other restorer of life and vitality, blood plasma. Her experiences would fill s. large volume. She enlisted from 'I‘oronto and went overseas on June 6, 1940. Her three years 1n England were not years of mere routine nursi . The Canadian armies in Eugand wen forming- motorcycle squads at the this for various convoy duties and there were the inevitable number o serious accidents involving broken bones. Then, too. with the lll- fated Dleppe venture there was plenty of work for the doctors and nurses of the 15th Canadian- General Hospital to which sh! ficahiinriffi Mali ‘will’: time “can Ma Biif Hr. usuewr (‘Ms Atom. " on Less v Yr Z { l,“ ‘l ‘I; 'i {N I I “iii/fyilllrili ill‘ In stock, seed oats $2.50 per ill. licCulgan and Boyle. 'K . E-M-lfll. —-Monday. National : Board Movies. Schools 11131.12?‘ - MOOSE JAW. Sasl-L, June 3 _.l ~. x‘ Q. June 3 __ 1gp; _ (OP) -— A shortage of ministers 1n] MgfigflTanh maxi-hum ten-men ‘Saskatchewan was revealed in the “was; vanwuvm- 51, Edmonton settlement committee report pre- 39_ (5; Rgglna 4.4, 5'1; ssnleri to the 21st annual meeting‘ 38. 64; Toronto 44. 53; i3- cf the provincial conference of thc’ so; Mom-cal 38, 59: Qllebw 34» 601‘ |United Church of Canada here iMcncton 38. 58; Halifax 38. 53:‘ |Therc were S9 CIlRTEEs where no Charlottetown 39. 59; YBHYMWYI i pastors overs availzblc. 35, 57; Sydney 50. 53. Tslnkon-g (Chlenklanz) and threat- ] -.- FORECASTS lli. S. Will Have cried two Japanese-held form r 1 Lower St. Lawrence: l Aerial Forest Patrol American air bases-the big bomber 1 m t m north mostly Liiltblildyiaband cool; mesilsy. part1? field at Liuchow and the flghter= drome at Shenyang. ‘cloudy and cool , l Rewinnlng Tsmkorig after almcst, and took delight in growing and experimenting with many potato varieties. As a young men, he was keenly interested tn rullltary mat-teas end trained with the Highlanders with wllwm he hoped at one time to be sent out Wwt to hclu quell the Northwest Rebellion of 1%. His widow survives him. There ‘were no children by either mar- age. lint. Election Eden norThi To _ Take Host lnNDON. June 3 -- (OP) --For- glgn Eden is suffering flay and h as —-—- been ordered by his doctor to takg h. 6am Family" 1a Georse- at least two weeks’ "complete Y m" hi’ Mwf-Illlfl DRY!!!» l0 Downing Street announced y" “may. June 5th. m, * 6-4-11 Prime Minister Churchill will be 1n any“ o] tho P9001811 Office dil-rinc Mr. Eden's absence and W111 be assisted by Education Minister Richard Law. the announcement tour of the Dominion- WASI-EINGTON, June 3 - (AP) —- Reflecting sharp reductions ln the United States and Canada, the world's lhog population declined about nine pir cent during the l-zst year to complicate the problem of Chinese Hecapturc stretching mm ‘mm m _ Highway Junction wriégvveary world. this indfld’. the Oifi - . ce a srsncaa mooss “m” cirrmGiuNo, June a - (AP) Chinese troops in south-central China today rec turcd the 1m- portarit highway unctlon town of NEW YORK. June 3 —- (AP) - Some 10.000 veterans of the Unit- ed States 1st Army landed in Ne" York today from three troopshlps and four Liberty shl s. One 01 which. the John B. cod. hid B 10-foot hole in its bow. souvenlr of a lt-shlp collision in dense 10B off Grand Banks Newfoundland. llsat Sand . ‘i Joseph gutton, chief officer of w" = the Hood. said several vessels were .50 badly damaged that they wen: forced to put in at Halifax. The Hood. had to dispose of the ships ballast so the damaged port bow would be above waterline. “There were 96 ships in the ,"l7nloa p lieu satiliiiilm m _ an and and mixed and Monday. Mc- k Y1’. '_,_m_ h@dQl'flil r n.“ H wntlnental Europe 1s than 1n the United states. World hog numbers at the be-l ginning of 1905 are estimated at I ht the bfiflilgiinflwiuil a o i944. The 1945 number s , its . a decline of l3 per. cent from the y . Lake St. John: Cloudy and quit») icool probably snowfluifltl. TWO“ ‘day cloudy and 0001. ‘ilimhlllflnill . 500th}. Another car to uirlve - N- . Outcliife. Fredericton. 8-2-2i. Gulf, Bay Ohaleur and North Shore: Moderate northeast mostly cloudy and cool winds Tueschy HALIFAX, June 3 -- (CP) -—In- partly clwdv and cool. 0m at Albany every t trucking n1“ m se p ne . George V")! hose every Tuesda r trucking service. i-ld-Bam-Moiu-tf. , and ‘lclerald Street arrived home Sat- 31, legion June ll. "yd, M; Eden's general condition m was reported i066!- Local Veteran Arrives Home , 1 De nis. n oi’ Mr- s“ lfiiimesnbenxis of 98 n, than five ears iletgrige “with Th? Canadian Anny v rsess. "i" ":4." r .=":.'.::: ca‘: h: on and Balnryitaly, mince. Beltium and Holland. He went thro the wai- with one sushi wound Y1 the leg from shrapnel. Four bro- thers sre still overseas with the ' Canadian forces but ewwt w "- _tum home this menth- Ges. Eisenhower - To Visit Home Soon Force. the lied States for a visit. the Wu rtinent has announced 5s is expected to arrive in Wash- ions gan shouting, not knowing what had occurred. Our captain quieted‘ them by informing them over the ship's public addrus system that. limped into ort with is water in its a collision with a tanker in fog at sea. cf Sup tum- | h) Wife???» o..__. group." Sutton said. “All of in re- malned not more than 150 yards apart. each using his fog buoy to guide the ship nearest him. The fog-the densest I have ever en- countered-enveloped us for more than a week. “We were proceeding most cau- tiously last Sunday afternoon when two of the vessels struck icebergs. This caused i4 others to collide and almost pile up on each other. "The soldiers on the Hood-some released from prison camps and ‘naturally nervous-be- thsre was no danger." Yesterday the Paine Winsavte feet of old as the result of British Car Output To Be Half Normal J half a r’; output. The Ministry pirtiss permitted imiaufac- resume operations but a and bomb output. At-A-Glancc Here are some pertinent facts on. today's _On¢tsrlo general provincial election . Pollsogui-d . a .. '. mJADN) am. .DT (Ia Polls close-J! pm. ED.T. (8 p. m., ADI.) Candidstu — 91')‘ f Conservative, 80; C.O.I'. and Liberal - su b1.) poor-tea 8'1. others cgigibie l record level of 1940 and l0 per cent l period. from the average for the 1900-40 Hog numbers in North America- mainly the United States, Canada and Mexico-totalled nearly ‘r5,- 000900 head at the beginning of this year compared with the record 1111490000900 at the beginning of ‘Ihc War Pbod‘ Administration has adicd farmers to moi-ease pro- duction nearly 10,000,000 head this year, but Government. surveys 1n- dlcste that production may “fell goo . 5,0009% head short oi flue Blended for Quality m es.- .~ == p‘- ~._n._ ‘It. l ‘Julia-l . ° Pro seven months of patlon. Chinese veterans squashed‘ to a polnlt 53 miles south west of| Ll and were pursuing flcclnil enemy forces toward the city which the Japanese appeared prfllmflnl to evacuate. 0 Young licer Found In Halifax Park HALIFAX. June 8—A two-day- old deer. less than two feet tall and barely able to stand up, was found ln Point Pleasant Park on the outskirts of the city Saturday by I}. G. Malloy and tlwo sailors. The fawn was apparently de- serted by its mother, which pre- sumabl swam across the North West , since no wild animals inhabit the park. The men werei ‘attracted by the barking of two dogs Iwhlch had discovered the an a. - DETROIT. June 3 - (AP) The meat shortage took of‘! in all directions in Detroit Saturday. While a market selling horse meat closed at noon with a. "sold-out" sign, Prank Zarzyckl, 3'7, was fined $35. for throwing s steak across a cafe. He complain-led, "there was too mud: fat on h " radio static Dpsrtmen-t or to any field in the Province from which the message can be delivered- by telephone. The R.C.A.F. is co-l operatlnz with the department by permitting its the al af-t. Japanese occu-iauguratlon of an aerial patrol to aid in forest fire protection, and suppression, 1n Nova Scotla announced I MacQuarrle Minister of Lands and- Forests. The patrol will augment‘ and supplement system. was today by Hon. J. H. the fire Taro light red ‘Tiger Moth 3;. planes are being used. The planes are radio fires to their home base. to the two ns now operated by the! equipped and can report of Lands and Forests fields to be used by rcr ‘The planes are at present equip- ped with wheels but later may be mounted on floats to land on any of the hundreds of lakes scattered throughout the Province. MacKenzie King's Official Agent Dies PRINCE ALBERT, Sash, June il-Alexander Duncan. 62. Prince Albert drugglst and official agent for Prime Minister Mackenzie King. who seeks re-electlon 1n Prince Albert riding in the Dom. lnion election Julie 11, died at his home here today following heart attack lost Thursday. essinigiiax on F. KOWBI‘ ' |te5 later than Charlottetown. I Maritime Provinces: Moderate northeast to north Wllifll mostly cloudy and cool: T06!" day partly cloudy and cool. High tide this momma at 606 d this afternoon at 5A6. Sun sets this evening at 8.41 and m“ tomorrow morning at 5.15- New inOOn Jllie 9th, 11% A. Summerside tide 616N439" mmll‘ SUNDAY SERVICE heave Charlottetown i2.l5. 5.45 PM Arrivg Charlottetown 5.20. 8.10 EM. CHAIILOTTETOWN- NEW GLASGOW i , Sunday) Le ca. iottetown 1.10. t“ PM iii-iivii C-harrlottetown us. use ma. N. S.—-P. l2. i. FERRY SEIVICI (Dally, including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY i-SEPT. 80 Leave Wood islands ‘l a. us. 1i a. in.. 3 p. m. Leave Caribou, 0 a. mu 1 7- ll- p. m. (On authority oi the Oil Con troller, _ on Mondays. Tuesdays Wednesdays and Thursdays du May and June the ll a. ll. . in. sailings wifl he cancels! un s there is evidence that t: other crossings not cal’?! i traffic offering.) . - -:-.-¢_.._.-.~..__-. _ - fills