Boo W.‘ HE WESIERNGUARDIAN’ AGENT; liirs. John Pond, Ii Church Street-Thane £39 SUMMERSIDE Ind PIJNCE COUNTY Adverthlr-g. should he 1m with Mn. Pond l 1 lhmdiun may m» booths! of the Ioiiowin; “We, u, kstnre, Writer Street. l, flakcly. iiuler Street. (firm will he delivered to any home in gummnfld. l, .__._____. . llr. Young n sulrscriiltl-"le Guest speaker At S’side Gourllec 3mg", l M"! Gender. glneflrgrlvtllzlre 2123i Rev. Dr. L. Young who arrived in ‘flu or» , , ary a1 2c M! "H!" "I I01‘ r-er week. Phone also r n, lSummerside on Saturda was the elm, order to the boy responsible for deliveries onoyoururmftrglw lgrfighyigglfiiarchllfrslgh {log}. a‘: lull i lit n >.‘ . .‘JGO. ii “hug J \\ ur pliant e. A 1_ 1",‘ tlf. column is reserved fnr lICWn lllirft‘ l. but advertising at '1ayl0r Drug C0,, K@,-,5ll-,glon_ . nature may he rnserlea d, strictly payable m River 111K111? lice Court- Monday Hail. ..iU. L-ll8-5-l7-2l_ Lunch and Dance nous’, Kensingtcii, i\i.iy 20th ac 8.30. L-llii-S-IS-Zl. IillQ- .»\llU.\'l‘l0N zxve :lic.1' diplo- til. inc Gradua- .110 Prince Courry Lynn's will cut the coal ' (drill. Buy insiil ., suurgle or panel Ll-IQB-{i-lu-Zl. be hcid tn the . r k \vl:en i1. uhlliritl of illlq r as sol- ry‘s Convent on Saturday Miss ill‘ S Rev. Fr. ut- .3: Summerside , perfcarnuri the icrl the Nup- lion- ‘ ~. of biack velvet, Fill r '1 Ill ‘T111 r or lhri-c months c n quantity rm. A infm urns .\.irl costs \\‘, ll _ (‘OURT hclrl FCTLZL l.' -" umn. After the ll-c young couple o.’ Prince Edward ‘(Milli cuss at the and Mrs. Al- r f Oitarva. lead- Summerside ir- ni fr ends \\'l5,ll ~S. court 0'1 rri hccrcl sev- l n .1 nsl. rrir 12g it when it u i‘; cnurhirlcrl and "we ivestrrn mrt \ lllflll from Tit;- possmsion" was cu days. An- “h was giv- of ‘Ii-l the driver rallwav stove. and 11w- damcge of ul in my a fine .rnri costs. _S. a M‘ T‘: lint half as annoyed as he might have been. wee the >"-~‘-" oil the bury Chicago intersection below, Players at r 1 been r r t r . -—JERGENS SOAP 1c Sale now on igililfygll lgtfigayanidehgreigrgfaa rlxylégse ‘staff of Presbyterian missionaries. n-146.‘€Il§llg;5lll1>ori} 1m gictou, N.1S., and e san on prev ous - Barbed who casioirs when he addressed a ragg- L-148‘a“1u'at, Fégiigfihlonclllli thle Summerside Pres- -r.arr ron rratrrnx - m, Irish lgev. ‘drc. Ygllirliqgisgaafiltjerelasfallfgf Brenton Rankin left last week ‘ loll ‘ terrs lug account o: the work o1 m; Halifax to join her husoano 59ml ‘misslonaries in Japan and ex lain- DJSB. Rankin who is stationed thebe. :€ldle"£1§n2i?:l)ll fgltlle lavarfzua oh of . nm onar es rom ap- flll. taking for his text the words "for it is God that worketh in you.” A, Klniey Field w . Dr. Young said that he felt it Mallllvlme 1m.“ M cfglrllilternurflplr “ill: 1 was not a disaster that the foreign a v s1 or t0 Prl ' “W, ‘leek and anfigllgggvill‘: ligand leave ‘Japan. He looked upon it rs Elly meellngs or the Island Bqa ‘N; the will of God and that God would Churches which were held at rfrlali- thrift] £11? cgg-tylyimcrlalkfrf: arid ggua m‘ Tuesday and Wednesday. r d0 a great work among the people. ev- MT- Klnlfiy also took the "er- Dr Young spoke of the earl work Vi” ‘m Wedilfiidfly even ng it “the of ‘missionaries in Korea and, now lsummcrsicie Baptist Church, Dur-liho pespie had. eagerly embraced m! his visit he was the guesg Qhthe christian faith. Then the mill- Rev. and Mrs. Cot]; of summel-Slde l taiy party came into power and the Rev. Mr. Kinley left on Saturdafohristian faith was challenged. Na- for St. John, N. B“ wilel-e he will tive christlans were told they must conduct. services in connection wp h l bow before the shrine and gods his work,_s_ ‘ ‘which. to the Japanese. reprcsert ___ the deity. This order began with tl.e -BAPTIST CHURCH - The schoglst‘ ahd thgif the “church lwas nongregall-on o; lh . . - as'c o ow ore 1e s rncs, church gave a defigaéltlcdsofililui“:‘many native christlans refused their Church lull on “may mam 1 dolso and were imprisoned and tor- hlg lol. lhe vlslllng Human A-very lured because of their refusal. Some enjoyable program was carlled out did in {lather itshlm sulffer imprison- lmd was mu.“ enloved by wage linen .0 11B n1 sgmar (as! felt they who air-nan. Rev. c. w. can. 1233i.” n“ iafftiififia lihffiafléfiffié Pistol". conducted an interestinluupon as arr offence for native contest on flowers. Those contrib: churches to have foreign missionar- "UYIZ vocal numbers were- Mrs ‘ies speak in their churches Dr John MacLeod, Mrs. Hu-rhsorr My-"Young, however had cverv confl- John Walker c-f the Y? M. i; | dance in the native clergv that they Mrs. Cook and Miss Irene Johnson , would hold fast the faith and if in a duet. Mrs. snogren and ‘vfrs, . they are not allowed to meet opsriy _ Chester Palmer gave readings, The a will ccntlnue to worship God in evening opened with o Canada their hearts. Dr. Young said there [Allter refreshments had been served‘ lvas tlulentv loft work’ lélogtllfifAglellffi er s - or 1e min s ers o n r ca, e W8 a general 5mg Song m” ' India and that part of China, which —BRACE's 1% ls right. pr 0e on -vrsrron T0 r. a. r. ha”, E, dllflifid by Mr. Walker The Na. ‘ , h . 0t m d th i f -§i,°':,“1cl§§fhi'§ brought the we“ “g i Jgrsiaff. H? fcelt utrlireerwcrkelgulgorgar lllhd not been in vain and could he —SOCIAL cwrs cram _ The Safely 1d,‘ ‘l’; QMQGS. hfndflfiiml." "is" meelns for the 5885011 0i the n°nrln ham finer Ifisfts {he xbiirvcfe‘ Ladies 5mm“ club °f Trmm’ Unit- 1 cf lflfeato be harried b men long Pd Church was held on Friday even- 1 saving "commit thv wYuvs toa the lng at the home of Mrs. James RmLord and he will brlnglt to pass" Hunter. Mrs. Charles R. Ramsay. Rev. Wm. Vcrwolf pastor, oviduct- the Drefildent presided. Af er the ed the service. The choir assisted usual business meeting Mrs, A, w, in the service of praise. Rev. Dr. McDowell was called upon and read Young will b‘: the gilcst cf Rev. and rm address to Mrs. L. E. G. Davie: Mrs. Verwcife during his visit-S e. er . r s. Vi .. lalcluohilly hilisenierl lf/‘frgllpaevigres with . g as remem f —“_-—‘ lhe club. Mrs. Davies exgracxsfijd r83’ ‘Continued mom page n thinks and anpreciatcn ‘ h .- “_‘,““I_7$ ' M “a1 Erasmus "new Molnar-lg? 3% ‘dill1352f;if‘“li?“hs"‘°a<.2f§§3l§ would always have happy recollec- lhllh lhe Gall-him ' amhusslldql- Jfilgllrs gplf he: stay in ‘Sllmmfifslfle- Franz Von Pnpcn,‘ held a long coh- a‘ men‘; were h“ serwd- fereiice Saturday with Soviet Am- bassador M. S. Vinr-gradov. Both envoys also saw Iran de- Mrs. Hunter being assisted in her fence minister Majdi Shefket be- duties as hostess bv Mrs. Louis Mac- Kay. During the Pvrfllng M155 Em fore he returned to Baghdad from conferences in Ankara. He was re- MccNelll gave a charming readlrq. —S. ported to have been assured enouglh Axis help t» permit continued re- sistance to the British forces from descrt biases. Observers here saw another straw in the wind indicating possible Russian move as o. result of Sat- urday's exchange of Iraq-Soviet notes establishing diplomatic and Personals -Mi'ss Bertha Szliurman was s. visitor to Montague last week to attend the Baptist Convention. - __ph,_ Wm Mllls o; lhl, l; E l lllgllflrfililéfslilfifllls between the two Hi1. x l‘ ‘i. - gmnde“ M’ Half“ lb ‘pend 'I‘urk.sh newspapers meanwhile lng a srort leave with his pnfelits,' Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mills at Sum- mers‘de.—-S. —Miss Dolly Matthew. tmchcr at Fanning School, Malgieque, . spentfhg the weekend wbih her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Matt.- asserted it was urgent that Britain occupy French-mandated Syria. next-door-nelghbzr of Iraq and re- ported pathway for AxLs aid to the Mlfdle East state. “The British should have oc- cupied Syria long ago, now they must do so quickly,“ observed the newspaper Tan. Ijriam nscrtcd that "the British must employ every means to occu- ny Syria!’ missionaries had been obliged to, w“. n mo... who was .. 'j:_"l2f‘|_l\i' firing gloss when this elevated train crushed =. ' "mii-"l" oil a rout-end tarckon May i2. No cne else was r . "rluladnpirll ll r- ‘N ""3 l1“ “F lireenrinue perch. left crowds wnnrlrrlng \ “hat ii stalled to do, clad plunge down to the etreet ""11 m um it didn't, Askam, commenting on peaceful Turkish-German relations, said ih~t because Ger-many now has no m liiary need for Turkey "th‘s ls to all-but peace for how “Our position." said Vajlt, “as n non-belligerent has become impor- tant and critical. These develop- ments might favor the personal ambit-ling of sonne Mcrlsms but rirmt (vcrk to the advantgae of Islam as a whole." Russian-Axis intervenbon ln Iraq were not further explained here. (German quarters were still s‘- lent on renorfs of German tank; and airplanes going to Iraq's aid, 85 Prportod bv Bntaln. (The BBC, however, quoted a. Ru- manian broadcast Saturday to the rffPCt that Gcrmanv has started the movement of infantry through the Bo ncrus. bound presumably for Syria and Irlfl- Arrvher London broadcast heard in New York said" German officers alredy were lead. lug Iraqis fighting the arms; forces.) nlwnys rurry RAD l in their Handbags l M (lies JPARADO For Q1111 k Rvlir-l n! Pam L The references of Nazi circles to SANTIAGO, Chile, May 13 - 4A- P) —A British freighter armed with a six-inch cannon and two anti‘- aircrnft guns was believed tonight to be chasin at least one of five German fre ghters which sailed during the weekend fro-n widely i separated Chilean ports in an at- l tempt to run the British blockade. I The Nazi ship Rhakotis 6.173 tons. lleft the port of Antofagasta only 30 minutes before the British arm- , ed freighter. Liaguna, 6,466 tons, ' steamed out in the same southerly direcifon. It was said here tnat the Laguna. possibly had set out in pur- suit of the Thakotls. he SURSCIE GUADmlA AND PRINCE COUNTY CH ‘British Freighter Chases Nazi Ship Enemy craft lefTéhilean port in attempt to run blockade. (The dispatch did not clarify how an armed freighter could take oo- tion against another freighter since the merchant ships are armed es- sentially for defence rather than offence. There was the posslbdity, some observers presumed, that, the Laguna might be faster than some of the ships she was chasing, and after passing them could bring into play her gun mounted on the stern.) The departure of the five Ger- man shlps cleared Chilean ports of all Nazi frelghters. They had been in Chilean waters since the begin- ning of the war. LONDON. May l8 -(CP) - Prune Minister Churchill pondered today a detailed seen; report on <statements by Rudolf Hess since the Nazi deputy fuehrer parachutes! 1 to earth in Scotland-and the Brit- ‘ lsh public hoped he would lift at least a corner of the veil from the l mystery before the House of Com- ‘l mons this week. The British Broadcasfing Corpora- i tion continued a barrage of broad- casts to Germany, playing the Hess affair for all it is worth. l It told listening Germans that the Nazi radio ls keeping rluiet be- ‘- fore its lxome audience, wh 1e pour- ing out a. varcty of conflicting ‘accounts for forelgr; consumption. l The British public itself appears anxious for clarification of widely differing versions published here. But some observers suggested that official silence thus far mght be a sign the government has obtain- ed such valuable information from the taciturn Hess that it would be able to wring maximum benefit from keeping the Germans in long suspense. British broadcasts beamed toward Germany referred to "widespread .reports of an extensive purge in Germany and many arrests of Hess’ RE-AFFIRMS (Continued from page l)___ Mr. Hanson said that on every appropriate occasion. the Conser- vative party has "pledged full sup- port and co-operation to the Gov- ernment ln all measures designed to ensure that Canadas part in this struggle should be not only worthy of our country, but a de_- finlte factor in ultimate victory.’ "In effect," he continued. “we have said to the Government. t0 the Prime Minister: ‘Your party happens to be in power at the mo- ment. You are charged with the responsibility for Canada's war effort. We are behind you to a man, irr ever bone flde effort which you un ertake. If you falter and pause, lf you weary and fall back. we are still behind you. pushing you. prodding you, and pressing forward in any event.‘ " Mr. Hanson said the United States had recognized her first line of defence to be in Britain. “The first line of defence fur Canada and of Canada is in any part of the world which our de- clared enemy has converted inlto a theatre of war." he said. ‘Any other conception, any other inter- pretation of our defence is not only rimpractfcal, it is distinctly dis- honest. . . “I so. to you in all earnestness and in all sincerity that the Gov- ernment of Canada has misled our people by its interpretation of the ,dcfence of Canada." - By the tenns and application of the National Resources Mobiliza- tion Act under which young Cen- military training, defence of o s w "exclusively home Canada meant. was not in Canada. the conservative House leader said "Ever-y round principle of strategy. of common sense. requires that it shall remain over there. There the challenge must be met. “The Liberal Government ls at one and the some time expending millions o1 dollars in the training of men for the defence of Canada end refusing to recognize, in its legislation, where that defence lies." The Conservative party "without reservation" supported the currerv recruiting campaign for 32.000 men for active service in the army. The appeal must not fall. But if the Government hm‘ "given the leadership required" from the beginning the call would not have been necessary. Th1- manpower would have been in ' training already. Mr. Hanson said that from the outbreak of war his party had deplored the "major weakness in Canada's effort. which lies in ths political high command." If Canada were to prosecute the war to the utmost of her strength. “Charo/rill Has Secret Report On Hess Affair ' British hope ‘v31 will be at least partially_l_if:ced this Week. associates, especially occultists" — a reference to German assertions that the No. 3 Fuehrer had been ill-advised by fortune tellers and mesmerizers. The Germans also were told that all telephone communication be- tween Germany and Sweden was cut at 6 p. m. Friday “precisely v.0 same thing as happened Saturday night-the night of the Hess flight." Exchange Telegraph News Agen- cy, in a dispatch from Goteborg, Sweden, quoted the Berlin corres- pondent of the newspaper Gote- borgpostcn as saying that Hess‘ wife was arrested “two days ago and that a multitude of arrests followed the escape of Hess to Scotland-"n Ber- lin alone there have been hundreds." “Police are arresting in restau- rants," the Exchange Telegraph Dlspatrli went on “persons, irres- pective of their political views, who discuss the Hess affair. “Several fresh prisoners have ar- rived at sachsenhausen concentra- tion camp. Secret. police are ques- tlonng Prof. Messer "hmltt (design- er of the fighting plane) about U16 plahe in which Hess flew to Scor- arr ." ter Herbert Morrison declared;- ccrnlble.” He charged that whatever Prime Minister Mackenzie King and his Government had done since the war began had been done “be- cause of the outraged voice of public opinion, in Parliament. in the press. and in the market- place." Idle hands and idle fac- tories indicated that industry had not been completely mobilized In the war effort. M. J. Caldwell, acting C.C.F. House leader, will make the sec- ond taik of the CBC series next Saturday, and John Blackmore, New Democracy leader, will speak the following week. HUGE FIRES IN (Continued from page 1) which many Buildings were ablaze." Other bombers spread over Nazi- held points on the continent while the Germans gave Britain a "night off" from raids. The air ministry said docks at Rotterdam, Holland, and Boulogne, France, and other objectives in enemy-occupied territory were at- tacked and unidentified French and Netherlands harbors were raid- e . Only one bomber was missing af- ter the night's raids, the ministry said. Two fighters were missing from patrol Saturday but the min- istry added that a British fl nter downed o German fighter, s cor- ‘ng it into the sea. off the southeast coast. As for Britain Saturday night. "The theatre of war is overseas." , the air and home security ministries l said Nazi raids were on o. "very adians are called up for COMPIII-Pgmgl] 5cm," l Today German aircraft were re- ported over various sections of Brit- defence," but the theatre of war | aln, including the Midlands, but lilzere was no indication of large scale operations. WE WILL FIND (Continued from page 1) war. His peace principles. " “l. Extreme nationalism must not again be pennitted to express illself in excessive trade restric- tons. “2. Non-discrimination in inter- national commercial relations must be the rule, so that. international trade may grow and pros r." "3. Raw material euppl es must be available to ell notions without iiscrimination. "4. International a reemente reg- trlatln the supplv o commodlti must so handled as to protect fully the interests of the consum- ing countries and their people. "5. The institutions and arrange- ments of international finance must be so set up that they lend _ __ l! l 1 1 I aid to the essential enterprises end the Government must "provide an r all-comprehensive. an oil-embrac- ing program." This will mean sacrifice. not only on the part of the people, but on the part of the Government" Mr. Hanson said. "It. will mean sacrifice of party and party ad- vmlue. No ouch Moire-m in die- rhe continuous development o: all countries. and permit the pey- ment through processes of trade consonant with the welfare of nil countries." At the outset of hie address, the Secretary of state commented that a good part of the United States’ foreign trade this vear wou‘d be in "the tools of self-defence" and remarked that this trade would be RONICLE “futlle" ft the goods produced did not reach those for whom they are ndled. "We are n hracticei people," he continued. ' en we set ourselves to e tack we finish it. we have eet ourselves to the ma; of annlng and supplying those whose success- ful defence is vital to our security. I have said it before and I repeat: we will not permit this purpose to be frustrated. We will find a. way to insure that the weapons pouring in over greater volume from our factories will reach the hands which eagerly swat them." Repeatedly. as he went on, Hull stressed that the policy of aid to nations resisting aggression is prim- ariiy for the defence of the United States which is not, he said, safe from attack by reason bf geo- graphy. In saying that there must be no internal division, Hull said "we must devote our whole energy to essential tasks." “Delays in meeting full schedules of production of essential military supplies, whether caused by busi- ness complacency or by strikes, can and should be avoided. for they gravely endanger the safety of the nation. “We believe there can be creat- ed a. safer and more prosperous world," he said in conclusion. "We have the tools-the resources, the brains, the hands—with which to help make it such. But first the tide of force must be turned back. Once that is done, we and other nations can xe-establish an open, co-operative economic life in which trade may increase, economic wel- fare may grow, civilization may advance. and the peaceful and benevolent instincts of the masses of now prostrate peoples may once more flourish in the really worth- while ways of life." 38,000 ITALIANS (Continued from page 1) "without giving them conszdeiatlon" a. mesage from_L:.-Gen. Alan M. Cunningham, British East African commander, calling upon the Ital- ians to lay down the; arms in or- der to ensure protection of the Italian population. (Today. however, the Fascist high command apparently prepared the Italian people at home for the im- mlnent surrender of the Duke's forces by acknowledging that position was “becoming more diffi- cult, from hour to hour because of the scarcity of means. the losses suffered and the impossibility of carrying away and tending wounded!" The Middle East command the Kenya Colony border. Gonclar in the northwest. On Saturday home security minis- l l Middle East fronts Italian King’s Cousin becomes King of Croatia (By Richard G. Mnssock) (Associated Press Stall it riter) ROME, May l8—lAP)—-1n a. 10- new AXZS- created state of Croatia today re- ceived its fifth foreign dynastylmlln manuel named his 41-year-old cous- in. the Duke of Spoleto, as King Almone to wear the crown of Zvcm- imir. Designation of the tall polo-play- ouse of minute ceremony the 839 years when King Victor ing sailor Duke of the H Savoy was at the request of An Pavellc—who bears the title Poglavnik, Croat equivalent of his the said that in Southern Ethiopia oper- ations were progressing satisfactor- ily and a London report told of the capture of Adela, 145 miles south of Addis Ababa and 200 miles north of British troops have yet to take 11 medical care and Carleton And Vicinity Mar Mrs. T. Tel land, Hun Beach, Califor a, has arrive to spend the summer with her sister. Mrs. Stetford Mullins, ‘rryon. Mr. Wesley Maclitliokm who has been working in Halifax all winter was called home on Monday by the sudden death of his mother, Mrs George MacMicken, Cape Traverse Much sympathy is felt for Mr. Ar- thur MacMicken, Carleton, who was doubly bereaved on Sunday. May ll. 1 when his maternal grandmother Mrs. Newton Howatt, passed away at his home ln Carleton in the early Rev. ilr. Luther L. Young, Presbyterian Missionary ITINERARY Tuesday, May 20 morning, while his paternal grano- mother, Mrs. George MaicMlciocc, also passed away at her home in Cape Traverse the 53-53; right. Much sympathy is felt for M:- and Mrs. Wesley MacMicken, Cape. Traverse. in their double bereave- ment. Besides the sudden death of. Mr. MacMickenls mother on Sun- day, May 11th, they also mourn the‘ death of their infant daughter, who‘ was born May 10th and passed away l May 14th, just after her grandw mother's funeral. ‘ 1 After a long illness, which she, 'bore with cheerful patience and‘ christian faith, Mrs. Newton How-_ att passed peacefully to rest Sun- day morning, May llth_ at the home ‘, Alberion. W. M. S. 8 p.111 West Point .. . . . _ . . . . . .. 8 p.111 Wednesday. May 21 Summersldn . . . .. . . . 8 p.111. Thursday. May 22 Tyne Valley. W.M.S. 3 pan Victoria West . . . . . . . . . . pan Friday. May 23 Clifton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 pan Sunday. May 25 Murray Harbour No. ll a..m Caledonia . . . . . 3 p.rn Wood Islands 8 p.m. Monday. May 26 Murray Harbour So. 8 p.111. Tuesday. May 27 Belfast . . . . . .. 811.111, Wednesday. May 28 Montague. W.M.S. 3 p.m. Thursday- May 29 Canoe Cove 8pm. Friday. May 30 Brookfield 81mm. Sunday. June l lilnrshfield . ....... .. ll mm. Mt. Stewart Zion. Clftown . , of her daughter, Mrs. Stewart Mac- 1 Clip and save- Micken, Carleton. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Wilson and she was born in Hampton in 185B. After her marriage to Mr. Newton Howaut, fifty-eight years ago. she moved to Tryon where most of her life was spent. and where she became a. member of the Methodist Church over fifty years ago. She was a faithful and consistent christian. a kind and helpful neighbor and loving and. devoted wife and moth- er. There are left to mourn thezr loss three daughters: Margaret, Mrs. Harry Sobey, Searletown; Annie, Mrs. Stewart MacMicken. Carleton, with whom she made her home for a. number of years. and who nursed her tenderlv through her long ill- ness; Emma. Mrs. Maynard E-‘oy, Tryon, and two sons, Percy, in Try- on. and Benton in Hampton; also a number of grandchildren and two sisters, Emma, Mrs. Keir of Gran- ville. and Miss Ella Wilson of Hampton, to all of whom sincere sympathy is extended. The funeral, which was largely attended. took place on Tuesday. May 13th. There was a brief service at the home; the hymn Rook of Ages was sung, fol- lowed by the 23rd Psalm and a short prayer. At the United Church in Tryon the hymns sung were Nearer My God to Thee and Abide With Me. Miss Mary Muttart 5115f with much feeling a solo, No Burd- ens Yonder, Rev. Ward MacLean if Tiyon. who conducted the services both at the home and the church, i delivered a comforting message, tak- r ing as his text 1st Corinthians, 15: is, But. thanks be to God, which -givetl\ us the victory through our lLord Jesus Christ. The pail bearers Fall of Amba Alija would release‘ , . - . considerable Imperial forces to clean rlgrvsfllllvffjglsll T132155 Lgghk ‘Qglfi up the scattered points of resistance blee w‘ s Multan {and Nathan in EthlpplamllmdNprolil/ldxf reinforce-l Bell: She h.“ lam w resl ments or e ort rican and‘ lamlly plot hl Tl-yoh heslde the her l-Jusband who predeceased her nliie- in wen Years ago. Among those from a distance who attended the funeral of the 11:0 Mrs. Newton Howatt on Tuesday were the following: Mrsl Georpe Bell, Charlottetown, Miss Ella Wi- son, Mi". and Mrs. Warren Fergu- son. Hampton. Mrs. Hector Kier. Miss Annie and Mr. John Kier, and lVLr. John Falconer, Granville. Mrs. Harry Sobev has returned to her home in Sarletown after spend- ing the last two weeks with her sister, Mrs. Stewart MacMicken. Carleton. The sudden death of Mrs. Georgi! MacMlcken, Cape Traverse, after an illness of only two clayfl. (lime B! a, great shock to her many relatives and friends both in this vicinity and throughout the province. ADPBTWUY in her usual health, she suf ered an attack on Saturday and her con- dltlond becomingmilwlighilynliéfgfe- 52$ passe away . r - in spite of all the nursing 111185511X!!- a led by seasickiiess. We had 14-164-5-19-31. i THREE AIRMEN (Continued from page l) l l not acknowledged. , "We were then some hundreds of ' miles from land and decided to get ‘ as close as possible before our petrol ran out," he said. “We marle i! 800d landing about 100 miles from the coast. “All we knew was that Africa was somewhere to the east. There seem- ed nothing we could do about get- ting there. "Later in ttie day we had a brain- wave. We got out our parachutes find YXEBed them 8s sails. We took it in turn to keep watch with field glasses. The pilot was incapacitat- _ only sevfn cigarettes among the three of us Next day they sighted land. But the wind changed and started driv- ing them offshore. "We downed sail and tried tow- lng a. bucket as a drogue (a buoy at the end of a harpoonl but could not check our way. In the end we decided to take to the rlibbgr din. Ehy. “We loaded lt with distress flares. emergency flying rations, three pints of water, an axe, and iloor 1 mcoepted Prime Minister Church- l Duoe-ln a. glittering audience at Could 110- 9T l quiet and the Qulrinale. 1 ins dlspvsltm Sh“ W" h bk?‘ 3f Almost immediately afterward, helpful nfifihbm‘ ‘md ‘m ll m but three agreements were signed in the‘ 1V mlS-‘fd l“ the comilflmlf‘ 135's w-lll presence of Mussolini at the Palazzo 6596018113’ i" me ‘Wmfirl e he: be_ Venezia fixing Croatia's frontier andr be keenly felt. Surv hnilmnd. an establishing Within Italy's "imperial 5ldes he! sonowmgt “f5 Caljleww community" the economic and po-l three "'15- smwart °d Wesley m; litlcal status of the new Balkan the w“ ' “n kingdom which was split off from Yugoslavia in the first days of tne Axis 13,1114“, lnvaslon, number of gran children. also bWO Croatia's new queen is Princess‘ SiSiBT-S- MTS- Dmmm mu‘ Trycn‘ Irene of Greece. whose brother, MT5~ William B°meiimgqulfllyz1lfg King George If, is a fugitive on the (me bmilher- Mr- elm slmye’ island of Crete from the German Cflflemri- W “uuffdeav Twe lunelfal ansdh Italian larmlelsli. t Fl fgmillfltshvwlllslcleli‘ Y‘ ~ e came rom er home a or-i F ~ ence for the occasion but did nct Qd- W91‘ ma“ at he‘ hm“ l“ attend the ceremony. ‘niwerse °n Cape were lnrllely attend- . Wednesdal’. 1l\l/18l'liél£-', Hero is boards from the 1;“; as lsadqies The" we occur-a (i... camera hatch Dflthfi Wins lo make Eli sink. '5“ d8)‘ and uiglit we paddled on, steering ‘by Compass, Next morning, he continued, they saw land seven miles away. But the QIIISYIY bflgan to lose buoyancy and after four or five hours we were up to our knees in water." - "Suddenly we sighted something which looked like a destroyer so we fire off distress signals. It, sheared away and we realized it was really a native fishing boat. ‘Then anoth- er fishing boat came from me shore and picked 115 up," T119 Negroes aboard were British Asked what they wanted as a reward. the leader said he wished t0 have a certificate to show he had helped in the war. "We wrote out a certificate. and £1150 gave them canvas for new sails. rope. and £20, a small forum, fOr them," said the observer, Nazi bombs Cause 83,612 Civilian casualties LONDON, May 18 —-(CP) ;Nazi bombs have caused 83,612 civilian casualties in Britain - 35,’756 killed and 47.1356 injured- _from the time heavy air raids be- lgan last June through last month, 'it was announced Saturday, security ministry": figures for April showed a rise over the casualties for March. ,when the pace of aerial warfare laccelerated after the winter's lull. 'Il'e home The documents signed with Mus-l T719 9551"“ 5mg wgéidlttlele lull‘ 1M0 sollni pledged Croatia not to build: the 403% and m‘ any army. air force or naval bases a along the Adriatic. and gave assur- ance that Croatia will not build a navy. FRENCH-AMER. (Continued from page l) non. Rev. Thomas Goodwill. conducted the service. fifteenth chapter of Corinthians and o night anoe of Goclblrhguidlilnge m we“? llf . earers ' 1 cerning France and Germany and glllfsgviflelle A g, l? Messrs Rus§Ql in no Way affect relations between France and any other foreign gov- ‘ Cl; an Bur Ma»:- crnment, particularly the United fif§,§‘e‘},f‘l§{§,m,n,d.,.,, lhpelfhe Kirk SiP-WS- Cemetery at Cape Traverse-D These explanations appear to -____--—~ » have gone for toward calming ru- l more current in Vichy that the :' United States was ready to break off diplomatic relations, that all, Americans had been warned to be. ready to leave France On short‘ notice, and that Ambassador Wil- liam D. Leuhy would be called‘; beck to Washington quickly fori r- ultation and a "vacation." g The Vichy news and propaganda 1 _ agency declaring there was talk of 1 a British-American federation? under United States lendcrshlpl put out a story that if France had in air-conditioned comfort | by H19 CONTINENTAL LIMITED 111's proposal for a British-French: union last June “she might today ' be run not from London. but from Washington." and "we would end 1 up as the citizens of s Dominion . twice removed." ‘ DIRECT SIIVICI I0 others would give her, particularly from abroad. seems lnopportune," ' n14 the war-amen nonw- . l favorite of the deceased. PM?" Month by Mr. John Macléilh; took as his subject the rwe-nty-thirlfil Psalm. He said it is a Psalm for al f life-for the morning. noon and of life, There is that sling; read the l But the April figures still were short of the casualties for ' last September and Onto‘: 1- a-hcn Nfizi raids uvrre n! n ‘,- n (F‘"“‘ . Jr-ld Wounded September . . I'- 054 l0 .615 October ... . . .6f'l4 8.695 1941 March . .4.'.!5(1 5,557 April . . . . . . . ..6,0‘=5 6.026 Beswies the 6.065 reported kill- ed last month. the ministry said .61 per=ous $llll__\\'(fl'f_j\1l$§ll'\Z and were believed to be dead. Among the deaths were those of 2,912 men, 2.418 women and 6R0 rl-ild- ren. FlfQv-five were "unclassified." : As announced officially, the monthly totals follow: . Month Killed Woundei ‘;.lul_v i940 25s 321 August 1.075 1,000 ' September .954 10,615 October 6.334 8.695 November 4.588 6.202 December 3 .793 5.044 January 1941 1502 2.012 February 789 1,068 March 4.259 5.557 April 6.065 6.926 FOREST, Ont. May lil-Lleut. William H, Carter, 25. a. member of the United states army air corps } from Selfridge Field. Mlch., suf- "j ferecl fatal injuries. and two other American airmen from the 1n an automobile accident “Whine? l alonehleh qlillllllflfidld to ' wlzzgxcvlwullrlllvagu day night, ke ecsons w c se cons ers J . .1 l. .24. the compatible with her honor and "”"°"‘"' "“'°“" .,._,,§‘§“°l.§,‘o,,_.,‘1,“?,'{,‘,, an; her interests. and advice which saynla General Hospital. Lieut. Max Siuhbs. 23. l, hospital. some station were injured. one seriously. 11987 ‘his Lambton County town Satur- sirffercd bruises and cuts but was able to leave the I 1 l l | I l I