T - WESTERN GUARDIAN ‘QINTIZ In. John Pond. ll Church Street-Phone ll! _ IUMMBRSIDI and I'll-NU! COUNT!‘ . r rlptlouo Advortlllnl should bo loft with In. Pond. b. bought daily of my of tho folio otoroo III Guru“ m” Suuunoroldo: w" i” u,“ wom- ltroob. Gouriioo Drlltltoro. Water SIIIII, Toronto l" Wotoe sum. nun unmet. or ai-mvuu sum. ln will be dolivorod to my homo ln Summoroldo by m M, n u per no; or lw per week. Phone us for this oervico or ‘Maui- ordci- to tho boy responsible for dcllvorleo on your route. i “ma. lo rooorvod for IIII ol dgIOI-lli trailer. . ndvortllll; of o 5'13"“- W‘ "L23: ma; Do lnoortod oi I -—-— —FRE5 , :5” In,‘ “u,” "Him i; Bram“. l! CEMENT order érolveziit == -’I‘URNIP HOES and garden vELofEp with w. tools, all kinds in stock uzgéilégltsapigaylor Drug 00., Ken- iurwll- at Bruce's. 3. —»ATTENDING RETREAT -V€n. " ind and l in ta - kfftbdrggété? D a 6':5'gl' _BKICK< Lime. Cement obtain- lliie at Elli" 5- 6'15- ~~ "r ruoros 24 hour rrgéhligsenprices. s“ Elllllfl" in r emctsrrrrrfrsirz. KENSINGTON POLICE COURT Em rveok a numberof youths in E. Town of Kensington were Draught before Stipendiary Magis- w ,1, F. Profitt by Constable J. Eadie; or the R.C.M.P. unit at suunrerside. charged with breakinB “fie a number oi glass windows in Quin vacant houses at or n68!‘ ggfisington. The defendants were ‘owid guilty by the court. Fines [ere lfnposcd with assessed damillf?‘ g and costs in each case and in default of payment a. jail sentence "as glVCll thc youths which would ‘gfle as a lesson for their future conduct. 4am r0 REST -"I'he funeral grrices for Mr. Albert Boswell were M on Saturday afternoon and were atleirtled by H "tree number d friends from all parts 0f the Pm- nm, 'I'1rci'0 was a service at 1.30 mm his rate residence on Central street, s's e, which was conducted b, my, c. Cook of the Baptist dmmii, assisted by Rev. G. R. Sul- livan, "me pallbearers were: Mes- us. E. P. Foley, George Harry! George Callback, Hugh Hannah, A1- iied Groom and Peter White. In- lenient was in the family plot at the Baptist Cemetery at Marshfield hshort service was held in the Baptist Church at Marshfield. old friends acted as pallbearers. Rev. c W. Cook. assisted by Rev. Mr. Nicholson look the service there.- C -ilflSSl0N BAND CONCERT — A very delightful concert was pre- ienteii bv the Mission Band of the s" imerside Presbyterian Church rreck in the church hall. Foll- iitlllii is the program: Chorus, ‘Junior Workers"; Recitation, "A for‘; Remark", Shirley MacDonald: one; w had My Hands this “Jesus H5115 Shine", Mary Roy Tiuton llliSlllrleV MacKay: Recitation. ‘i iiile {grigersh Neill Wager; esus ves e . ane or- ao Recitation, "Mission Bands“ kin Hopkirk, Georgena MacKen- trend Joyce MacDonald; Duet. ‘ii 'ior Jesus", Catherine Mac- hila and Joan Baker; Recita- fou, llcrclds", John Verwolf and luri lilacKenzie; Recitation, "Lov- lz and Giving" by John Mac- alight; RficltatioJn, "Oué gifts’ bcyl n Matt ew, can H 6r Rn gtherlncwhMacléajrlanegndmosgi 0111s,“ i r ng’; es: - inng; The Igleng-S AIRS. WJI. CAMPBELL VISITS PSIDE WORKERS — Mrs. W. H. pbell, National Chairman of Red Cross Women's War Work led the Red Cross Workers in merside on Sunday afternoon. John E. Campbell head of the ' r Cross Council for Prince Coun- lntmduced Mn. Cam bell to the " - Mrs. Ernest Mil , president thc S'Side Red Cross met the dis- t. islicd visitor at the Town H811 cordially welcomed her. Mrs. pbeil congratulated the Red workers of Prince County for irplcndid contributions they have Me to the boxes for English "lit-n and children; also for their abic contributions to all other ones of Red Cross work. She iced the great need for clothing lhe bombed areas of England. l1! to the tremendous shortage clothes in England, mainly d‘ 5th: rationing of clothes. Eng" {it were able no longer to give l cast on clothes to the chari- le institutions. Mrs. Campbell Smkc of the shortage of wool -- the need of conserving it for _ work. Sho asked that all Red "illkers oo-operate with their ‘ lttccs to use the wool given i-hcm for the special purpose that liflsintendcd for. If they had H] Rircn to them for gloves. l1 mnkc gloves; if for socks then M socks. It is only in this way the shortage of wool be over- " She felt that the women in “unify are doing a splendid for their country 1n the many I" ind bales of wcrk thcv have v libuted for overseas. In the late ‘ H Mrs. Campbell drove to -° 8- r‘. 1'. s. and visited the ~ "RI there, 81ml of th ghflholfnan homestead for tea “"11"! Mrs. Campbell left l‘ mtlllllll! by plane for " tori-s. NOTICE M“! 10 the recent Federal ‘ "llllli ruling prohibiting re- fill buttermilk In cream con- hnldiendcra will be received by "fllllrd up to 6 p. m. Wed- imn’ 3""! 17. 1912 for patrons axaenlliilrcrltiuc Ibrlaldfllxll 8h 0n Do n; I- altf“ "lullr price per hundred "ml! "lllllred weekly. xrusmm-or: panama ASSOCIATION w- ll- Deloney. Secretory. 0-13-81. Archdeacon G. R. Harrison, S'Slde left Monday morning for Clrtown to attend a retreat for the Angli- can Clergy of Prince Edward Is- 31- land which is being held at Daivey. Rev. Mr. Ellis of Halifax will be the speaker-S. -AI.BERTON COURT - Magis- trate Darby held Court on Friday at Alberton and heard the follow- ing cases. One case cf ion a- Enmst a. _man from the vicinity of Tignish fined $10. and costs. A case flkalnst a. party for consuming fine $5. and costs. Another case against a party charged with the possession of beer fined s25. and costs. A man brought. in on a similar charge sec- cénd offense fined $150. and costs.- —S'SIDE NURSE PHOTO- GIMPHED WITll ROYALTY - Miss Andrea Dalton. eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dalton, Sum- merside, sent home a, d Weekly" dated May‘ 8th, 1942, which she is shown in the ward of a Canadian Military Hospital some- where in England with the Duke of Kent. who is talking to one of the patients. The Duke is talking to L—Cpl. J. E, Hudson of Winnipeg. Nursing Sister M. Andrea Dalton is standing at the head of the pa- tlent's bed, across from the Duke- The magazine is published in Lon- don specially for Canadians.--S —A. R. P. COMPANY PARADE ——Men of the Summerside A. R. P. company held a parade on Friday night after their usual meeting. They were wearing their gas masks part of the time, Many interesting citizens watched the turn out. The A. R. P. organization is now fully organized and are fully prepared for any emergency. Cards have been delivered to householders, which when completed will give a full census of the town and what each person is capable of doing in an emergency-s —PATRIOTIC CITIZENS~Mal- peque is always well to the front in patriotic matters and the following news item will prove the truth of this statement. Mrs. Ralph Beairsto who had charge of the collecting fcrthe Red Cross campaign says she was very grateful to receive from the men who bad. charge of the plebiscite vote in the Malpeque district. the salaries for that dav as a contribution to the Red Cross campaign, as far as Mrs. Beairsto knows they were the oniy men to do this. Charles Woodslde. poll clerk, gave $4.00; Harold Champion. poll officer. $7.00; Charles Iockhart $22.61. $1.90 payment for rent of hall was also handed to the Red Cross. Mrs. Frank Bealrsto and Mr. Clem Crafen typed the list free. their money oln to the Red Cross campaign. A toge her a. very tidy sum was realized-S —EXI-IIBITION 0F NEEDLE- W0li|(—Tlie pupils of St. Mary's Convent held their annual exhibi- tion of needlework this week. The many visitors who look forward to this annual event spoke highly o! the work done by the children this year. The senior grades had o. very beautiful display of exquisite altar linens with very fine hem- otitching beautifully dune. Grades six and seven also showed thci. skill in hemstitching with some very lovely linen chair sets. Grade 5 had a lovely display of embroid- ered pillow slips, a credit to little girls of 10 and 11. Grade 4 made pretty embroidered aprons, the dainty stitching showing up on the fine cambrie of the apron. Grade 3 had some lovely aprons in plain colors, made with plain stitches, which showed painitakiirg work. Pretty little handkerchief bags were the choice for grade two and very lovely they were too in dainty pastel shades. Grade one had some very pretty pieces of needlework done in outline stitch. ‘The small boys were not forgotten and they excelled in a realistic model 0f a fishing harbour, with tiny boots. mode by the boys; a tiny wharf with lobster traps, lighthouse and boat house. It was all very com- plete with harbour master and in these war times. a sentry on guard: there was also a number of hobby horses on display made by the boys. Out outs and crayon work added to the attractive display-S. -_-_____._. Personals -Miss Brown, Superintendent of the Prince County Hospital left on Saturday morning for Montreal 1c attend the annual meeting of the Nurses Association of Canada. —Lieut. Wm. Arneti. has arrived in Summerside to spend a short leave with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Arn regiment. ett before rejoining his —Mrs. A. R. Brennan has return- ed to her home after a short visit with her sister, Mn. Sutherland ot Chlpman, N. S. - a —'I‘he Mine Glen MocNelil Muriel Infurgey, and Uno Murray were recent visitors to their homes in Ohm-y and Badeque. —M‘rs. fl Archibald has re- turned to her in Dover. N. H.. after visiting her father, Mr. C. lid- Wlrd Sift-ml. B'Bide.-S. ____________ NEW TYPE Ol‘ HUT LONDON-(CD-A new ty of hut for servicemen is made o wood shavings and sawdust mixed with cement lain! a minimum amount OI lioOi ind tknhor II M19901". \\\Ii|.' <,iiili\\i\ l/irl.iitli-- 'U.\( ‘\ IIHRT t 3W. FIRE“ WRIGHT - IICHRRU Culwlfll '___ Dlrociliiiryylllllkll vmcn , bum-m n aura umo Firfurn. m. Also short subject Shows at 3 — 7,— 9.10 SUMMERSIDE TELLS OF (Continued frogpgge i) bloomed swiftly. The turning wreckage crashed into the water. The fire turned to thick black smoke Lt. Cmdr. Jorgensen who shot down the plane, called his shots for the whole fleet to see. and delivered as he promised. Just An Incident All this was just an incident in the broader battle picture. It hap- pened the morning of May 7 while 76 planes from our nest were in the air speeding toward a Japa- nese carrier force that had been located at dawn 175 miles north- east of us. . . During the afternoon of May 6our air scouts located tire first of the Jap pincers fleet. It was 250 miles northeast of what then was our positions and was described as two big carriers, four heavy cruisers and a dozen or more destroyers. This was the flcet sent to hold the Jomard passage at the southeastern tip oi New Guinea. Rear Adm. Fletcher, in command of the task force, at once turned our force and steamed hard to be in position to hit the Japs the next day. Locate Japs Off before dawn the morning of May '7, our scout; did nct find the enemy for some hours. Shortly after 8 dclock, liowcvcr, they made contact. The Japs had split up during the night and our planes found only one carrier. three heavy cruisers, and six destroyers. The United States air fleet stalking the Japanese consisted of 24 torpedo planes, each iviili one heavy torpedo; 36 scouts and dive bombers each with one 1.000-pound bomb or one SOC-pound bomb and two IOO-pound bomb; and l6 fighter planes to deal with Japa- nese defensive and scout plane pa- trols. Their course took them along the northern edge of the island of Tagula, then north past the east- ern tip of Mlslma. Ln-Cmdr. Ham- ilton, leading the dive bombers, picked out the Japanese 50 miles away. Visibility was perfect, the sky clcudless and the white wakes of the ves els showed as silver streaks on the emerald-blue sea. Go For Curler "We came over at 13.000 feet." LL-Cmdr. Bob Dixon related later. “Enemy fighter patrols were in the R5 air, but the barely reached us n we eased i’ into our vertical dives. These fighters came rignt on down with us in a terrible free- for-all mlxup, staying with us right to the water. Naturally we went for the carrier first. . . Fighter pilots sitting up at 18,000 feet with the heavy dive bombers reported that Dixon's dive was per- fectly made and his 500-pcund bomb hit the Jap carrier deck amidsnips. Behind hl.rn Ensign P. ° F, Neely dropped his 500-pounder near the carrier's port side. The blast of Neely's bomb tossed two bumlng planes over the side. Lieut. J. P. Leppler’; scout bomber was attacked as the dive steepened to the vertical. His rear gunner. John Liska, shot down two Zeros that closed to point blank range, firing their cannon and .25- oaiibre machine guns as they came. Leppler saw a Zero on the tail of the scout ahead of him and veered in the dive enough to get it in the sight of his front guns. This Zero never came out of lLs dive and crashed into the sea. Lepplers 500- pound bomb missed the carrier and he immediately zoomed away to make a second dive from 4.000 feet on a Jap cruiser. One l00-p0und bomb hit the cruiserl; stern. The scouts’ dives had taken sway the enemy fighter protection and the heavier dive bombers, tot- ing their 1.000 unders, were un- hindered in the r attacks. The few seconds required for the first at- tack had given the accompanying Japanese vessels time to fan out. presumably to give the carrier manoeuvring room. All the Japa- llese vessels put up o thick anti- aircraft fire. The heavy dive bombers and the torpedo plane ivsaults were co- ordinated and the Zeros which had followed the scout bombers swept off in an effort to tum aside Lt.- Cmdr. Jimmy Brett's torpedo planes now closing in. Brett radio- ed for fighter assistance. Lleut. Baker and his wingrnan. who had just shot down a Jap seaplane fighter, bored in. Thefy dropped two Zeros and cleaned of the rest. . . In lpllt Seconds All this action was taking place within .rplit seconds and actually happened in a shorter space o time lion it now takeovto dell-ll it. Cmdr. Brett. whose torpedo bombers were close to the water. took advantage of smoke and flame clouds already pouring out of the carrier u they approached. They swung in at m angle l0 tho smoke ocreened them from moot of the glrruiser and destroyed anti-aircraft e. This enabled thc TBDh (torpedo bomber Douglas) planes in his squadron to soore hits with 13 cf ' their "tin fish to 0f minutes later. In all. l6 of the 1.- 000-pound bombs, three 500 pound- ers, and l2 torpedoes hit the ship. Three planes failed to return 1mm the fllshb-all scout bombers. ‘Ilwo were believed destroyed by anti-aircraft fire. The third, flown by Liltlll- Qnlgley; was. landed on Russel. easternmost island of the Louisiades. Quigley and hi; rear ilrutnner were rascued several days a er. In o. lull I counted up ti“ day’; results. We had stink a large Jap- anese carrier and a cruiser and knocked 23 planes out of the air. Besides this number there were alto the Japanese planes that went down aboard their carrier. ". Th blasted flio Touch. Fanatical m In our enemy we recognized a Wish. fanatical foe Whose courage and cunning could not be dis. ‘minted. Our forces appeared about Equal. It was a question of who would get the first blow home, we had “fin What planes could do to a carrier in the day's action. To- morrow would come the world-s first battle between two strong carrier forces. each knc-wing “I the others presence. History was in the making a5 We KFODQd through thfiapitch tbiaitzk night. y nex so '11 tel Lelrlngtonis lastybavgtle. l of the R.C.A.F. List 0f Casualties OTTAWA, June 15 -(CP) - The Royal Canadian Air Force in its 291st casualty list of the war today listed the names of one man killed on active service overseas and six llll$lllg after overseas air operat- lOilS- The overseas section of the also included the names of two previously reported missing now reported killed on active vice. and five previously missing and now for offic poses presumed dead. Five men were listed as kil'ed on active service in Canada and one as drowned in Canada. Following is the latest list of C55. list men and ser- reported ial pur- ualties with official numbers and next of kin:- OVERSEAS Killed on active service: Watt, Thomas Fair. Po. Ji5347, Mrs 'I‘. F. Watt (Wife) St. Cathar- ines, Ont. Previously reported missing. now reported killed on active service: Drilke. Donald Frank, Sgt, 4886- 94, Mrs. J. T. Drake (mother) Tor- onto. MacI-lae. George Kenneth, Sgt, B72714. F. T. MacRae (father) East Rvyalty. Queens county, P. E. f. Missing after ab- ommgiom, Hiazin-wn. Lloyd George, PO. .f - 5279, C. G. Higginson (father) Mon. trenl West. Que. McEwcn. Alan James, 110., r5037, gig. McEwen (father) High Prairie, Jeffrles, Eli-nest Norman, !l'lt. Sgt, 8.54831, Mrs. B. N. Jeffi-ies (wife) Laval, Que. M65111. Edmund Thomas, , Sat. B58817, Mrs. E. T. McGill (Wife) West Kildonan, Man, Pethybridae. William John, sgt, 6320. E. J. Pethybridge (father) Elm Grove. P. O. Man, l-lwtim. Hm-y. Room. w. o. Lawton (father) Dallas. Tex. Previously reported missing. now for official purposes presumed dead: Miller, Arthur Ieo rd, P0., . 600, Mrs. James MIliIer (mothtg) Lachlne, Que. Gilllley. John Frederick, Sgt, my. 921$, DEF. Gauley (father) Tor- Newsome, Chester Douglas, ,, 11.70069. Mrs. Isaac Newsome (moth- er) Brantford. Ont. Plflildlgiifpf, Dlgnald‘ Moir, Sgt, g. , . . l t f Pentium‘, B. one Orpe ( ather) Yeatcs, Gordon Richardson. Sgt... B69759. Mrs. G. T. Yeates (moth- er) 'I‘0ronto. Condo Killed on octlvo oervloo Dolley, Arthur Beverley, P0.. J81- 59, Mrs. A. B. Policy (wife) Brand- on, Man. McCutcheon. Ralph Gordon, cpr, 11133661, S. J. McCutcheon (father) Toronto. Light. Alan Scott. lac, 3.107483, g. s? Light (father) Battleford, a . Gibson, Eric William, Acting Lac. FXBBBM. C. B. Gibson (father Bur- ton-on-Trent. Patterson. Henry Scott, Acting Lac. VXB8831. Mrs. H. Patterson (mother) Glasgow. Drowned: Adams, George, Ac.. Rmlllsfmel, Mrs. M. McIntyre (mother) Moss- lsids. County Ant/rim North Ire- an . oLlllI Toronto Priest In Jap Hands TORONTO. June l5 — (CP) Monsignor John M. Fraser, 6 . founder of St. Francis Xavier Miss- ion Semlnary here, is believed im- prisoned by the Japanese in Pek- ng. it was announced today. Auth- critics of the seminary, who are trying to get news through the Vat- ican, have not heard from Ms . Haser since the fall of Manila where he had been stationed. A native of Toronto. Mswr. Fraser spent 20 years in Chink as a miss- ionary before returnina lo Canada to found the mission hero. IHSUHHIIEE IiLl. truss RALPH MIITTAR Suuzmcrside Seamen Charged In Montreal Court MONTREAL, June 15-—(CP)— Seven seamen were brought today before the Recorder's Court in con- nection with a waterfront free-fcr- all in which a city policeman was stabbed Saturday. Three were held without ball and four were ordered to pay $25 each for damage to clothes and property of Constable Odessa Malo, 24. All were charged with “unlaw- fully and wilfully causing damage to property. tearing to pieces a SIM of clothes worn by and belcngini! to Odessa Malo. constable of the city of Montreal." The fighting was between long- 5h0remen and seamen from the merchant navy manning D001. and occurred on Place Vigei". Condition of Constable_ Malo. knifed in the abdomen during the altercation. is reported satisfactory bv hospital authorities. Irish Win New Laurels For Valor (By FOSTER BARCLAY) (Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON. June 15——(CP)—_SUr6 its the O'Sheas and the OBriens, the Fkgens, the Finucanes and n host of others ivlro leit_ liearths in Rosconiinon or Llminerick or Der- haps Tipperary that are after Bil’- ing new fame to Irish valor. While Eire observes strict neutral- ity. her sons nevertheless are fight- ing for Britain wherever Brilqni fight, And it's a grand lob they re doing, too. . In Eire the newspapers and r5415” seldom giver. me people iilLVlllililZ more than information contained. ill official coinmuniques. Officially- for instance, the people have never been told that 100,000 Irishmen are serving» with British forces ill/Tl countless number's ‘are playing civil- ian roles ill Briiains war effort. But if Eire is neutral there is no real secret about who she is’ neu- ti-al against-not with the Oshraz and the O'Brien; and Finucanes sailing and figurine and fiyirs l" Bi-iraiiti 33d ttheii- fame known from Bray o an ree. , _ In this war three _nati\'9§_ 0f Elf‘? have ivon the Victoria Cross. Scorcs of men from over the Irish gee. wear the Distinguished Service d 1- der, the Distinguished Flying M9 Pl - the Military Cross, the George Cross and the George Medal. Not a man or women. boy 0i‘ R11‘!- in Eire but knows the fire and brimstonc tale of Cant. Filfarté Fegen of the Jervis Bay W110 ‘We his command and his duty 8nd l fight against overwhelming odds better than life. Irishman were nev- er told officially however. that Fea- an was born at Ballmunty. County Tlggf-iltérhegen was awarded the V. c, posthumously. The Jervis Bar was an armed merchantman sunk Nov. 5, i940 while protecting ll- w!" voy. Anti - British . Move Coming . In India Prooton Grover Assocfiytcd Press Staff Writer Indi , June 15- (Avgyla-Eiegigiidas r2. Gandhi, l- gain the little priest-Poilllrlrli- d” claxed wdfli’ n5 5°01‘ wxlltlishmuxm a movement organist Bl’ m in India iiléilat "will be felt M’ e wliilfinvlfil the statement in an in- terview in a little whitewashed mom in this barking southern India town near which Gczidlu ‘lives mum 0c m; time on l w!‘ o! ranch surrounded by I 001011! folclifliecfhi declined to outrne the nature of the PlCPQ-‘l-‘d mm/emiem" While he was both mys-ter cu-i mu mystical in dlscussiri! t!!! new movement Gandhi reiterated he is not waiting until the war i its now. enlflii Zgidwfiil? IFSIlrcedcm for In- dia were kranted by Blllaln- he would be willing to have British and United Slates forces remain in India to fight the M08119"- Asked What, would be the next move in event that a freedom de- mand were i-ejecied-sclns-thing he agreed ls by ffirdtthe greater‘ like" _ e :- nhggdwidebcl: move which will be i, b in wh ‘e world. “Li; ‘I-navenctfinicrfere with i116 movement. of British trofP-S but it is sure to engage Britflsh atten- tl . qfh would he wrons of them w r; i. my proposal (for immed- ia lndg-pendgnffll, and that In- dia should remain slave in order that Britain may Win or be able to 1 . damn ch nawceipi, that degrading "1 lcannot it on. posfndia free and independent will play a prominent part in defendinB (Irina. Today I do not ih nk she l5 rendering any real hell) t0 (jflna, we have followed a non- embarrassment policy so far. We wili follow it even now but we cannot allow tire British govern- ment to exploit it." ANTI-GAS TRAINING HALIFAX. June l5 - (CPI Three courses of instruction in an- t|-ga< training are io bevln in Hn‘i- fax lmmedietelv. Maior O. R. Crow- ell. city civilian announced today. defence director. MMMEQRSIDEI GUALRDIAON AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONVIE Missing German Prisoners Located 4:31pm, out. Juno 16 —- (Qggrwb German’ prisoners m wu- flrgt, reported to have 65081990 whiie en route from a northwestern oiiiario prison ramp w I "P1"- wero discovered hldini ill u" ‘Mn int night, it was learn here Th. prisoners, llric Schmidt, l2. and Mai-tin Maennick._25. of the Nazi air force, were missed Bl 11 fl- m. Saturday when other German prisoner; were being loaded on l. train near here for transfer t0 an- other camp. ‘Ihe train was held on g, siding for three hours while an unsuccessful search was made in dense bush country by ilililrdi» Then the train proceeded without the missing Schmidt and Maennick. Whllg Ontario provincial police searched all eastbound and west- bound freight and passenger trains and members of the Veterans Guard of Canada were posted at point-o in the district, the men were found in hiding. A prison camp spokesman said he believed the men went into hid- ing While waiting for a more oppor- tune time to make a getaway. ll-ILF. Planes Sink German Minesweeper‘ LONDON. June l5—(AP)—_Pilols of the Royal Air Force Darticillflled in a successful attack icclay onha German niinesweeper WINCH. vrus left, rsinking oif the Nfitheilnllfi ‘mrilié Air Ministry said Spitfires dipped so low the 011°“ WW4 59° the sweepers guns fore and aft They were silence after the first attack. , . German shore batteries tried to drive the planes away. but “e16 unable to prevent a second swteD which fédltlSfd a big explosion in the stern o e vesse- Light enemy craft and barge-i, U“ the French coast and in Belklllnl also were reported attacked. Training Youth 0f Settlements Like Commandos (By ERIC SANDERSON) (Canadian Press Staff Writer) WILDWOOD, Alla, Julie l5 - (CPI-Town iouilis ranging in age from 1n w 17 years have formed an unofficial gonp for military training and have chosen the name Alberta Boys’ Commandos. The boys are taught bimhcraftt. gkirmishing, signalling. shooting. first aid, cooking. imitation.- of ani- mals and bird calls. physical train- iirg and squad drill by J.M. Gilroy of the Veteran Volunteer Reserve here. Parades are held twice a month and when sciiocl holidays start a standing camp will be set up in this settlement, 70 miles northwest of Edmonton to which the boys may come at any time. The boys do not wear uniform; and they buy their own ammunition. The lads often watched the veteraru; of Wildwood practice guerilla tactics and when they found they could not drill with the men the boys’ unit was formed. Mr. Gllroy said he called the unit the Alberta Boys’ Commandos be- cause "lt is apt: it ties up with the most colorful phase of t e present war and the initials ‘AB ' are un- forgetable and can also stand for America-Brltlsh-Canada." Mostof the boys in the unit are of Anglo- Saxon origin. Gllroy told them ho was o "gun crank" and while he was not trying to make soldiers out of’ them. he wanted strict discipline at all tunes. Good lllflemon Some of the boys have ,2: rlflu of their own and the others use a spare gun of Mr. GiIrOy's. Only those of I4 years and older are al- lowed to “bear arms." Any cadet missing two parades without a. rea- sonable excuse is d for a month. Marksmanship of tho youths. is 800d. The targets are small pieces of cardboard cut in various shapes two inches by one inch, worked on a ‘revolving rod at 20 yards, which is life size” for approximately 250- 300 yards. Five shots are allowed each boy. Percentage of shots is be- tween 40 and 60 per boy which is "very good for new hands," 531d M}, Gilroy. It is planned to leach the boys about night travel. difference be- tween nlght and day sounds and other detail in which guerilla or commando troops are trained, M11 Glllfly. a school cadet in Northwest India at the age m‘ 12, said cadets used to be pitted against Pathans and Ghurkas for sham fights in India. In the First Great War he was captured by the Ger. mans at the retreat from Mons but wcnped and joined the Black Watch in Palestine. He came to Canada in Mauritius? Children Killed WINDSOR. Ont.. June 15 --(CP) --A Tecumseh mother and three of her 10 children were killed instantly today when their car was struck by a Canadian National Railways train at a crossing a mile and a half west of Tecumseh. e victims were: Mrs. Balllarseon. 50; Rene, l6. to have been the Ernest Jr., i4 and Francis, four. A fourth child was unaccounted for but was not believed to have been in tih-e crash. although coiriiirr- for William Haddnn io'd provincial police he beliwcd f‘ve or six per- IODB I01’! 1h IP18 0LT. Blanche be'ieved driver of the car; . talians Claim» Undies not chonqed Sea Battle every day In Second Day Are a friahlfvl ME, (FE-Tatum niuad- qive4|wav caste), June 15 - (AP) - Italians claimed toni t o violent battle raged. throng its second day in the Mediterranean as alian aircraft attacked "remaining enemy units of one of two large British convoys which the high command asserted had lost two escorting cruisers and a destroyer and suffered damage to an aircraft carrier. a battleship and three other warships. (British quarters in London made no comment on the report which came entirely from Axis sources.) The convoy, declared by Ii Gior- nale D'Ita.han to be the biggest ev- er sent into the Mediterranean by Britain and said to consist of about 30 units--a battleship, two aircraft curlers. four cruisers, l0 destroyer! and 12 to l4 transports-was be- ltleved bound for Alexandria or Mal- a. The bi gest art has been forced rom the attempt to to turn ack pass through the iOO-mile wide passage between Sardinia and Sicily at one side and Tunisia on the other, Ii Glornale Dltalian claimed. Italian government quarters said nothing concerning the second con- voy, but some sources said they be- lieved it was or Alexandri Prom dawn to dusk Sunday. o special communique claimed, Italian torpedo planes. dive bombers, fight- ers and bombers made five different attacks upon the eastbound convoy. Twenty Italian planes were lost and l5 planes which rose from the two defending carriers were shot down, the Italians claimed. The high command summed up the convoys losses as follows:- Sun :— TWO Cruisers. a destroyer, four other ships. Badly damaged:-- A battleship, an aircraft carrier, tnrio cruisers, a destroyer, four other s ps. British Air Raids Rouse Goebbels Threatens To Extermin- ate Jews In Reprisal For Attacks. NEW YORK, June li-(AIfl-‘Phe German radio broadcast last night a full version of an article by Pro- paganda Aiiiiistei- Paul Joseph Goebbels. published by the weekly periodical Das Reich, in which lie threatened extermination of Jews in reprisal for British air assaults upon Germany. The broadcast, heard here by CBS, quoted Goebbels as follows: "We (intend our very skins in this struggle for national existence and we use those moans that are being forced upon us by our enemy, We have never doubted that through aerial warfare some and even heavy damage could be done to us. "The question, however, remains whether this sort of warfare is suited l0 influence basically the military situation and whether the results Mr. Churchill hopes to get from it will actually be achieved to any appreciable degree. “It does not need any emphasis that the German civilian popula- tion, struck by this method of war- fare, has to suffer bitterly under the British terror. But London is mistaken ivhen it believes that the German morale could be broken by terror methods. It is a complicated and very expensive way of waging war, for both sides. but he who started it is responsible for it "It io the characteristic of terror that it can be broken only by ter- ror, while it would only be encour- liogeed and. increased by appeasement. rror as well as counter-terror de- mand sacrifices but they are in no comparison with those sacrifices which are to be made when one bows to tei-rorm. “Deplorable u it may be for a person sensitive to culture-and we count ourselves as belonging to this type which is slowly dying out in the world-to witness the loss of old traditions, historic landmarks and monuments of art, not only in Luebeck and Rosiock, but also in Bath, York and Canterbury, vre are got those who are to be blamed for "We have to defend ourselves against his (Chinchilla) method of warfare. And because we are de- termined to cormtcr it with the same oestial methods with which he tries to terrorize our people, he is doomed to failure." “ air war is, above all, a war of nerves. l-ie wages it in order to crush the morale of the German population in the areas LILYCHIQIICC bv air warn... "Tile sacrifices we have to make in this vvai" ivill one diiv lie reward- ed. Therefore, we have to make them, We try to revenge lllclll ill a, measure compatible with our en- gagements in a. vvorld-"wfic u'.’ll'.... "In this ivar the Jcivs are inn)"- ing _ll'l€ll‘ most crimnini game and they will have to pay for it with the extermination Oi their race throughout Europe and. maybe, ev- en beyond.... “We wage war against our enem- ies who threaten our most element- ary living conditions. In this war everything is at stake. Its sacrifices will once be balanced against thc greatness of the vicicr_v.... "Our enemies are still in a posit- ion to delay this inevitable devel- opment for a certain time. But this will make the course of events only the more inevitable, Here again thc slogan can be applied: what doesn't kill us, can oniv make us stronger." LONDON, June l5 —(('7I’) —- The BBC said tonight that in formation from enemy sources said German and Italian troops had launched a new offensive by land 1rd sea on long-be- sieged Leningrad. "The enemy even claims Io have succeeded in landing some troops behind iho Soviet Iincs in barges." thr- BB!‘ said. The attack was said lo be supported by artillery and bombers. west bound, from Suez a. flfl/l Smart fi-oclu will got you nowhere if tho undies beneath betray you with “undlo odor." Don't risk it! Never wear the same undies two days running or, our: as fate, they'll give away the fact you aren't very dainty. Stay popular! Join tho Lu: Dolly Dipper; and dip your undies every night, soon as you get out of them. Lux Whisks away odor. keep! undies dainty as new-keep: charm oafo. So nan fonlghl 7011/ w. A LEVER PIOIIUCT l I Food Stocks Seized In Transylvania BERNE. June 15 —(AP) — Dis- patches from Budapest, said today that Rixnanian authorities had sud. denly confiscated all the food stock! of Hungarian families livirg in numerous villages in that part of Transylvania still remaining under Rumanian sovereignty. Moreover, it was reported, tiho Hungarian minority has been noti- fied that those deprived of food stocks will not bo given food rat- ion carfis due July 10. Many of tho Hungarians were said to have been forced from their lands and homes. ___________ SALVAGI FOOD VALUI NUTBITIONISTS ADVIII _____ Bolvogo everything these days- fats and rubberprags and bon and don't forget to salvage fo value, authorities advise. Nutrition services of tho Depart- ment of Pensions and National Health point out that. the way to do it is to cook and prepare meals in such a. way that every bit of health protection will be got out 0f the food. Don't forget to save tho outer leaves of lettuce and cabbage. They are a. darker green and coarser in texture than the inner leaves but they are from 1O to 30 times richer in Vitamin A. so shred them and put thc-m into soup pot. And whfe icttiicc is under discussion it is vivorih remembering that leaf lettuce ls a better buy than head lettuce from the nutrition atandixiint. Potatoes can be a dependable source of Vitamin C but loo frequ- enllv 50 per cont of iiiis valuable quality is lost in thc cooking. Much of the Viimnlir C content can be served by cooking pntliioes iii their skins. This should be (lune no: only in baking irointof-s but in boiling ihcm too. Tlicy cnn be cooked in their DIN-WI: and “cocci jilsl be- fore serving or in the case of new ittiin. ‘Ilsll nipple like to eat the tender skins. All thc water in which vegetable! are cnnkcd should bc saved and put into lire- smip or added to the grnvv. Although the extra cocking des- troys most of the Vitamin C con- tent. which L< casiiy destroyed by heat. a certain amount of Vitamin B is retained. and oi course, 50 up» the l“llif‘l‘illS. Big Rubber Drive Launched In U.S. _____ - WASHINGTON Junc l5—(APl~ Bcv Fronts bnnriniz baskets of old rubber howls, housewives with dis- cnrdcd hot. Water bottles and farm- ers tntinr: old tractor lircs flnckcrl lo fillinrz stations tirrnnghont the United States today in a collection drive rlcsfqncd to lrcln offset Jap- an's blorvs at the United Nation: rubber supply. The campaign was slnrled on or- ders of Prerldent Rocscvnli. On its outcome mnv dcncnd thc qncslcn whcthcr a naticn-ivirlo SVRf-"lll cf rvcseliu" '"'i"iiing will be instituted to rave tires.