MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN i -_—-_—- not Wk‘ 5n..." (lunrdlnn, Two Cents, lull" (iusrdlsn, Ioundcd lllf 9- 11,” no all dumb dogs, they can- azi ///'///v,nu" &\\' #4 “--~. , .-_.-.. --.-___.~.\ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JUNE 15, 1942 Read by Everybody 8 PAGES Desert Armies Smash At Preparations For Middle East Drive p, y, was Gallagher, Associated Press Staff Writer) WyDON. June l4-—(‘AP)— The t‘ bombing of Rumanlan niacin or German bases on the 3pc Sea. by United States army bombers caused military experts to v tonight that America's uirpower had been against German iui‘ a. Caucasus-Middle \ re so. then Russia i ihatllcd defence of the and p6niizqis Turkey, ltili, but a likely avenue illl (irive on the Middle be the beneficiaries. a lease-lend agrcc- mv. n; the United states as villas cviiizoinlc ties with Ger- V. A east four oi the big four-mo- chanted bombers landed vii Friday, evidently enough to return to and the crcivs and lbcfin interned under ii i radio pointed up the cidlc East situation to- lCflF-liflil the comment d press on "reports about a German land- ‘iiucssus coast." No Dircct Claims l .i Wiiilitiic Germans have been in " such an attempted seizlnz the Kercli i-i the Russian Crimea ‘aid no direct claim to S ‘t __lfl_fQ>_tl1€ ‘I (Cvnuiucd on page ‘l, D Col 2) toning Events 9-0- Noiicen in this I ccnls pcr word H0 for column "Supper and Dance, St. Teresa's his liltli. Webster's Orchestra. "Doirt forget “The Dust of the lriii" Hunter River Hall tonight. 6-15-11. "Arriving car Cedar Shingles. lowest prices. Geo. Dunsfogdis 21 “Klzigston Players ‘iancls Proposal" in Afton. 10th. 6-12- present June Greeiivale "iias-srve July 1st Mun, 6-l5-1i. "Kingston Players present Anne's Proposal in Wlieatley River, June W-h. 0-15-17 *"Corno to the Dance in Elliot fAii Altilliiil)’ night. June 15th. Pro- Mils for war purposes. (i-l3-2i. "Dance iii Georgetown Hall Wed- wldoy. June 17th. Webster's Orch- 0f - 2i. at the blessing oi both vessels, sits. 30 cents 6 13- “Anntiiil meeting Boyne Lodge “(iii June l0, ll p.in. Impor- l- 6-15-11. "Palmer Ito-rid picnic, Wednes- il. August 5th. We'll be seeing M 6-15-18-23-27-7-27-20-31. "Tfllvlilfll hogs as usual for the Ilmnu-i" months List hogs “ill (I (ircr n. Albany and G. C. iiiicrald 5-6—7-ll-W-T-M-tf "Show Moreli Tuorday, Show giriiignu Wednesday‘. show Murray “Pi sdny. Show Eldon Fri- ‘v- 8-15-21. Nwilichlre Shipping club truck- “QI lions‘ for all patrons requiring m: service. Make contact with k Er Cloiv in charge or E. N. Eas- Bg. Secretary, Livestock Marketing “"1- D-13-2i. {Pica sound movies (Hilda Gil- Tuc ,June 16. souris (8.00 h‘ < . Wednesday. Juno l7. Mt. “m ‘B1101; Thursday, June 18. “WPI-‘hin 3.00 and 8.30); Friday. i‘ 19. Montague (3.00 and 8.30); mdllgdiir. June 20. Cardigan (3.00 .00). Others later. 0-15-11. ll ‘i d“ 5°18 liiiirkets are strong and all yum lgfltllmi as usual week of M Pih. Trucking service sup- mh-autor instance. contact Robert umme» Q1013. Chas. Nicholson, lick A' Fsfldl’ Nelson, Mrllvlcw, Nemmlv-"ir. Montague. Linwood Mnand- ‘Cfliflisan. Clifford Peters. l H" for Sourls. Lem Cras- ,;ny“"'" River. George rvrcxiiy, “one lhI/ivflre Bros, Freetown. etc. n“ “t? boys for trucking ser- ' n-is-zi u “ P,“ Piss Monday at Fred- _ M ‘lwsfliiy 10 A. M. Brookfleld iicrrli I. ("k Station a P. M. Bed- ghm s‘. _M. Mt. Stewart. 6 P. M. chm, "I" Waiervalc. '1 P. M, Aiuivlli, H‘ (fir). Wodncsdil l0 A. M. Brion, “ "a" T01" Rood bills over h. Will also buy smaller nud ooriienscn. 0-13-21. i5. ply London Military Observers Comment On U. S. Objective In Bombing Raids. 8 Killed in: Wreck of ll. S. Express Train KITPRELL. N. 0., June 14 —(AP) -Eiglit persons were killed and eight or more were injured here today when a freight train ran into the observation car of the south- bound Silver Meteor, crack passen- ger train of the Seaboard Airline Railway. The passenger train was stopped at the time. About five hours after the wreck, which occurred at 12:58 a. m. E.D. T., the body 0f H. M. 'I‘ei're!l, 56, of Raleigh, superintendent of the Vir- ginia. division of the Seaboard Rall- ivay. was found in the railway divis- ion yard at Raleigh. about 30 miles from the scene of the wreck, which was in Terreilfls division. Detective Lieutenant Hubert Nor- ton at Raicigh said he died of a bullet wound in his mouth and that a pistol was found near the body. Horton said it was not immedi- aicly determined whether he had been slain or had shot himself. 'J. C. Wroton, general manager of the Seaboard Airline. said lit. Nor- folk. Va.. that the New York-to- Ficrida through passenger train had stopped at the Kittrcll Station in northern North Carolina "apparent- ly on account of brakes stickinz on the train." The freight ploughed into its rear. Wroton said he had no informa- tion to show connection between the cdlision and ‘Ferrell's death. All those killed were passengers in the observation car of the Silver Meteor. They included three wom- en. The fireman and brakeman of the freight were injured. Simply Shin ls Launched AN EASTERN CANADIAN PORT. June 14—-(CP)—A base sup- shlp, christened "Provider" yvas launched here Saturday while another v-csiel of the same class, Kimmy launched. was christened “Prcserver". ' The “Provider" was christened by Mis- Jean Faeuy of Quebec City, - the mother of Lodger Faguy, slats rbieputy of the Knights of comm. us. Mus. Ludcerhimerd christened the Prcscrver‘. Most, Rev, Arm";- Douville. Roman Catholic Bishop 5L Hyflclnihe. Que. officiated Well Known Retired Railwayman Dies SUSSEX, NB» Juno l4-—(C!P)— George Baxter Boyce, 74 we“ known retired railwaymnn,’ died after suffering 9, stroke Saturday night. Fcr 42 yea-is he served be- tween Saint Jclni ancilvfbribflin as a brakenian. H:- is survived by a son. Robert. at. siint Jclin: one daughter, Mrs, Charles Grenougti. HaPf-ax; 3 srgp. dflllkilifer, Mrs. Percy Courtneysus. 59X. Mid two sisters, Mrs. A. w. Dryden. Moncton, and Mrs. Will. lam Collins, Haveihill. Mass“ Treated 15D Wounded In Dne Hour WASHINGTON, June l4—(AP)- A lone American missionary doctor in Burma. treated 150 battle casual- ties in M hours, the war depart.- ment reported Saturday in recount- ing tho recent war front 0x910“! °I Dr. Gordon S. Bengrave, Renewin- born Baptist missionary. The head of his own Hart)" Memorial Hospital at Harkhaii, Dr. Sengrave placed all his facilities at. the disposal of Ueut. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell. the United States army officer who commanded Chinese for- ces Burma. "With sixteen of hi! names. 1W0 of his lee and eight members of the Prion Ambulance Corps whom he recruited, Dr. Belqrnve moved behind the Chlnsse lines around Toungoo." the war department said. "l-le and medicines but no other doctor to assist him when the cas- ualties began to come in. During the heat of the early fighting tie work- ed one 24-hour stretch with but ninety minutes off taking care of 150 casualties. The only assistance he hsd was from Malrio. PS head nurse, who handled twenty of the minor cases herself." Rommel la Drive To Gut Coastal Roaii Death Struggle Resumes In Full Fury After Brief Dust Storms. (By Frank L. Martin, Associated Press Staff Writer) cAIB/O, Egypt. June 14—(A.P)- British and Axis armored desert forces clashed furiously in con- tinuing battle in the Acroma sec- tor today after a. slight let-up due to local dut storms. front line re- ports said tonight. The death fight was an extension of heated combats yesterday along the outer defences of the vital and staunchly-held port of Tobruk. Marshal Erwin Rommel seemed intent. upon driving to the Medi- terranean ooast and cutting the coastrd road linking Tobruk and Ain El Gazsla, northern anchor of the original British defence line extending t.o Bir Hacheim which now has been pierced and out- flanked. A subsidiary Axis attack in the El Arlem region 15 miles directly south of Tobruk was repulsed blood- ilv by British forces who chased the enemy column to the south. Frontline reports said the concentrated the majority of armor and a mass of infantry in the drive on Acrcma, yesterday, and at nightfall there were noflindica: (Continued on page 7, Col 1) Four Die In Dar, Train Brash PEMBROKE. Ont. June l4 —(C- P)-Thice people were killed in- stantiy, a fourth died later of in- juries and a fifth was critically iii- Jured as a. result of a collision be- tween an automobfle and a Canaa- in Pacific Railway train at a level crossing three miles east of Pem- broke Saturday night. The dead. all of Pembroke: Mrs. John Johnston. 79. Andrew A. Johnston, 3i, her son. Mrs. Richard Smith. 88. Kathieen Bathgate. ti. Mrs. Alex Bathgatc. also of Pem- broke. mother of the girl who was killed, was critically injured. Andrew Johnston died in hospital here after today of injuries suffer- ed in the accident. The car was proceeding over a private crossing when it was, struck by the train. a west-bound local. The impact carried the car 60 feet along the tracks. turned it over three times and wrecked it. Building Damaged By Fire At Saint John SAINT JOHN, N.B.. June 14- (ClPi-Fire, smoke and watsr caus- ed damage estimated at $1.000 Ln a buildng _on main street Satur- day night. Heaviest loser was Fred W. welsford. in whore drugstore basement the fire was said to have started. The norzti end public li- brary suffered smoke and water damage while damage to the Do- minion Stores, other occupants of the building. was limited to smoke. Rubber Hi7; May Decide. Gas Rationing WASHINGIDN. unc 14 -(AP)- Mr. and Mrs. Am can. who turn- ed their homes topsy-tiuvy lust year hunting castoff aluminum articles. will begin another cellar-to-attic scramble tomorrow in a search for scrap rubber. How much they find during the two-week collection requested by President Roosevelt may be s pow- erful argument for 01’ against na- tional rationing as a tire conserva- tion measure. If ienty of scrap rubber turns up _on: the cstlsnates o! probable col- lcctioins vary all tho via from M,- 000 to 030,000 ions-nut onwido gas rationi may be voted dowfl; very litte i; salvaged. rationing is a virtual certainty. Fiilin stations will buy proier- red rubger at a penny a pound. Oil companies serving the stations will collect; thc piles and move them to central concentration ints for sale to s government. rub r reserve company at $26 n short ton. All pmflt for the handling will g0 to designated charities, such as the army and navy relief funds and the Red Cross. Y. l’. U. CONFERENCE sAcKviLI-E. N. B.. June l4 (CP)--Tho Maritime Conference of the Young People's Union of the United Church of Canada will hold its annual meeting in Mount Al- lison Academy here Julyr 14-22. A Berogram of leadership slnfng is ing arranged. ifof War Situation Last Night (I1 RIB-KB L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) ‘Whatever he may my, it is s reasonable guess that Hitler is far from the jubilant mood in which hc trumpeted the opening of his lrent "crusade" in Russia just short of a year ago. Twelve months inter thc self-appointed ssvfor of mankind I fully aware that he has caught s tartar in his march with “no prudent" eastward against Russia. “to safeguard Europe and thus save all." There was a precedent after all, a Napoleonic precedent. Tho soc- ond “Little Corporal" has been perilously close, by his own admission, within the last 12 months to the fate that befall Napoleon. He ls not yet out of the woods. He still has the Russian bear by ihc tall In a dance of death that. involves millions of men. lie can neither let go nor go forward notably with his “crusade? The other end of the Russian bear, the business end, is 8 O I That is the situation on Germany's ‘ anniversary of lIitlei-‘s attack on Russia. And to match it a storm of British-American making is brcwiing in the west of which iGermrin vic- tims nt home have heard the first ominous rumblings in thousand- plane British bombing of such cities as Cologne and Essen. For the six months that followed the night of Juno 21-22 this year, every night must be one of Increased danger and terror for Germans as the hours oi’ darkness lengthen. Britons have known that grim waiting night by night. but never as Germans must now endure it. No German can doubt that tho Cologne and Essen raids were but tokens of horror to come. .What the upshot of that might be (or Hitler before the winter turns the longest night with certainty. U l‘ ll corner in December none min say O I O Nor can any say when allied guns as well as bombs may again bc joining in the dreadful chorus on the continent in the west. The ships, the planes the men are gathering within the fortress that in Britain. The Nazi win-maker can have no doubt of that, nor can he turn from snappim savagely at his heels. I b I his Russian front to meet that growing threat. Two-front war even now is a terrible reality for Hitlen. For the weeks since he thumbed his eastern army against Keri-h Isthmus in an effort to regain the initiative in Russia. his troops have been flounder- ing in blood, still chained to a fundamentally defensive role, l O I U i i The intensified siege of Sevasfopol in thc Crimes is primarily u ile- fensive operation. That long Russian-held Him-k Sea. base ls fnr behind front a week from the Amazing Story QLSuhmarimFs Bold Attack (By Larry Allen) (Associated Press Staff Writer) ALFLXAN lone British submarine and torpedoed two RIA, Egypt. June 14- rAPi-The amazing story of how s. _ daringly trailed an AXls convov into harbor large supply ships although constantly hunted by swarms of anti-submarine craft was disclosed Saturday aboard the Med- . Thou u-c weighed in the balance and found wanting- MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN Annual subncrioviun lIcllnna-cl £6.00 By Mull: P. l. I. $1170; to other Provinces and U. 8. $5.00 Offensive Gairns Fury In Russia 'Are__Locked In Mighty Battle Reds-Ii-Ibld On _.3 At Sevastopol And Kharkov Soviet Defenders Outnum bered At Sevastopol Five or Six to One. (By l-lenijv C. Ciissiily, Associated Press Stuff Writer) it r an a n t, bm 1 d t MOSCOW, June l5—(Monday)—(AP)-Soviet Sflpr e “ 8° 5 S“ "m em of the south, pounded by the mounting fury of two major forces The submarine carried out her at- German offcnslves. held firmly to their positions yegter. tack shortly after dawn. She escap- watcr out of a narrow channel, the enemy dropping depth charges all around her. She is the submarine Torbay, commanded by an audacious Scot. Cnirir. Anthony Cecil Capel Miers. 30, who previously had earned the distinguished service order for sim- liar bold exploits, llwts Enemy Convoy Miers first spotted the enemy troop convoy. then out of torpedo range. heading toward the AXIS har- bor aiid immediately gave pur uit. This is what happened as to d to this correspondent by s submarine offlccr:- "Miers knew there were many patrol vessels. destroyers. schooncrs. and trawlers in this harbor on con- stant WflICll, not to mention the cortinrz the convoy. (Continued on page ‘I. Col l) Nazi front lines. It is a galilng thorn ln the south flank of n broad- linscd Nazi attempt to roll down the Rostov corner into the Caucasus. Tho Russian bulge drive into the German front south of Kharkov is rm even more menacing throat in tho north flank. German failure to remove both thrcnis within a reasonable time would makes general Nazi advance all but impossible. New Gcrimsn attacks below Kharkov and the tremendous and sustained Nazi attack on Sevastopol imply desperate efforts to clear both flanks. Prime Minister Churchill wsrne d Hitler sarcastlcally weeks ago, be- fore the Kcrcii operations reopened thc campaign in Russia. that time was passing there, time Hitler could even less afford to lose now with the west girding for offensive action, than lie could last year when a few lost weeks iin the Balkans stood between him and a possible decisive victory in Russia. Jap Drive Bites Deeply Into Free China Area Chinese recovery of important Town threatens Enemy's position; Heavy rain reported over Some of battlefront. By Spencer Mnosa Associated Press Staff Writer CHUNGKING. J1me 14 —(A.P) -— The western blade of the Japanese scissors has sped through Nan- cheng, 100 miles from its starting point in Kiangsl Province, but its further progress toward a junction with the eastern blade from Chek- lang is threatened by a Chinese re- covery of an important town in the roar, Chinese reports said tonight, The Central News said the Chin- ese had recaptured Tsungjen, rough- v half way between Nanchang. Ja- pan's Klimgsi base, and Nancheng. If this report proved true, it appear- cd that the Japanese left blade had been broken in two. Sign of Difficulties (That the Japanese may be ex- periencing difficulties was indicat- ed by o. Domel broadcast which said a downpour had turned the Kiangsi countryside into a morass in vihich Japanese troops had been forced to abandon their shoes. Military air- plane; had dropped thousands of pairs of army boots to the troops, Domei said.) Capture of Nanchang meant the Japanese were within 1B5 milcs of c the gap between their west- ern and eastern forces. Overwhelmingly outnumbered in a handmo-hand fight after the Ja - anese had riddled their ranks wl an artillery, and aerial bombard- ment. the Chinese were forced to evacuate the town late Ilbidaiy night but not. before they had killed more than 000 of the invaders, a Chinese communique said today. WELDERS 0N STMKI VANCOUVER. Juno .... Officials of thc wetsuit”) shipyard here so d today s ma welders in t with the Ama. We. ers‘ Union. are rema ningioff work 1n protest. against s closed shop agree. {sight held by the boilermakers un- a . [U330 CANADA News Briefs ALLIED IIEADQUARTERS, Australia, June iii-inlondayi- (CPJ-At least 18 Japanese na- val lanes attempted to raid the nortlfiern Australian city of Dar- win yesterday for the second tlmc in two days but were in- tercepted b Allied fighters and four were estroyed, Gen. Doug- las MacArthurs headquarters announced today. LONDON, June .14 —(CP Cable) —'I‘housands of young Canadians- men of the army and air force- movecl to bases in Britain during the week-end sficr a sale arrival in a troop convoy at a British port. WASHINGTON, June 1i (AP)--'l‘he American fwd Cross sold wrlay it had been notified relief supplies arc being distrib- uted to allied war prisoners and civilian internees in Japanese- hcld l-Iong Kong and Shanghai. Thc material is taken from sup- plies shipped by the American Red Cross before the war and intended originally for distribu- ilon in Chino. LONDON, June 14 —(CP Cable)- George Lathon, (l6, member of Par- liament for Park Division, Sheffield and treasurer of the labor party, died today after an illness of sev- eral weeks. He recently underwent an operation. Mr. fathom; death brings to seven the total numbers of ivy-elections pending. GITAWA, Juric 14- (CP) ._ Oliver Lyiileton. production minister in the British war cu- lilnct. arrived hers by plsnc to lods for conferences with Prime M ulster Mackenzie King and Clnllllnn production heads. M F LD IJ R EXCELQ IN THE KITCHEN Give Detailed Analysis of Cologne Damage mNiDON, June 14—(CP)—AP- proximately 300 acres in the WT)’ centre of the ancient. Riiinclazid city of Cologne were devastated and 250 factories and workslwpfl destroyed or seriously damaged in the mammoth _R.4A.F, raid Mo)’ $9‘ 31. the Air Ministry news service announced today. ""'1'tie'"BBC' in a German-lonmllfl broadcast said 3,000 homes also were destroyed by bombs and fires. The report was the first detailed analysis of reconnaissance photo- graphs and showed ilhat the dam- age was “immeasurably greater‘ than any previously inflicted by the R..A.F. on a German city. A week ago the Air Ministry said that more than 5,000 of the 60.000 acres in the entire metropolitan area of Cologne were devastated or ruined by the raid. Vast other areas of the city and its suburbs were reported damaged. In the German-language broad- cast the British radio gave the Germans a. story of the raid which ("ias not. been carried bv the Ger- man radio. German claims of the damage novnhere approaches the British report. Cologne nQWVSDZ-liefi giving fuller news oi the damage are not being cigculated outside (Continued on page '1. Col 2) Declares People In Onitario Complaceiit KITCHENER. Ont. June 14- (CPl-Compared with the Mori- times, a person in Ontario would not know there is a war on, Clar- ence Gillis. CCF. member of Par- liament for Cape Breton South said here today at. a labor meeting as he reprimanded residents of con- tral Canada for "complacency". Mr. Gillis nlio criticized the gov- ernment. for failing to give legal status to an order-in-council deal- ing with oolcctive boreatriing. r ed by rushing at full speed under ‘ with Kharkov and Scvastopol, the government announced early, day in continued bloody today. and indecisive fighting about In addition, it was indicated in the daily midnight communique, bitter fighting scattered points of the long is breaking out along many, front, possibly indicating a general opening up of the battleline. WAVES OF TANKI '_I‘he Nazis hurled wave upon wave of tanks and infnn-l try into the Kharkov sector and in these reckless assaults the Russians said Marshal Timoshenkds men inflicted heavy losses among the enemy troops and machines. Outnumbered in some sector; of thc Sevastopol from u‘ mug]; g five or six to one, the Sflvlct defenders battling the first general one“. slve against the beleaguered Crimean port since last December we" tliFPe Ilflliflfl (ICSIYOYGYS flctllfllll/ 65- declared to have repulsed one after another cf the German “mull-i upon the 15~mlie-dcep Russian defences, GBNIRALDIDIVI While the action in the south raged on with increasing violence by the hour. fighting acknowledged to be 0f local importance broke W; u’ and clown the front from the Baltic to the Black Sea, indicating the) Hitler may be on the verge oi his long-threatened general cdfmdvu, rs The great part that planes were playing in the bitter struggle was indicated by an official recapitula- tion listing 377 German and 135 Russian planes destroyed in the week ended Saturday, Most. of these presumably figured in the fighting on the Kharkov sector, ‘which sprang into renewed violence five days ago and in the battle of Sevasmpol, now in its second week. Smashing anew at Murmansk, the Germans made five raids yes- terday on the far northern port of entry for American and British supplies and Russian fighters shot 110ml Blkht of the attackers. Only a. few of the Nazi craft penetrated Murmansk! defences Forest Fire Hazard Said Acute In N. B. FREDERICTON. June 14—(CP)— Reports received tonight by Chief Forester G. I... Miller stated that a. large forest fire iii Restigouclie Count was brought under control Satur ay while another continued burn slowly in Northumberland County, More than 250 men. with five pumpers and 15.000 feet. of hose, checked the Rcstigouclic ilrc after it. had burned 400 to 500 acres along the north brunch oi Stillwaici: Brook. With the fire hazard acute in many districts. Mr. Miller appealed for public co-operstion against fur- ther outbreaks. EDUCATOR DIES VANCOUVER, June l4 —(CP) — Robert, James Sportl, 09, founder of the Sprott-Shriw Commercial Schools and regarded as one of tlic citstaiiclliir: commercial educators in Ctmada. died in hospital here yes- terday. Born near Collingivood, Ont,. he studied iii Europe and tile United states, coming to Vancouver 4Q.Y€°*”PJ3°- Declares Carrier Is Superior Naval Ship U. S. Newsman Gives Impressions Gained In Epic Coral Sea B attle. l‘ This is the second of a series or stories supplied to The Canadian Press by the Chicago Tribune whose correspondent, Stanley Johnston, was the only American reporter a- board the aircraft carrier. Lexington. iln the Coral Bea battle. Johnston in his first story said American na- Vfll-Bll‘ forces sank two Japanese carriers. put another out of action and that at, least l5 other Jap ships were lost. The Lexington, hc said, beat off Jap attacks, only to explode and burn hours later. seen the tvio carriers in our task force iii action in the iievclolliiitf stages of the epic battle oi [ll-J Coral Sea did I understand how (loudly a modern aircraft carrier" can be. and how niucii superior‘ to any other type of vu-scl it has l‘.‘(.‘i‘0lllC. The dviioiistraiioii was a convinc- ing one. For within n pcrirxi of 11 hours our pilots, gunners, and car- rier creyvs. on tiic (iziy of May 4. dc- stovcrl lil()l‘(.‘ wzirsliilis. transports. and auxiliary vessels than f‘\'f'l‘ lic- iorc have been wr-“cknl by i\ir- plaiies in a single siisiaaied bum- . bardinciit. By Stanley Johnston Foreign Correspondent of the Chl- csgn Tribune (Copyright 1942 by the Chicago Tribune), CHICAGO, Juno 14 -—l had long believed the aircraft carrier was superior to any other craft afloat as n. naval weapon, but. not. until I had We had been out. of Pearl Har- bor for two urcks. rruisiiii: in". and on a secret i~iiiir=c that always kept. us out of .-ivht of i-lnuis vilicre lllllllf‘li(ll\’ uu-s uiilllii marl-Z our passing, when we (il‘l'l\'_(‘(l in Coral Sea ivatcrs. it. was about April 30 fir i ovi- . (Continued on page ‘l, C01 4) Honorary Degrees Are Gonferred (YITAWA. Juno l4.—(CP)—'!'hO honorary degree of doctor of lawn was conferred upon live prominent Canadians at. the annual oonvociu Lion of the University of Octaws. here tonight. They were Most. Rev. J. T, Mo- Nully, Archbishop of Halifax. Mr. Justice Robert ‘raschereau of thc Supreme Court of Canada; Minister Mocdonald, Dr. Alberta -‘ Couillard of Three Rivers. Que, who is president of the Canadian Tub- erculosis Association, and Main‘. Joseph Lcbeau. Chancellor of mo Arcti-diocese of Ottawa. Very Rev. Dr. Philippe Oornellier, newly-sppouited rector of the uni- versity and former gridiron star‘, presided over the ceremony. a which scores of students also rte- ceived their academic degrees. MILITARY ADVISER. OTTAWA, June 14—(CP)—Lt.. Col. J. R. Kingham. who returned recently from England where ho commanded the 1st Canadian ‘Scot- tish Regiment. has been appointed military adviser to the Royal Can- adian Air Force on the Pacific coast, it was learned on good auth- ority tonight. \% ‘flu: ._—_- WcAfiiER Mané up A Licliimric. a CALCULAfoR rliij noon and tonight "nice at 7.48 and i - w: at 4.12. L » JiLUe 21. 4.02 p. m. Summers rir‘ 1.11» i xvccn mlfllllf$ later than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAII." EXCEPT SUNDAY From Bordon - Leave 6.30 nJn. 0.25 n.m. 1.00 p.m. (.45 p.m. 7.55 p.m. Imuvc (Yap: Tormcntino-‘IAS rum. 11.00 um. ".15 p.m. B45 p.m. 9.10 p.m SUNDAY SERVICE (Dirty 3 to Doc. 27 inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 n.m. 12.00 noon 1.4-5 p.m. 7.15 p.m. g Lca r- Tormontino 10.15 lLIIl. 2.39 p.m. 6.00 p.m. 8.30 p.m. PILL-NS. FERRY SERVICE have Wand Islands ‘i a.m., ll p.m. 3 p.m. Including SIIIYIIRY- lmvo flsribou D mm. I lI-lfl- 5 p.m. _>....