MAXIMS ‘l era Y’ MERE MAN ihsliohlookthesn. Quinton-crankshaft; ..---................- "wares"- WAVELL APPOINTED VICERO VJIIKA“ _To Invade Balkans Speculation Grows Allies lflgn VIIIIIJ Italians Said Growing More Jittery Every Day Turkish-Syrian Frontier Re-Opened; Nazis Said Reinforcing Balkans. ‘ Need More Men, Women In Servbes TORONTO. June l8 (CPL-Every man and woman medically fit is needed in the services. Brigadier James Mess. deputy ad- Jutanbgngral and director of army recruiting, today told the National council of Women of Canada at their 50th annual conference. “In just as important to get a girl in the services as it: is to get g man," Brig. James Mess said. ‘Those in industry may disagree but every girl or man they lose ls no tragedy to them——lt's an secon- venience. But our guns and bullets are of no value without the men. whom the girls release, over there to use them." About 170.000 men and women were needed in the services. Oi this number 35.000 were being’ sought for the CanadLan Womens _Arm.\' Corps. 26.000 for the Womens Di- vision of the R.C.A.F. and 5.000 for the Women's Royal yanadian Na- vsl Service. Make Alcohol From Pulp W00» _.t1aste ‘Tfitdhfl. Ont.. June l8 —-(0l’) Owasts liquor frcm the manufac- ture of suiphite pulp is hem! 0°11- verted inoo industrial alcohol at a new plant developed by the Ont- |ri° paper company which was viewed today by officials of the Canadian and United States GOV- lmment. A large portion of the annual out- ut of the plant - . estimated at £00,000 gallons - - will be delivered to the United States for manufac- ture into synthetic rubber. COMING EVENTS l-n- ' - l Wed sd . ‘Show Ma peque 11663341‘ - "' n d lb e mégil-iuoyw and Dance- ra salsa?!‘ "Reserve July lst party in Bonshaw. "Breadalbane Concert, Todd's Orchestra, Freetown. fist. War work. 6- lawn 0-19-11. with June 19-21. a's ior B su d-D so. Tera-s Wednemrffliune Webster's Orchestra. 6-19-21 "Dance. Cardigan Credit Union Hall. June the 21st. Websters Orchestra. 3'19‘ "Remember lviarshfield Concert, Milton Hall, Monday, June zélsltg "Girl Guide Rummage Bale 1n st. Peter's l-lall on Saturday. June 19th at 6 P. M. 6-19-11. "Alexandra women's Institute Pantry sale. Moore so McLeodb. Saturday, June 19th. 6-l9-li. ! "Reserve Jul m for Marshfield] Ounstaifnage nited Churcloi ‘tack "Murray Harbor Shipping Club loadin hogs Monday afternoon June gist. D. Ray Bmoksbslezckyg. "Notice-Be inning Monda 21st. my store will close every even ng at six o'clock except Saturday and every Wednesday at noon until fur- ther notice. 0, c, Green, Ehglfifaflladi. "Will not be buying pigs next ‘M11 but expect to want. an extra 111186 number the following week. A number of extra good horses is ‘lint-ed immediately. Phone 2732. 15-11111! Jorgenson. lfiederictoroi.“ n For Income Tax Payers’ ~ Convenience Y" the benefit of Railway 700s and others whose Invent them vlsitllll Ihlll llllvo and June 38th. B BLAKE SULLIVAN ted Press Staff Writer LONDON, June l8 (APi-Re- opening of the Turkish-S rian fron- tier and Axis reports o large Al~ lied troop concentrations in Syria boosted enemy worry today over the shaky “southeastern wall" in the Balkans, where the Germans were said to have sent strong re- inforcements. And as the Axis was kept guess- ing where the invasion blow might. fall. one possible barometer of Italian nervousness came in a Reu- ters News Agency report that a rumor of Allied invasion of Sicily had surged through the town of Tolmino in northern Italy; with the garrison dashing into tho streets “to welcome the end of the war." The Turkish-Syrian border was re-opened at fl a.m. Thursday after a 48-hour news blackout, but the Rome radio declared that British authorities still were keeping seni- ed a 62-mile stretch in northern Syria and the Lebanon coastal area, designating it a military area closed to civilians. Rome reported the Allied troop concentrations in Syria. In Ankara, a British source said the frontier had been closed to guard Allied troop movements from Axis agents. Officers in the border area. however, said the closure might have had some connection with the King's visit to North Africa. The Germans have sent strong reinforcements to the Balkans, said a Stockholm report to Reuters, and Rome warned the Allies that “the Bulgarian high command begun to examine the possibilities of an Allied landing on the Balkan coast near the end of the Tunisian cam- paign." and was ready for “any eventuality." The German radio, quoting Swe- dish correspondents, said military experts in London believed the “probability” of an Allied offensive in the Eastern Mediterranean was "even more imminent," with all the signs "now pointing to a coming Balkan offensive to be ushered m by attempts to conquer Crete and the Dodecanese." The Germans clamped tight the lid on Greece. The Morocco radio reported from Istanbul that ma- chine-gun nests had been con‘ structed everv few miles on the Athenssalonika railway. and .hat armed patrols constantly guarded the line. A strict curfew was said (Continued on case 11- C01 7) ____¢_____ Canucks Active LONDON. June 18-(0? CABLE) — Flt. Lt. Duncan (Bitsy) Grant, D.F‘.C., of Watrous, Saslc, our- standing train buster of the Royal Canadian air force Mustang squad- ron. added four locomotives to his u. m"! during intruder operations in northern Fra be t ht, disclosed todary. l“ mg it was Four more locomotives were dam- BKBd b Grant's squadron mate, F0 Aan Carlson oi Vermilion, Alta. in the same operation. Actions at sea in which Can- adian fliers participated also were disclosed today, PO George Ruickbie of Bath- wit. N B. Flt. Sgt. J. Abbev of Ottawa and crew members of a 110111511 £0111 how their plane hadt 812950561101 __'»°_3..1‘.1°.E1.1?- OTTAWA. June l8 -(CP)-——Pleas for more scientific research ‘for the benefit of Canadian Agriculture cam from sll quarters oi the House of Commons today. As Agriculture Minister Gardiner proceeded with his depart-mental estimates Gordon Ross (Lib. Moose Jaw) a big farmer who pioneered in the growing of sunflowers as a commercial crop on the prairies. renewed an earlier proposal for a $500,000 grant for agricultural re- search. Today Mr. Ross went further than before and suggested labora- tories be established in the four main agricultural regions- the Maritimes. the Central Provinces. The Prairies and British Columbia -end that the agricultural re- search pmgrnm be separate from the work carried on bv the National lteseards Council. Mr. Gardiner made no immediate comment on the Ross proposals but gave an outline oi resmrch being carried on by his department into man unless his permit has been so marked. Civilians are required to show ‘ cards when making "med a submarine m me Atlantic gases to prevent abuse oi the pel- Urge More Research To Benefit Agriculture CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, JUNE 19, 1943 Conservative Nominations For 1st Kings; Messrs John R. MacLean, M LA, and Al". McQuaid, K C_..’ Souris. were nominated as Progressive Con» servative crandldates for the 15$ District of King's at a large and enthusiastic convention last night at Sourls. Mr. J. Frank Stems, president of the King's County association, pre- sld M: MacLearfs nomination, which was moved by Angus Lavle. Souris, and seconded by Daniel Murphy. Elmira, was the only one sub' mitted for Assemblyman. Two names were balloted on for Councillor, those of Mr. McQuaid. moved bv Harry Burke, Fortune Bridge, and Mr. Henry Mallard. moved by Peter D. Conway, New Zealand, seconded by Colin Dick- son, East Baltic. Mr. McQuaid won out on the first ballot, and his nomination, on motion of Mr, Mall- ard. was declared frnaimous. Rousing addresses were given by the candidates and by Mr. Mallard, Hon. Dr. WJ.P MacMlllsn. pro- vincial leader. and Dr. A. A. Mac- Donald. Dr. MacMillan was warmly com- plimented on receiving the Order of the British Empire in the re- cent distribution the Kinlfs birth- day honours, In his address, he dealt oomprehrnslvelv with both federal and provincial politics. Allied Secret g A wearun “Praised WASHINGTON, June l8 — (AP) - The most publicized secret weap- on oi the war . - made possible the successful American landing on Attu in (he Aleutians, the Congress lcarned today. Maj. Gen. Dawson Olmstead of the United Stgics Signal Corps told the House of Representatives App- roprlatlons Committee:- "lh the battle of Attu in Alaska,_ when our forces arrived and wan-l ted to get men ashore in small boats. the weather made visibility so bad that the water could not be‘ seen from the du: of a ship, The ships were berthed and the menl landed by the use oi radar." I Radar, developed in Britain. is a‘ radio device used for detection oi ships. planes or other objects ob- scured irom vision. It played a stell- ar part in the battle of Britain by detecting the approach of German planes. It was by Radar, olznsread said, the Japanese planes approaching Pearl Harbour Dec. 7. 1941 were de- tected while 132 miles off shore. (However, the detection was not officially reported at the time.) TIGHTEN LIQUOR CONTROL VICTORIA. June 18 — (C?) — Men and women of the armed forces in future must have their liquor permits stamped by their orderly room officers, liquor com- rnlissioner W.F. Kennedy announced c ay . Government liquor - store clerks will refuse to sell to a uniformed their registration liquor pur- national system. Mr. Gardiner, in discussion of his department's estimates. said mech- anization had made possible an hr crease in fibre flax acreage from 7,000 to 47,000. The British gov- ernment had askcd for 75.000 acres and if lnbor were available it would be possible to reach that goal. More research was needed before hemp production could be under- taken on a commercial scale. In connection with oil plants the department was seeking a greater use oi wilt-resistant flax varieties. The goal of 90,000 acres of soy beans could not. be reached this year but about 55.000 would bu planted. All available sunflower seed had been planted. Rape seed was being grown and other nil plants were in the experimental st e. flew hybrid varieties corn are being studied with a to their use or corn oil and corn starch. Work done over a period of years on rubber-producing plants had made it possible to proceed with growing mllkweed and dandeli la or that purpose this y sr i f r ds. r f ds. ° ' . 33.1.5153.‘ ‘$31? tuft"... n§?.'°-‘;M°.°;..- giy.fi~;=~:_=efig's 5113mm _'_=°°-. ion. vegetable oil duction andL opnflnugd m p". 1'5“ g§= rubber plant produc on. 4 '" 727/’ The People's Paper VIIIIII ‘and friends ‘of MAXI ME OFA MERE MAN Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ffifeifisfIfl l War Situation Last Night By Glenn Babb, Associated Press Analyst The sweeping changes in the setup of British rule in India have tremendous importance for the whole war effort of the United Nations. It means that the herculean task of Japan's defeat ls to be approached with a. new directness and energy. Its immediate significance is that it is designed to free Allied sirlkln power in the Asiatic-Pacific theatre from the deadening, shackllug e iect o! India's ceaseless political tur- mo But the most important ppointmcnt of all is still h be disclosed. "It is proposed,” said the announcement, "to relieve the commander-in- chief in India of responsibility for the conduct of operations against Jap- an and to set up a separate East Asia command for that purpose. Fur- ther announcement on this subject will be mode soon." The selection of a man for this command and the definition of his mission may well prove one of the most important decisions of the war- lt will involve the strategy and means by which the Allies hope to en- compass the destruction of Japan and will go far toward determining how long the job will take. What ls the East Asia command to be? will it be limited to those grlilshqand Indian forces assigned to the promised campaign to recover urma. Possibly it will not be so restricted. or, If it ls, that. it will be part of a. much larger AmericanJirltlsh-Chincse-Dutch alignment working in co-ordlnation at the ob of knocking the Japanese out of southwestern Asia and the Island mplre that fringes it. This will be a task of hem- ispheric proportions. one to which far the greater port of the military power of the United States may be committed before it is done. The attack from India and the Bay of Bengal probably will be only the western arm of a vast pinccrs designed to slash across Julian's new Empire at the waist. The advance across Burma. will more than a drive to reopen the Burma Road for aid to China. It. should establish the avenue by which great Allied armies can reach the eastern shores of Asia for the final assault on Japan herself. Large Attendance At NotreDame Convent Commencement EXGTCISQS g._—;-_—: Many interested parentsnrel tives the gradual; Notre Dame Academy atten ed their colorful graduating‘ exorcism; hold lost evening at 3 oclock be; fore the brightly decorated altar of the Convent chapel. ' _‘~'_ His Excellency. Bishop Osullltgi r O Mussolini " Seeks To Blame Party NEW YORK. June l8 —(A_P\- European advices reaching the As- sociated Prekss todlav gain Mulstsoliini —-against w om tie de of a an bitterness is said to be rising-is Education. he advised. S not trying to shift part of the blame lust that obtained from boo s. etc *' gm- his errors upon the Fascist but a realization of the principle party's national mrecwram duty to, country. people. and..abovb_ _ A“ members o,- tms body are 8p. 1111- 1° G011 11.5 1155111611 1119.1 wad": pointed by Mussolini whose title. 1151115 111111 the" 11195 were “Pr”. Ii Duce means leadenoi the party. 51°“ °1 111911 11101151115‘ "1 Competent foreign observers said His Excellency warned them not the njneqpomh rem)“ presmted to lct amusement interfere with re- early this “Tek to n- Duce by (EH10 sp°11s1bgu1eidtghfiudllzifigg eggggé- Scorsn. party secretary, must be ifilanallotfii} influence greatly ones‘ ‘read P1111 ‘1111111115 f 911°" 11° £u,ure‘m-e_ ,,__ sprea responslb ty _ or Ita y's dsdeil“ "‘i§‘°.“r.‘°"‘2£‘ whfiililm‘ llllilipiiél. ‘L’? “Slctiltéfiiimgitéii e v cv. a er eo. . . assisted by Fathers Dougan , 4 560ml. McCvnrclcwwlth the girls choir 55,1118 fgpoff, 115mg’ pgsf, short. oartioLtt11ll-i. BR1111511111011 W115 7131', mings of the Fascist regime and lcnved -~" 1m 1101'- 01 00115131113110"; lled for more rigid mobilization Following was tho programme. < was present. and prizes and plomas" were awarded by Fat Me " Others present were acDon-uld. Sullivan and Douga The program continued with an address by His Excellency who stressed the great 10y felt by parents, teachers and relatives over the success of their loved ones. Opening duck-Annie O'Shea. Sy-f V9510,‘ It was suggested ma, bv bil Power: Joyce Cantwell. 3111116?" 4 ‘ McLeod__Queen of the me hs means Mussolini also was tn , to dodge some of the respon- s ility for new measures to hold the Italian people in the war. from which. according to some indica- tions. many of them would like to withdraw. Nevertheless. press reports from Italy continued to tell of deterior sting morale, mounting hatred of Vatcher. Jimmie Mussolihrs Fasclsis, and increased 0! U10 despair and hopelessness. P s. “June is in my Heard-Maureen TIJWH. The Little White Guest-Grade I. “Daffodils and TullpsW-Mnureen Blake. Anita Dillon. ' Prlve Day on the Hill-Grades II and III. Sleeping Beauty~Grndes IV and B VDuet-Bobbv Mncdonald—The Message let “has Kill 12,1000 llazis At llrci LONDON, June l8—(CPl—Rus- sin announced tonight that Soviet forces had killed more than 2,000 German troops in hurling buck _ numerous enomv counter-attacks itions simmer Howe ipnisht en- this week in the vital om sector, 11011110911 1118 05101911511111 l;- 01 where the Nazis were reported Q1191)“ shipyards. 111111.. a town iifilhg semi-trained reservists nnd Company, to co-ordinutc the shlp- mgr-mm rroopr building activities of Morton en- n one mm, nqythwggg, or Mrs. 81110911118 R1111 dry 1199K C0. 11151-1.- '_- nsk. the Germans "drew forward Quflbefi; George T, Daviefiind ~ serves" todnv but ‘showed no 1M» 11mm"- QW- 111111 activity." snicl the Moscow mid- billldfilk 11111151011 01 A" night communique recorded here adinn pulp and caper 1111118. by the Soviet radio Monitor. Crown Shipbuilding Company Formed OTTAWA. June —l8—(CPl -Mun- as ‘y, rail Ls a little must not} y - depends u g 1 ncngyzrovs 1 ABA“ corrnn H a long way, satisfaction ‘quality of flavour. ~ .1 l 12 PAGES A plonghman on hi; legs is high: than a politician on his knees. luhsoription Delivered, 85.00 loll, $0.001 other Provinces I U.I.A. $3.00. Synthetic Rubber llerc To Stay THDROLD. Ont.. June 18-(0?) —Willlam Jefiers, United States rubber director, said today in a broadcast address that, the "syn- thetlc rubber industry is hero to stay and industry, before this year is over. will be producing synthe- tic rubber as cheaply and as good as any natural rubber." Mr. Jeffers was one of five speakers on the program, broad- cast from the new industrial al- cohol plant of the Ontario Paper C0. A 111F361 part of the new plant's annual output of 600,000 gallons of alcohol will be exported to the U. S. for use in synthetic rubber man- ufacture. '1591"?1'111 Wiles of synthetic rub- be: are already better for many uses than ls natural crude and mum progress is promised in the 11111118." said Mr. Jeffcrs, who 15 President of the Union Pacific Railroad. “We by now have learn- ed our lesson never again to de_ pend on one of our most vital raw materials from far-away planta- tions in Malaya and elsewhere.” Says Sawfly Pest Now Under Control O'I"I‘AWA. June l8~—(CP)—Ag- rlculture Minister Gardiner 531d lll the House of Commons today that the spruce sawfly, which has damaged 101cc eastern lumber stands. appeared to be under con- trol, with the scourge grgdunuy be- mg reduced in different areas. l some wuoooooo parasites which ‘combat the sawily have been r115. . uibutcd. and the use of this meth- 011 01 flghtlng the pest had proved successtui. Non", the W115 b11183 reduced rather"‘th spreading. The Minister said no means have been found of combatting attacks on. hardwood trees py me bygnzg b11011 borer. but lllS department assisted in the salvaging of wood 16ft us a result of the insects act- ivitles. Bombers Continue To Pound Italy ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICAaJune 1B _(Ap; ~11A.F. and American heavy b0mb_ era smashed again at Italy and 1t- B11811 Sicily in the campaign u; deg. tmy 1119 enemy's potential sea. pow- er in the Mediterranean and to krgtgfpout the last of his air cover. t h.‘ . Wellington bombers struck a k 6 heme Port of Naples in r111‘ 11°55 Wednesday; American our motored bombers followed (hi; "P by dropping 15o tons of evplos- ives on the Sicilian nlrdromes o) Ccmiso and Biscarl yesterday All 5111911 Plano-s returned safely 1 The United States bombers, 95h. gfrreslvgfieasfjerlrtlvgzialby. R.A.l~“. Spit- * Stiff Penalties . For Trafficking ‘ In Certificates ZIIIZ lnfCSl-fltla; Y mated in Cairo dispalghes at about‘ By s. c. nsmsr. l (Associated Press Staff Writer) 1 LONDON. June 19—(MondaY1—\ (AP) _- Great Britain appointed Field Marshal Sir Archibald P , Wavell. commander-in-chlef in 1n-' dia, as Viceroy of India today, and announced the intention to create a separate East Asia military com- mand to wage an offensive against apan. Cien. Sir Claude Auchinleck was appointed to succeed Waveil as commander in India. The separate command decision is presumably one of the magror products of the Washington s ategy conferences between Prime Minister Churchi and President Roosevelt. Who would head the proposed East Asia command was not dis- WASHINGTON, June 18- (CP) — The appointment of Field Marshal Sir Archibald P. Wavell as vlceroy of India was regarded here tonight as n forecast of intensified war- fare against the Jlpunese in thejiurma area, probably an sllfmt offensive to reopen the Burma Road at the end of the monsoon season this fall. The immediate reaction here to the appointment, announced in London tonight, was fav- orable, because lt place in the Vlceroys Palace at New Delhi an acknowledged strategic ex- pert and, perhaps, a. man who might be able to pacify the conflicting and’ divided polit- ical elements o! lndla, thus placing that rich and populous country solidly behind the war efforts of the United Nations as a base for offensive action. closed. The announcement from 10 Downing Street of Wavells ap- pointment to a five-year term suc- ceeding Lord loiniithgow, and cle- slgnatlon of Auchinleck to return to his former command in India concluded:— “It is proposed tn relieve the com- mander-in-chlef in India of re- sponsibility for the conduct of op- erations against Japan and to set up a separate East Asia command I01‘ that purpose. Further announ- cement on this subject will be made soon." This was taken by unofficial ob- servers as a concrete expression of Britain's intention to prosecute the war against Japan with full vigor once Hitler 1s defeated. It appeared to put into a ooh- crete plan the assurances given by Mr. Churchill in an address to the United States Congress that Bri- tain had an equal interest with the United states lXl avenging Japanese aggression. unere was every reason to be- lieve that thLs plan germinated in Washington, where Sir Archibald and the air and naval commander of the Indian theatre Joined Mr. Churchill and Mr. Roosevelt in ex- haustive strategy talks, HAL n blanket OTTAWA. June l8 —(CP\--Traf-1 I Dixicls entered Y 0F INDIA TIIIJ’! Move Seeh As Foreshadowing Drive 0n J aps Britain To Create Separate Easf Asia Military Command. tBracken Walks Through Rain To Visit Village B JOHN InBLANO l! (Ca-nadyian. Press Staff Writer) IFAX. June l8 - (CPi-N wrapped around hm shoulders, Hon. John Bracken tramped a mile over a rutted country road through a. rainstorm wday to reach Herring Cove for a talk with the fisherfolk of that: Halifax County Village. A bump on the rock road. to the Cove disabled the Progressive Con- servative Leaders cur, and he elected to risk a. soaking to gotta the village, where he chatted with a group around the stove in the general store and inter adjournc to the parlor of a nearby home f a round-table session with some 0G the shore fishermen. Mr. Bracken divided his time in this county between the Harri: Cove trip and a jUllll, meeting 0 this city's service clubs, where he delivered an address. Later: he left for the Annapolis Valley, stoppu overnight at Kentville in the lieu oi the orchard district. The party leader told the service club meeting that Canons, (nth the rest of the Anglo-Saxon world, must achieve irauonzu unity "if some form 0f totalitnriarusnl is n00 to fasten itself upon ms and upon the world." “Canadian unity now lg notices able chiefly by its absence," he de- clared. "For too long in this coun- try we have been led on the huslcs and chaff of sectional prejudice." It was high time this situation was remedied and that Canaduins grow tothink of themselves first as Can. adians. One way of achieving national unity. he said, was through the formulation of national (xblcltixus -political, social and cconomlc— so designed that Canadians cvvnv. where would Work together toward their attainment. This should be C0119 1f Canada was LO Jssunre 11,3 full responsibility as a stale and bu. 00ml: a. nation "ill loot 0s well .' in name." Charg—ed— Following Fracas Aboard Ship SAINT JOHN, N. 13., June l8 < (OP) —Al‘l.lll1l' Dotitls, of Wales, apr peared before Magistrate Stc" Palmer here this uficmom c'n.r_.- with assault causing bodily lmrm, following a. fracas on :1 ship izcre this morning in “inch Robot". Hum, a senlllml. from England has “rim.- - derl bi a revolver bulht. _ a plea of not guilty w the charge and “as re. leased 0n $1.00‘) unli’. \\1l‘(lllE‘>(lil_\' of next week AND GETTING .-\\\'.\\' ‘The bodies of ii~h arc cove-on with a mUOIIS-llkl‘ stibstnnco winch licking in war saving certificates S w L tempted in set themselves up in the capacity of discount agents for war 1113111111111" 1111c" “f, 11391113 °1 511°11 Frank Knox, who snid the present “1151911911 1111111915 lull in the Atlantic "must indicate is made illegal under an orderrin-l COllliCll made public today m Cnnry adinn war orders and regulations. i The order said there had been cases “when: individuals have ai- 0 n savings certificates. buying the “W,” _,___,., , said certificates nt a discount from " WASHINGTON’ June 13 __(Apv ill informed registered holders and _An increase m the Submarnjg then nitczzipting to present ‘fhem slnkmgs M “mm shrps w“ mo. for lTClPillDdOll at their full re- dmed ‘may by Navy 596mm“. Onlv a registered holder. the some change m n". plans o; the legal representative of a deceased Grrmansfi registered holder. or a person aulir Knox mm R “mas 11117-611 b.‘ ‘aw m “Ct on b€11111f91 that at present the progress the registered holder may acquire amed war savings certificate or right to (he proceeds of a ccrtiflc- thingy m. added.__ 1119 "i119" Tcdeemcd- "We'll get an increase in sink Penalties were provided for any- in,“ >11“ Wm. on “u. one illegally acquiring certificates. my, m." b‘. any meant $2.000 or imprisonment of up to one year or both mny be imposed. Upon silmmarv conviction. a fine of up to $1.000 or imprisnnment1 of up to six month; or both may be imposed. tho Atlantic. them as lung as the war lasts." MADE DODGE WIDOW WEDS LAFAYITTE. Ind" June I8 fAPi -Annie Luurinc lVlcDonnld. former l 1111‘ 1711111011‘- Goro Boy. Ont.. iolwhone operator‘ and wltimv of Dnuuv l7n<lge of tlv automobile mznlufi" n". irni" was mnrrlcd hero 5 to Ccv‘ Joan W. Van Nntta, Jr. of Lain) l EL . Vicar General and Chancellor o “v- Cathedral of the Tmmaculut ,1".nccpiicn hero have been mv‘ '\l‘.'l mrmlzcrs cf ‘Jen Panal hoarse .. ervnlvnmebl ~ -~s-.......,.. conference of anti-submarine operations is 1111-1’ 1111111- 11119 01' 111191515 111 a "very satisfactory, but realistically ‘"11’ we know they're going to do some- submarines It may 119°“ 111111¢1111°m 11 111w 01 1111 1° rovivr at any time at any place 1n "Thev have a lot of submarines. We will continue to struggle against SAINT JOHN. ll. 3.. June l8 - ICP1 - Rt. Ftev. John H. Mllligan. Diocese of Saint John rml Rev. ‘Francis Cronin. Rector cf "~r-\.cs‘lr Prelntfls by Pom Pius XII lubricates and facilitates SWlllllllllig. i. WE BACKYARD QARDENERS ARE Dom‘ ‘Fumes Tm s ‘can 1 High iizlu- this murninu of llsil nntl tonight at 1.00. Sun sets this cur-nits; .\i 0.30 nut P rises tumor-rm moi-trim; =< 5.1.‘! e Last quarter moon Jun» 2i, All pm. - Sunnnerskio tific l8 minutes into sshold. Each how become monsignors ‘than Charlottetown. w4=- w". unseen-n»- mslurnlmuuf. 1, trieiiw- -~'-..~ <1.» -~‘_'»