MAXIMS MAXIM‘, g or A P” or ‘ ., . AN r MERE M MERE MAN pin-mi '_ n l; not necessary for s sane Id u, m, lg‘, way, n wlgc oh] I The words of his mouth were "in w» “"t""'=°..'t'.."" The P9 er ”/ w“ Read b Eygf bgd :.:"t':;“t:.l‘:-"..:"t‘::..“t'.ma: ternllls m‘ m“ m" °"‘ ~""“""~'---~\ than oil. yct were they drawn swords. ladle" t i ’ ottclown Guardian. Two own. mnl" flulrdhh. Ioundsd Ill’: Cl-IARLOTTEWWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1942 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew 8 PAGES Annual uuhser B! llllll P. I’ l. ipllnll Delivered. Ifl-IIO “Mil to other Prnvfnoun nnd 0.8. III r v Commons Passed War “T Appropriation Bill — Measure Has Been Under Discussion Since April 2o. June 0-(073-‘111: 0t Commons tonlgn gay iylslpseheztiilllg to the Nn/vvnlmnvw W, pppfilplltlbltill ulll, _V\lliCil has h9g1) unocl ulnlost continuous uls- ¢ll5Sl0ll slllcc April 20. The bill was given second. read- m Dy the house last nlgnt. and lulce their has been under ulscuss- loll lu colllnllltcc o1 the uncle. phpussloll on the lsrelllnlnary res- olunou has occuplcu most Ci tne “me h; lllc l-iouse since it resumed we: lilo buster recess on Aprll zu, with optrlllolls of a nullluel‘ 01 811V- erluuelll llcprlfilllelltd under rcvlcw- Alter tlrsl-IUSIIIK of the war appro- loll olll tonight, tne House plo- ' t0 studv rlnallcc lvllnlstcr we“ sl50,000,000 loan o.ll. This pleasure will urovluc author- “; to borrow up t0 the amount >01 |,,0,u00.000, for retiring securities lallllll; duo or callable in the next r t-lro. Sewilgll lllC debate on thcgwur 0D- pwpflflllflll bill was continued at tlle start of torllghUs sitting, Con- petvallle liouse leader Hanson and J,FfB-ilL'0.5 Poullot tLlb. Tcmiscou- m) urged development of high- whys rs a means of assist-rig Calla- tilan dell-lice. I l, Leonard O'Brien lCon, North- umlttfltllltit sold he believed the Germans had exact knowledge of tile lllralllichl River area in New yrllrstlick, and he believed it a ltntegc point in the defences of the eastern coast, partlctllarly Halifax. UITAIVA. Vital Bridges The Canadian National Railway lille cute-rd two branches 0f the rlver o\'»r heavy steel bridges and Ilillllllft not surprise lllln lf it lavas lrlrllrd "any morning" that a sub- marine lllld c‘ t llli/O hllrllnlichi Bay and prcc to (itnntlgc or blow up these brltlgrs. "if that happened," sald Mr. O'Brien. "Halifax would eventually starve to death, because the mzlln lllle of the rllrllvlly from Upper Carotid through Halifax to Great T _. . _ . 600 STIRlflllf PUMPS HAIJPXAX. Jlllle 9-(CPt-1\'Illjol' O, ll (Irowcli, director of civilian defence here, said today 600 stirrup Pllmus. about one for every city blcck, are being distributed. More We “XDCCKCG to be available ' liter, he said, Coming Events P0- ‘lfl for Notion in this I cents our word "Tnlkiey-Crapaud ‘rhurstléay, "Talkics—(7anoe Cove Friday. » 6-10-21 "Talkies-Mt. Stewart siltllfdtlz)’. - o-lo- l. ‘Wit-serve Wednesday. June 224th 0r Ebenezer Festival. 6-10-11. wrfrhe Dust of _thc Earth", e ‘H1111.’ iLver Hall. alcl of Bucllez- r Womclls institute, tonighahw n m‘d't'lJJolne to the ‘Ice Cream Festival J once at Caledonia Hall Friday. "l" 1M1- 6-10-11. "Cftllvclinlz hogs every Frtda. £10m lut with Leslie McDowell. idlrlvton. 5-l9-20-twtf. h"Dance Vernon River Hall Wed- "llfllu Juno 10th, Mlllvic-w Or- "ltfitra- . 6-9-2l. "Don't forget the barn dane atY giacDollalds, Coveilead. Wednes- Nly Julle l0. B, 1. B. Orchestra and "fitment-c. 6-9-21 _ i... mgrrucklfl! hogs as usual for the mhmcr months List your ho a Gr A- C. Green, Albany and G. . gen. Emerald 5-6-7-ll-W-T-M-tf To Ca" 0p 15,000 ‘Men For llrmy In July OTTAWA, June 9-(CP)-Jn the largest monthly requisi- tion so far the army is calling up 15,000 men for mllitsr training h] July, it wss lesrne today. Tile June callup was 8.000. The requisition for July reach- ed the Department of Nu- tlonal War Services, which handles the compuluo, selec- tion of men for the army, toll!!- Along with men who enlist voiunturii‘ the 15,000 compul- sory service men in July will mean upwards of 20,000 men entering the army trsining centres. The army's training facilities have been undergoing expou- slon for some time. According to the last official stctemcnt on the subject the monthly capsu- iiy was being stepped up from 10.000 to 15,000. The July requisition Indicated a further increase has" been made. Recent announcement that compulsory trainees will report to depots for enrolment- and documentation over n ll"- iod of days instead of all direct to training centres on one do! Indicates one of the ways In which provision for the luff" number is bcing made. By enrolling and documenting the men at depots, time is sav- orl at tho training centres and the men can be held st depots and sent forward to trainln! centres as accommodation is available for them. Sugar First For Coupon Rationing OTTAWA. June 9 -(CP) -Cou- poll rationing plans of the wartime prices and trade board at present are collfirled to sugar, which will be the first commodity to be placed under the new system, officials said today. Announcement Of detnih of the coupon rationing system for sugar is expected from Donald Gordon. prices board chairman, within the next two weeks. Japan Releases Canadian Women From internment UITAWA. June o-tcr) - The external affairs department an- nounced tonight it h” “*9 m" formed that. the Jiilmilefle Giwem‘ ment has released 24 CflnHdlB-ll women from internment in Japan. The department's lnfonnatlon. relayed through the Swiss legation a; Tgkyo, said the WOTn€ll were released May l3 after the JCPRMSQ Government learned no Japinelo women have been interned in 0H1‘ ads. One Canadian woman. i-hO 00' partment said. had alremdl’ been released from internment March 38. Names of the women were not announced. r The Swiss Government is, actlnf as the proteotln! 110W!‘ 1°!‘ 3mm“ in 'I‘0ky0. Last March ls. the donut-meat issued a list of '13 Canadians known to have been interned in Japan. It said all were missionaries except two listed as Elaine Daceau and ' Don't for et “The Dust Of The Eh d DQ $1111; in W eatley River Hall to- Jill“... m, m; m; M", ' 6' ‘u- David Ellison of the Christian "Don't forget tn l in x1 g- lbn Hall Thursdayeniztl: . 0-10911. ~ ‘nliilnlolldln car of Miracle Feeds Royal ousehold Flour today. ' rder at car lot prices Dawson and Jognslton. "Bee Orwell Woman's Institute "will Dlayettes. specialties. Mill- nyt orchestra. dance, in Morel] "t Thursday. June 11th. 6-l0-li. nlgrtllitce at Borden, 'I'hursday g 1. Julie 11th. Good orchestra. 6-10-21 u '_"‘—*. nNotlce~ Beginning Wednesday untfdullh. We will close our stores- mmili, Wednesday and Friday znii-o at 0 o'clock until further 5M1“ W. H. Ford. " “We e-m-n . said today there are Indlcstlonlslgha “tunawd m“ there Wm be “ppm” G. C. Green. and Missionary Alliance and Ella Ledyard of the United Church of Canada. Ten belonfml to the Ul-sullne Order, l0 to the Sisters of the Good shepherd and three w the Dominican ‘sisters. Indications llazls Ilse French Tanks UCNDQN. June 0 --(OP) - Gtr James Grlgg, British wsr secretory. Germans are using French on the Russian front. the British Bwhdvwlm Corporation reported. Hi6 tanks hid Sir James said hitherto not been used on sny front but had been developed for train- ing the forces ' Prince ‘Rupert Under Illert a For Two liours~ Second Time Friendly C raft Touched Off Alarms In Canada. VICTORIA, June 0-(0?) -_ Un- identified planes approaching the northerly port of Prince Rupert to- day caused a sudden "imminent danger" alarm-but it was lifted when the aircraft were identified as friendly. It was the second time in Canada in a. month that an aircraft touch- ed off alarms. An unidentified bomber flying over the lake St. John area in Quebec May 26 caused a- larms to be sounded in various points before the plane WB-s identi- tled as "friendly." In a statement tonight, western air command of the R. C. A. F. said: "Owing to presence of unidenti- fied aircraft off northern coast of British Columbia, an at: raid alert was imposed at Prince Rulxrt at. 12:30 p. n1. June 9. The aircraft were later identified as friendly." The sudden wailing of the immin- ent danger signal at 2:05 p. m. PD. T. (6:05 A.D.T.) caused schools to close and some industrial work to shut down some school children went into the woods, but there was no alarm among the population of the northern port, Stores remained open, but most shopkeepers stood at their doors, looking toward the sky, and there was a general unwillingness to go indoors, A. R. P. wardens turned out, and stood by their posts, fu‘.y equipped for emergency. The all clear was sounded two hours and five minutes later at 4:10 p.m. P.D.T. (8:10 A.D.T.) Indications were that the north- ern rt would be blacked out. to- nigh and henceforth indefinitely Last night was the first night since June 3, when Japanese planes raid- ed the united States naval base at, Dutch Harbor. Alaska, that Prince Rupert had not observed a precau- tionary blackout. During the imminent danger p01‘- iod, A. R. P. wardens were instruct- ed by police to clear the streets, because some pedestrians were un- vrilllnrg to go inside. Military headquarters was guarded by a sentry and the area ccm- mflndflill. Col. S. D. Johnston. gave order that no one was to enter. ls Convicted of ‘Manslaughter 5T. JOHNS, Nild., June 9—(CP Cahlei-Pte, Francis J. Martin lavas convicted of manslaughter today and sentenced to seven years in penitentiary with hard labor by Chief Justice Harwood. Martin was charged with murder following the death of Pte. Edward Arnold in a barrack room fracas at Master's Field last May 15. He said in court today he had been drlnkin and "went nuts" and hit and kicke Arnold during the afiray. Arnold QFLIQK. the illzht- War Situation Last Night (By KIEKE L SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) Whatever else Premier General Hidekl Tojo, the real ruler of Jap- an, told Emperor llirohito in his report on the war yesterday, he had only bleak tidings from the Midway Island area. The scope of the Jap- anese disaster there has swelled day by day, hour by hour as the re- turns come in. Tokyo's failure even to admit there has been s battle st all is proof positive that u Jlrring blow has been struck not only in grim retaliation for Pearl Harbor; but at the very foundations of the Japanese conquest dream. How serious a blow Tlojo himself may not have known yet. U That the Japanese sea force fled the field under a radio blackout to Wfllle further American vengeance is wholly probable, There are strong indications its losses have not. yet been fully scored up. It: flight was so desperate once the Midway trap was sprung that. its inggard sea units, battered lame-duck craft, must have become a menace. Thcy were the spoor of the sen trails. Falling behind uninjured or less damaged craft, they gave clues to the far-ranging American air scouts as to where their more fortunate fugitive comrades might be SB-elfing refuge. That could bring American submarines on scouting duty into their path. Nor could Japanese prllde permit surrender of Injured craft even _when hopelessl out off. What happened to those enemy lame-ducks may 118W!‘ be known; but the ancient Samurai code to which Japan's mili- tary caste still clings suggest wholesale Bari-Kiri for ships and crews somewhere in those wide waters. U U Q I O I Face-saving by self destruction when confronted with defeat or dis- grace still is a. functioning relic of Japanese feudalism, it is the fate that seems certainly in store for the Japanese who commanded or planned thlt ill-fated sortie against Midway Island. It. could have been ordered for wounded ships to blind the trail of those still able to run for refuge somewhere. Whatever happened to break American contact with the for: west o! Midway, the results of the battle cast a new and ominous shadow on the "victory" summary of six Isld before the puppet Emperor. Like the Coral onths of war Tojo might otherwise have Sea fight and Gen. Jimmy Doolittle’; bomber sweep across Japan, they spell out into por- ients of an approaching day when Japan will find herself besieged by air and sea as Britain long was but is no longer. British Sub Takes Toll Of Axis Ships Italian Destroyer and Four Enemy Merchant Ships Sent to Bottom of Mediterranean. (By Robert Bunnciie, Associated Press Staff Writer) IDNDON, June lI-KAP) - Bri- tain's new submarine Turbulent, has sunk an Italian destroyer and four merchant ships rushing sup- plies across the lvIe-diterranean to the hard-pressed Axis army in Libya. ev-cn as huge R. A. F‘. bomo- ers struck nightly blows at Axis bases in Sardinia and Crete. These offensive actions in sup- port of the desert army of Gen. sir Claude Auchlnleck were an- nounced today by the Admiralty and R. A, F. Loaded to Gunwales The Turbulents depredatlons were in the central Mediterranean on the Axis supply lines between Naples and Tripoli. At least two of the medium-sized supply ships. loaded to the glmwales and pro- tected by two Italian destroyers, were sent to the bottom. The Tur- bulent also sank one of the escorts -—81.628-t0n destroyer of the Navi- torl cl ss—the Admiraltys c (Continued on page 7, Col-C) 13 Jap Fighter Planes Ilownetl ALLIED IIEADQUARTERS, Australia. June i0——(\’i‘t>llncs- tlflYl-(CIU-Thlrteen Japanese fighter planes were shot down yesterday over‘ Late and Sai- amaua In New Guinea, allied headquarters announced today. War—25 Years Ago Today JUNE 10, l9l'l—ltalian attacks shifted from the Carso frcnt to the Trentixlo; border pass of AETTCHQ carried and Austrian de- fences about Monte Artfgara cap- tured Allies demanded a-brfcatlozl of King Constantine cf Greece. i Ch’Town Sea Cadet Corps Recruiting ‘Boys I5 to 18 ‘I10 fonnstlozl ol’ a branch If the Sea. Cadet Corps In thfs City was announced yesterday by Mr. Walter S. Grant, Chairman of the civilian Committee. This gives Charlottetown boys the choice of catering any of the three services. Army cadets have been active in connection with the schools for many years. Last year the Air Ca- det Corps was organized and has completed a ve successful term. Regulations the sea. Cadet Corps permit boys of 12 to l8 years. but those 15 or over will be given the reference in the formavon of the ltrst two envisions, sold Mr. G ran . Canada's glowing Navy and Mer- chant Marine re uire an ever in- creasing supput men capable of guarding and maintaining the Em- pire ilfc lines. It was for this pur- pose thlt Ron. L. Macdoneld. Minister for Naval Services, su- thorloed the formation of Cu cadet Oofps throughout Canads. Th; Department has also ued regulations and rescribed s syll- abus for the C ets almost Ident- ical with what is taught the reg- ular naval recruit In his first eight st an R.C.N.V.R. training chip. Units already established In other parts of Canada have made wonderful progress and enlist- ments fal- above expectation. It. is imatel 30.000 56a Cadets in the Dcminon before the close of 1M3. Tn Guriottetown the Navy Dengue through Lleut. M. lfc- Carthy Commanding Officer Ho: ' OJ. ‘ n Charlotte" "'4' the matter with prominent. Imp who were unanimous in their ODZTTlOII that tile people of Char- lottetown would tuppotrt the Sea Cadets as they have Canada's war effort in every other particular. A civilian Committee was promptly organized and the groundwork quickly done. The facilities of the Charlottetown Yacht Club were of- fered. and arrangements for the use of the hull of Prince of Wales College fcr drilling purposes is be- Ing considered. In addition to Mr. Grant, members of the Civilian Committee are Hon. George D. DcBlois Messrs. JR, Burnett LB. MaoMIl-an, 0.1. ‘Bonnell. w». olllls, Fined J. McWade. and Lieut. M. G. McCarthy, R.O.N.V.R. Officers of the Corps will be: Lleut. in Command. Ian Burnett, Divisional executive officers, Nor- man Sounders, B. Eerie MacDon- ald, Surgeon Lieut. E. B. Glddinge, I‘ o“ CANADA ‘l Puvmuter Lleut. Albert 0th- er officers will be added o the strength as new divisions are call- ed up. Boys will be given training 1n Seamanship, wearln uniforms and detportment, simple riots, compass, semaphore, helm and steering, rule of the road, lead and line, squad drill, care of rifle, manual exercise and rifle fir-mg. As the cadet ad- vances he is given higher inst/ruc- tion in the same subjects as well as boat work, swimming, lifesaving, and first Md. "ea Cadets are un- der the disciplinary supervision of the area commanding officer of the R.C.N.V.R. Recruiting will Im- mediately and boys to 10in the wrlu may apply to the ggftlcer lnecharsedat the Yacht. Club ween .30 an 8.30 evenln this week. my ' commence desiring BLO§§0 M's THE All PURPOSE FlDUR Eriendly Planes? Are Cause 0th JAir Raid Alarm ‘Mayor Holman Reports 0n Ottawa Visit Monthly Meeting Of City Council H eld Last Night. A sufficient amount to complete the railroad wharf in Charlotte- town has been paced in the esti- mates of the Federal Government according to Hon. Dr, Cyrus Mac- Mlllan, it was announced last night. by His Worship, Mayor B, y Holman at the regular meeting of the City Council, The Mayor had been told this while In conversa- tion with Dr. MacMillan during his recent visit to Ottawa. "Thzs is indeed encouraging news, and we trust that the Treasury Board will approve it." His Worship added. The matter of the proposed move of the CNR. Accountancy De- partment; the possibility of hav- ing the local C.N.R. shops utilized to capacity; the work being car- ried on by Bruce stewart and Comp-my, and the importance of a drydcck at South-port, were a.- morlg the points dealt with by Mayor Holman in his report. More details of this appear below. A prcpcsal for re-lccating the lighting in thc business sections oi the city, which was put forward by the Maritime Electric Company was accepted by rcsolutlcn of the council. In short this would mean the removal of the ornamental lights scattered throughout the city and the placing of these in the business part. The old iron standards alcng the streets would be removed and any usabie fix- tures from these would be utlLzed for rcpairlng the standards at Vic- toria Park. The tCtal cost of the city lighting for the year under this new plan would he $10,466 as against the present cost 0i $10,288, A communication containing the full plan of the cilange in the lightng system was read to the Csuncil by Councillor J. T. McKee, chairman of the Light Committee. It was a letter from ltle Manager of the Maritime Electric Company, Mr. V. A. Airlswcrtll, Tile finance rc-jort, presented by Ccun. R.C. Chancil , showed total receipts so far th _yc_zar__t0>_ _ (Continued on page 8. Col 0) Argentina Makes Protest To Axis BUENOS AIRES. June 9 - (AP) -‘I‘he Argentine government has protested to Germany and Italy over the “aggrfssiom committed in the torpedolng of the Argentine tanker Victoria "without warning" in A- merlcan waters, lt was announced tonight Prepare Japs For Bad News NEW YORK, June 9—(AP)-The Japanese people were being told. guardeoly today that. they must oe able to withstand the news ol na- val losses, and competent propa- ganda analysts saw ln this a sig- nlllcallt indication that the Tokyo government ls preparing to an- nounce some of its heavy reverses in the battle of lvlldway. with Japan generally in complete ignorance oi tllls destructive sea engagcltlcllt, tile Tokyo newspaper Asahl callle out with an article by an unidentified admiral which not only expounded the theory that "we can't win all the time," but also clipped lnto history to show that the Japanese navy can "take lt." This article was broaccast by ra- dio Berlin, not by radio 'l‘okyo. and shortly thereafter the German broadcasters were reminding their listeners that "complete silence is still preserved in Tokyo on the lla- val battle alleged by U. S. A. quart- ers to have taken place off Midway Island." Expect Arrest Soon In II. B. Murder Case 4i BLACKS HARBOR, N.B., June 0 (CH-Following further invest-l- gation into the death of Mss Ber- nice Connors. police intimated 0o- nlght that an arrest might be made soon. OIfLcel-s today continued to ques- tion resldents cf the d‘strict in an effort to ascertain what person or persons last saw the llt-year-old girl alive after she left a. dance Friday night. Her body, practically nude and with the head battered, was found Sunday night. Several clues had bscn uncover- cd and might lead to “tar .ble re- sults very soon," an oficer in charge of the investigation said to- night. An autopsy ls being performed by 1).". Arnold Branch, Saint John, provincial pathologist. His report will be made at an inquest next Tuesday Fazis FITAl-i-Out Drive 0n Sevastopol 2,500_C_ermans Die In Savage Battle For Port Red Troops Continue To Throw Off HeavyAttacks; Civilians Carry On. (By HENRY C. CASSIDY. A ssociated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, June l0~twctlnesdayt-(AIU-Sovict defenders of So- vastopol killed 2,500 Germans yesterday In savage hnntl-to-hond fight- ing as the Nazis hurled wave upon wave of Infantry-men at the ap- proaches of the Black Sea naval base, the Russians announced early today. By sheer weight of numbers. the Russians said, the Germans blast- ed their way forward in one sector of the mountain-studded battlefront, Counter-attacking Red forces hurled them hack again. Twenty-four German tanks were knocked out, the Tuesday mid- night communique said. It listed six German planes shot down and‘ ll damaged. Under siege seven months. the de- fenders have been subjected to a series of heavy attacks for five days by planes, tanks and infantry in which appeared to he an all-out German assault, Nowhere was there a sign of wav- ering in the Russian lines. Upward to 50,000 picked German troops have died before Scvastonol since last fall, and the tdl is mounting swiftly bv the hour, the Russians reported. . While veteran Red troops parried ever thrust on the Germans the civilian population went into the catacombs deep under the city to weather the fiery and explosive storm of the Nazi air fnrce. A correspondent for Izvestia. gov- ernment newspaper. said several thousand lncendiarlcs and hundreds of explosives were showered on the city. but the civilians ntlicklv ex- tinguished the fires and repaired damage to essential services. All vital industries and instilli- tlons were established llnclcr a thick protective lover rlf rock lrtaviloz the ground free for full development of the defence. Some 800 miles I0 the north. fltthtinrv intensified before Moscow where the Germans made several tcsiirw attacks reported to have post tlwm 6.300 dead and 74 hnks in 10 days. Other sectors of the 2.000 mile front appeared quiet. SaysTITIaskJ ‘Road Route “Fantastic” WAsI-TINGTCN. Jltze 9-_-(APt— Urging immediate cclistzuctzon of a. highway to Alaska west of the Rocky Mtlliflttlillls and condemning the inland route road now being constructed as a “vtv_aste‘ of mllll0l15 and millions of dollars,‘ Ccngrcss- man Warren C. Magnuson (Dem- wastlington) said today the United tales is in danger cf losing Alaska unless a. western road is buzlt. The road new bclng built, Mag- nuson said in rmlarks prepared for delivery ln the House of Repre- sentatives, follows a route “so fan- tastic" that it had W611 lgnmed by the United States and Canadian International Highway Commiss- ions. ‘The United sintes Crmmlss- ion selected "route A" west of the Rockies, running from Prncc George, B.C., to Alaska, and the Canadian group chose "rcutc B." also starting frcm Prince George but running east cf the Roklvs. The road belnc developed is known as “fOlttc c" and strrtches frcm Fart St. John, B.C., to Allska. 0rew’s Criticism Raises Discussion OTTAWA, June 9—<CPt-Jus- tlcc Minister st. Lallrult told the Hotlsc of Commons today he has asked GCDGFIITTOITHH officials to ob- tain. if possible, the complete statement made by Ll- C91 99°F?” Drew, Ontario Conservative loader. on the l-iontz K911i! lnqlllii- He vcas answering a qllcstlon b3’ Tom Rgld (Lib. New \V(‘S‘.mlll5l(‘l') who asked what steps were 111"!- rlcd by the government regarding the “serious attack" nrl Chief J05- tlce Blr Lyman Duff, l-long Kong inquiry commissioner. Conservative House leader Hlln- son said there had been no attack on the Chic! Justice. “Sir Lyman Dtlff is n fretnd 0f mlnc and there was no attack on him," said Mr. Hanson "There may have been an attack on the Royal Commission and .ts report, but that is a different ma‘.- ter.' TORONTO. June 0-—<CP>--'I'l~.e judicial report of any commissioner whether ho he the Chief Justice of Canada or the hlllnblcst citizen. ls not. immunc from criticism. Col George A. Drew. Ontario Conserva- tive leader. said today when ill- fonned that his attack on the Hong Kong rcpnrt would be exam- ‘lncd by department of justice of- flcials at Ottawa. International At II Glance. (Canadian Press) RUSSIA-Germans start ferrifll offensive against Sevlflwllill- BRITAIN—R. A. F. blasts Rhul‘: docks, railways, airdromel ill France and the Netherlands. LIBYA~Free French withstand Rommel‘; strongest assault on Bir Hacheim. CTTTNA- British and American air forces arrive to help Chinese. CANADA -- Unidentified planed cause "imminent danger" alarm at Prince Rupert. B. (‘-1 aircraft later identified as friendly. News Briefs OTTAWA. June 9—(CP)- Duty and war exchange tax on coke importation; from the United States have heerrrc- moved, J. McG. Stewart, coal administrator for the Wartime Prices and Trade Board, an- nounced tonight. OTTAWA, June 9—(CP)--Hon. PJA. Cardin, fcrtner Transport Minisier, said tonight lt had not yet been decided whether French- Canadian members cf tile H3059 of Commons will introduce an amend- ment tr; the governments bill to bend the National Resources Mob- ilization Act. LONDON. June 9—(CP)— Prime Minister Churchill an- nounced today the establish- ment of a combined production and resources honrd and a com- bined food board (or “most ef- Icctlvo use of the combined re- sources of the United States and the United Kingdom for pros- ecution of the war." CHUNGKING. June 9-(AP)- Chlrlfst} forces still in possesslcn 0v tile availed tmvn of Chuhslcn have klll""(i or wounded 7,000 Japanese in three days, raising enemy cas- ualzles to mole than 10,0110 in tur- iotls bul thus far fu‘ _ assaults upon the key rail tau in western Cileklany Prcvmcr. L10 Chinese command lllnlou: ed tonight. MANY b NOISELESS ‘YYPEWRWER ls OPERATED BY A QIRL warrants A Dozen BRAccLcfe H1811 tide thi. o l and tonight at 3.02m m n8 M M‘ Sun sets this morning at 7.45 2111;! rises tomorrow morning at Nctv moon June l3. 4.02 pm. Sunlmerslde tide eighteen mlh. utcs later than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE TMILY cxccrr srxmw From Borden - Leave 6.30 a.m 0.25 a.m. 1.00 p.m. 4.45 run 7.55 not Leave (‘ape Tormcntinc-JLIS a.m. Ii.00 n.m 3 i5 n.m 6.45 n m 0.10 pJn, SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 Inclusive) Leave Borden 0-00 a.m. 12.00 noon 4.45 n.m 7.15 p. m. Leave Tormentinc 10.15 1.111.830 p.111. 8.00 p.m. 8M pm. -. .... sv-sasm-r-nrwnr-uwmunmru-