MAXIMS 07A 11cm: MAN ,_--_-— Ion," iiuerulun. Bu”. [hy soul with quietncsl. ‘l‘ 0955c "‘"‘""" “'""“EZ.'. .13’ m1 ightiil >Z'////’ The People's aper (lovers Prince Edwardilsland Like the Dew CHARIJOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1942 We cannot eflord to relax effort. MAXI MG OIL MERE MAN Io PAGES Annunl flnblcrlption Delivered. Ill-M B] llnllr P. I’ L, “Jflp to other Provinces nld IJ-l. flJt Middleton M§;',,?'fl‘,'.-.. 51m Writer ~ une 4 —(AP) -Brit- wilfitrlqhli three fight-ills SEY- h. igalnst the Nazi continent to- " 24 hwy; o1‘ ceaseless assault, er preparatlotts f0!‘ Lht? ' ~ - of perhaps 200 big ‘:5 amnvyqrt-ll Bremen l11 the 1 uuumer durkncss, COlliUlflhLlUS '~ d the Royal Nuvy land- mm-g of the invasion llnulogtie and lhv mthev . ~11 ‘Mm resort of In Iggy grumbling 1t bark valuable in- cvalurtiion by Alll"d = at u time when fut‘- fur the-future Allied t“; “Elk! being discussed 1n ‘ngtoh. mWake of Commandos . liél. gy brouil May, n the wake of the Com- 1105, ter; and light bombers u‘ norms the Chanel to u’.- urgets in the Pas De Con‘: .... -the Koulislt sky was fllird kg w 1 wave after wove tlll of .. . ‘Iiltl from the .- and Calnis. mutant on Bremen, although gpmccmparlson with the four- 1; "iictory raids" on Coloflllfl .. - called "extrcmey we 11 n all" informant He ‘ti ihema 111d propcrttonatel . l chcutaga to the crmvrlc No ». centre lo Nazi submur ce- .. erami a .lt manufacture as the larger Itahr attacks. Big ill-arcs Used The cltr was brightly" lit b?! flll-“JS heavily and tuethozllcally homb- Tlie R. A. F. lost l0 planes. 312mm, normally a city of 325- 0a m- bn!‘1\\\ 0i tlic W-rscr. ls - ' to ilaruburz: as a G0.‘- “e centre. It is r1 300- 110111 Erlglnnrl. < at Disppe, France, and fencmy nlrrlrcmes dis? direction oi ued on page '1. COl l) .S.Has Second Province-wide Test IAUFAX, J1me -i—(CP)—-N(>vn had its second province- ‘ prac re blackout of the war 111.11 l1 llqhts ordered dous- ltrlo minutes from Cape North 91W Sable. 111015 plrL, the lights-off s11;- wuaded smultaneously in all '~ and tovcns and l11 the lnrqer ' .'li1a rural areas are lllidfi‘ Rllnaaeilt rial blackcut, liming Events _g_ fov Nllllrr-p m gm. I win» pv! word column Show-Eldon l-‘rlday. 6-3-31. “Talkies-Sourls Monday. 6-3-31. "umkifls —mlvl-ontogue Saturday r-t on Dollar Bully." a-a-aif rahamis 55L: play in Freder- Hall. Friday June 5. 6-3-5. "bmcenlomy Plains 111111, ru- .June ath. Mtllview Orchrstarola.‘ 6- - . ,'d1"ii Hogs every Tuesday , . P M. at Five Houses. JfllSltl-f‘! » s. . 3,! ____ °i Cream Festival and Dance, H1“. Monday, June 22nd. , ___._ Bcace Lorn v11 Tu c ‘ 9111.’ Wcbgter‘: gchestfiuay‘ 6-5-221. figfuflllge sale Boyne L. 0. L 1 0n room Saturday. June 6 P- m- a-z-s-zt. me lo Bingo, Rustlco 111.11. “June 5th. 1n mid of boys - prizes. 6-5-11. "Klilkor no l-lall-——Ic_e cream and l, “(my night, June 9th. . 6 Orchestra, ‘you ““" wnRlver will present the Bantu? Lost- Church" in Bon- y“, lChux-eh, June 7th at - (i- kl“! 1102s as usual for the cmglrah-s‘ big: vourd chose ' '~' I. an an . . h -Emeral:i 5-6-‘7-1 -W-’I‘-M-tf A ~_-__. _ l, K129i!‘ nmnbcr of pigs want- Jmmgsflggoiititll ‘it M. ta; , v - a par or no ‘I m‘ 27 lbs. Knud Jorgcrtsen. '1 l‘ l4 '_"‘_'_ . m“ Dust of the Earth" Hm,“ Dlfllffrs in Mrhcntley ‘ misto wormwdfly. June l0 "- Thurs-day. June 11. 8-5- ll. Report Ready 0n llong Kong Investigation» OTTAWA, June 4—(CP)-ft was announced tonight from the office of Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King that the Prime Minister has received a copy of the report of Chief Justice Sir Lyman Duff on the ilong Kong expedition inquiry. A spokesman for the Prime Minister snlrl the report would be submitted‘ to the Governor- Gcneral for approval and that after approval was given, it would be tabled in the House of Commons. It was assumed from this that the report would be tabled tomorrow. M. J, Caldwell, C.C.F., House leader, had asked in the House today when the report would be made available. Defence Minister Ralston said then that the government was anxious to make the report available to the House as soon us possible. At the time he spoke, however, the report had not yet been received. I. 0. D. E. Annual Meeting Ends MONTREAL. June 4 — (C P) - Thc annual meeting of the Im- perial Order Daughters of the Em- Dire ended here today alter the de- legnbcs decided to petition the Dom- inion government to keep under strict. supervision" Japanese who are being moved inland from Brl. t1sl1 Columbia for security reasons. The resolution, presented by tl1e Ontario provincial executive, was accompanied by another from Al- berta urging the government to re- peal the act granting exemption front military service to certain struts on "such grounds as their re- ligious beliefs." Both were passed unanimously. The voting on resolutions was fol. lowed b the announcement on Wcrlnes ay's election of national of- ficers. in which Mrs. W. B. Horkins oi Toronto was rte-elected national president for the fourth consecutive time. The five-day meeting, attend- ed by delegates representing 40.000 I.O.D-E. taembers, then ended with r1 closed session of the new notional executive committee to select 15 ad. dltlcnal national councillors, The other councillors had been voted in- to office during Tuesday's sessions. The voting on resolutions drew considerable discussion from the delegates. The resolution on Japanese. ex- preslng fear that the Japanese may occupv positions by means of which espionage may be successfully curried on." asked that the Federal government "not permit them to oc- cent employment by private indi- viduals or enterprises. or to pur- chase property or otherwise estab- lish themselves in the other prov- inces of Canada to which they have been moved." . Chinese Press Urges Offensive Against Japan; Talk Of Jap Invasion Of Si beria. By Spencer Moon. Aseocluted Prose Staff Writer CHUNGKING, June 4 -(AP) - The three United States command- ers in southeast Asia gathered here tonight for war conferences with China's Gen. Oblong Kai-Slick e- gainst n background of press a - peels for the United states to ta e the initiative in an immediate lend. sea and sir offensive against Japan. To [nude Sibcrie! Interest in the meetlna wu heightened by Chlneee reports of new Japanese troop concentrations in Mnnchukuo. and the spread of speculation that the Japanese gen- erals may have decided at lost to try the etrenzth of Russia's armies in Siberia. Chinese circles said such a move would account for Japan's failure to follow up her eujlv successes by attempting invasion of Australia or n c. 04-11. 1 d! There was no immediate an- nouncement of the subjects discus- sed by Ohiang and the Americans. LL-Gen. Joseph W. Btilwell and. (Continued on page S, Col l) Eagle order by Hitler. U. S. Commanders ' Meet Gen. Kai - Shek .. ...,,,.».-...,_...... . .- Information ls Corrected} By Minister War Situation Last Night (H XII-Kl L. SIMPSON. Aleooilted Prefl War Analyst) Japan's air raids on the Dutch Harbor naval base, Unolaska, can be written off ea scouting forays on the basis of information so far available from Washington. They had none of the earmarks of an op- than to find‘ out what was going on at that . - ti f t JOIHt Canadtan-U- S. D9‘ airleritfialo upi-rlhlgbeogaiedgo or American attack on J11 an. That appears to be Lh Washington conolus n. Th f t that no fance Plans Put Into bombs were dro ped during” the second enemy fll gt overethaec base tends to confirm it. T e six-hour time lapse between t e two daylight eweepu also ltron§ly support-e the navy conclusion that the planes involved were Operation. i-—4_(GP) De launched rom a small ‘carrifr. UITAWA, June - ' fence Mlnister Ruiswxzrdzoya $0 0n! goo? 551:5 tggmggggéé 0155x151 emége bomber had not been described as ac ue a ' fédy giggles naval base at Dutch and Harbor. Alaska, correcting infor- ‘Muse {nation he gave the chamber earlier Th that, there three. h» - ~::*§s“'..":.::l=‘ men r - - fir»? $55315? Canadian and Un- cast in the United Stat . ‘ ited States forces on the west ' ' ma» w» w» WM we P" "" “""‘*.‘:.*.:r;:'*:.":t: 22.12.... Dutch Harbor must be of special interest to the Japanese. there remains any doubt as to Russia's future role in the Pacific war theatre. it must be oi heent interest to Tokyo, for Alaska. is an Aw r icon bridgehead for contact with Russia for joint operations against Japan when the time for that comes. the Dutch Harbor action. 9“ l“ “M” “m A; the House prepared to ad- journ at, 8 o'clock, COl. Rabi/On 5a . ld.-- "I should like to make s fur- ther statement with regard to - what l said this afternoon resPWl- lng raids on Dutch Harbor. More Than Report! Unfounded "A message has been received from the Pacific command—and honorable members will be glad t0 know this-to the effect that a further report or further messages which they have received indicates that the reports which came. pur- porting to be from official sources, regarding the second and third at- tacks on Dutch Harbor, are un- ilzillefltierllilécflllld that there was only over 50o boys wmafglsmz the . t tteto 1 cadet Battalion pre- Col. Ralstons latest information a “Kan appearance u m“, from Pacific command was in line “ndgrwent ma“. “mm inspect,“ with revious announcements from n vmona Phrk» vyeaterduy nub Wash gton. The United States noon Departing {mm me promd. navy announced that the second um of separate lmpeamons of for- wave 0f enemy planes which flew ‘n61. years’ the Na 148 Queen square over the base yesterduy failed t0 cadet, Corps and Na 3o was; Kent; drop bombs and probrnly was en- Cadet my,” were inspected Jointly gagecl only in TCCOHXIBJSSZIHCG. yesggydgy by Lieut. S. Inlley, Dis- In his first statement to the m“ gade; mspmmr, Halifax, ‘muse the Minister 5am m“ "m His Honor, Lieutenant Governor _-—-—-—:=:=- ».-—~—:;r=~=—= a, . LeP e took the salute dur- (Contlnued on page 3. Col 5) mgwthe Co?“ o; me geremony, of;M32”‘2f.&"...§§l;“é?"..é’“é;i§%é R. P. Bower Is Named to Nfld. Interesting Ceremony followed the parade to Victoria Park and watched with interest as the boyséverg, tgrouigglo the $111101?! The uh re s o ys a n ncls and the res- OTTAWA- June 4"‘(CP)_A’V' gncfiaogfftlhesgfiggt Kent Cadet iaphhd, mmtmcm °f R- P- Bmve‘ “s cam‘ the members all decked out ‘m their ma“ wade C°mm1ss1°n°r m New‘ red uniforms was a feature of the foundland was announced today by d The bind provided m“ the ‘Trade Minister MaeKlnnon. gy‘ n. anoeuvred across the Mr. Bower is an officer of the S. °w a,‘ .1“ mmarml M“ u each Commercial Intelligence Service of ‘Md P” 3d 1 t Osman Canada with l2 years’ experience. 912mm“ "m"? n ‘a9 l.‘ rived and previously served as assistant The U°“t°“”'“t °vem° “r trade commissioner at Rotterdam. m) m? Parade gmunds smrfly M‘ Batavia and Javn- A ckl d N Z.. ter two o'clock and the proceedings . u an . . and Sydney. Australia. sot underwv almost llgllgedifjgllé- While still holding rank of ls- His Honor. accompahe y u. sistant trade commissioner, Mr. Lplley, and others went through the Bowsr will serve in his new post as ranks on a general 11159909") 01 acting trade commissioner. the battalion. Those accompanying l F I o . . —_—— -f——— him included: Lt.-C An- Fhes To Finland " ‘TeawmTTTTE? . 6.11;‘ HELSINKI. June 4-(AP)--Hitler POUPYD JAP TRANSPORT filew tto Eirlilland from Germany to- -_-- m oy _o e ver personally birthday N 51,1131) AIR, BASE IN - greetings to Field Marshal Baron 131g‘ May 29 _(De|ayed) _(Ap)_ Gustaf Manncrhelm. and returned Dam. through 131;- weather and t° Gfimanv b!’ m‘ ‘lmlffhi- ma ‘n. A. F. fighters and bombers Hitler was accompanied b0th “finish at the salygggd gtepmgrs and ways by Field Marshal Wilhelm crude bamboo rafts which bring figlrtleal. the chief of his hlzh corn. Japanese troops and equipment trap ' i’ e Mannerhelm was presented a. the winding’ muddy waters o . hi d -l Rt , her the Nazn golden mand cross of the German goanfisnrangeflalgng fine border o; Burma and Assam, India's eastern- most province. four bombcre and a protective screen of 15 fighter craft, l. r:- merkabe disproportion, were noted in th The type of this was written. The implicat on is, however. that they were small ships. able in take off from o flight dec the whole group represents about the strength und proportions of what a. small merchant craft, converted for carrier use, could carry and e first flight. t be ere had been no official me ntlon oi’ the incident from an Jap- apparel) l)’ had 9" anesc source many hours aificr ii. had Axis broadcasters in Europe made much of it, picturing a vlrfunl '~ vasion panic on the west coast of Canada. and the United States. It was obvious, however, that they had no information other than the broad- es been disclosed in Wash ngl base building operations. 500 Cadets Inspected Yesterday Held At Victoria Park: Hundreds Turn Out To Witness Event. lleydrich Dies lbul Many More Czechs Execute Nazi Reign Of Terror Builds Up Own Count- er-Terror. By J. Wes Gallrgher Associated Press Staff Wrllm‘ IDNDON. June 4—(AP)—R.eln- hard Heydrlch, scourge of Nazi; occupied EuW-‘IDE. died in 913E" tcdsy while the rlflrs or h-s Ges- ta took terrible revenge amOIIE the populace for his assassination, and tonight the German govern- ment prepared to bury him with macabre pcmp and ceremony. Twenty-four mcre Crezhs. in- eluding three women, were execut- ed 1:1 Prague, and Brun, today tol- lowing the announcement of H551’; ra But the bloody terror loosed by hangman. claimed the lives of 187 hostages in Bohemia and Moravia, was building "P "-5 drich's death, the Prague announced tonight. henchmen of Hitler's which already has own counter-terror. The Gannon radio itself revealed that Nxzts in the protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. were feeling the hand that strikes by night; the revenge of patriot-assassins who come by parachute from nbrcad to reply, with bcmb, fire and steel. f0!‘ the subjugation of their homeland. Indeed. a Nn-zi broadcast this evening, giving what purported to be the details of Heydrichfls fatal (Continued on page 3. C01 3) rovitded the raiders with notes While General American MoreEnlistments In Navy And Air. Force Expected By Frenk I-‘llherty Canadian Preee Stuff Writer GITAWA June 4-40?) - Al e result of the recent ruling which prohibits enlistment of compulsory service trainees in the navy and air force after they report to army training centres. more drafted men are expected to enlist voluntarily after receiving their call but be- fore reporting to the army. War services department officials estimated that. from 22 to 25 per cent of the men who receive calls under the National Resources Mobi- lization Act enlist voluntarily in either the army. the nav o1- the air force M, some recruit g oifiie I. STEEP 5 MINUTES (Continued on D189 3. 0°! 43, TEA IS RATIONEII Avoid waste -- follow these simple directions l Said out the leepot to wenn Ii. 2. Use e level teaspoon of tee for each cup of tee to be served. 3- Un lite exec! amount of FRESH water you require end lee thei it It BOILING FURIOUSLY before you pour ii info lite pot. Sgt. Robert Goxr Killed In Action Overseas MOSCO\V, June 5- (Fri- day)—(AP)—'l‘l1e Soviet com- mand reported curly today a re- sumption of fighting and air force activity on some sectors of the front. Actions afield were describ- ed as local, hmvvvcr, zmcl there still was nfl indication of gen- eral fighting arrvtvherc. During June 4," said a com- munique, “cngugciuenis of local importance wore fought in gomc ‘ tors of the front with active - n X 5%“ . r SGT. PIT OT RO ERT CO a" operations‘ Sgt. Pilot mom Cox. as. hos "WW J1me 3 11111“ o! 0w Mr been killed in action overseas, his 1°?“ on “"0113 59cm" 01' U19 mother, Mrs. Catherine Cox, 101 3°11‘ dE-SPTQYGd 01‘ dilmagfli 115 lV-CtnCllth Street, Charlottetown was motor vehicles with troops and war llllOlillfld last nlgltt. He was killed mill/HMS. 40 Cuffs with ammuni- on June g, the nwssage sump n; tron. 1111119 fields. 21nd anti-aircraft contained no details except to add guns, eight arm-aircraft machine- that he was buried ln England. E1111 905th. and four searchlishttl- Sgt-Pilot Cox was a native hf blew up four ammunition dumps, Morell, P. E. I. His father was the damaged two railway sttuions, and late Russell Cox. He attended dispersed and partly annihildml Prince of Wales College here and up to six companies of enemy in- then for the next six years was em- fantry." ploy-ed by G. F. Hutcheson, opm- The mud-day communique yes- metrlst. terday said 300 Germans were He enlisted with the Royal Can- killed on the central front m, a adian Air Force in August, 1940, and 10m] Nazi amwk, and that 12 WASHINGTON, June 5—(CP)—- Cilllfifllzlll and United States naval and‘ air forces scoured the North Pacific today for a Japanese air- craft carrier believed to be the base ship for the two bomber raids yes- terday on Dutch Harbor, Alaskan naval base. The raids. discounted here for the actual damage inflicted on the base itself, are believed to have been designed as feelers on Ameri- can defences on Alaska but it was agreed they might lead to much bigger operation, perhaps in the In ing accldenobut recovered fully snrl stationed at Kentvllle; lvfiss Eliza- betl Presides At‘ immediate future. its 18th annual meeting 1n Sackville The Unwed Sm)“ "MY- which aided of Dutch Harbor, at 9 a. m. local received his wings at Uplands Arr- more German planes had been DOW. 119m‘ Ottawa. in Alllil 1115! YHI‘ shot clown on the same front. I re umed active service. M d He is survived by three sisters. I 1 Cox in the unemployment I insurance office here and Miss Louise Cox l11 l-Lvnrltnun and Com- q- , Confer-coco SACKVILLE, N, H, June 4 ——(C- {hum Church mrmrlt Wm, ap_ disclosed the attacks on Dutch Hor- pruxlmntcly’ 500 (lulggzltes present. hm‘ mmmmcpd F‘ Jnmmese a" M‘ Prayer was offered by Rev L E time (330 A D T‘) today‘ G. Dovlcs, pastor of the Sackvlllc H A Mrs. H. J. Gordon He went overseas a month later. July he was injured in a fly- Mlss Dorothy Cox, a registered I nurse employed with the Nova Sco- . tla. public health department flilfl s e ; panys insurance office, ll H h f ' r. 11g Miller P)—ThG ltlttriiirnc conference of the United Church of Canada. opened Th‘, wurmg pmsidmn‘ m“ Du tack on An1r~ric_n11-l1el<l. I\I1'E\vay' Isl- Huqh Miner’ Charlonenown‘ pl_e_ and in the Pacific, far to the south United Church, and the scripture laud by Roy. D1215). W. Bart- e , 'O‘l\’lllC, . S. r. J. R. P.‘ Seiater, "forcnto, was t-he special I‘ 0' D- E* speaker. He took for his text: "The - gglyllfi Lord is with them that 001111011101‘ The Lord's supper was dis nsecl ‘ i" to members of the conference? Dr. MONTREAL‘ J1me ktcpk,‘ Miller conducted the service, asslsr- Seventeen {WW Patkmm colmclfi" ed by Dr. Sclater and R/ev. GA. 1°” have mm of“ d byDqllffffszfilg c .155 , _ . of the Imperial Order “i? ,‘,,‘,’,,,§§n§§"°“' N‘ S" clerk or ogdtl EX)‘; 1 , it. wlrts announced Riel Q H‘ Johnson‘ Grand He‘ ay its t1e rmnua m/(‘tifig l1ere N_ s.’ gave me addmx at a mem_ ended, The rentatndcr were re- orlal service for the following min- elecmd" islets who died during the past you": RaeVCrfilldS P. M. Hartley, J. U Boll. CA. Ritchie and D. McD. Clark, The conference program released tomght revealed that election of (\f- flecrs and installation of the new president will ire carried out tomor- _ row morning, The report on evnnire- -_" i? . lism and social service n11d the en- F0111‘ Tolvll COUIICIIS nual meeting of the lay ssoclatl - - were scheduled for the EftPTUOOAEI)? OPPOSG (‘OIISCTIIJUOII MONTREAL. J1me 4~fCPl -- Two commissioners to the gem-r- a1 council will be nominated Satur. d“? mfifnmil. following by appolnc- The town gounrlls cf frnr munic- mcnt of a new settlement commzt- ipnfities near Montreal lmve ap- tee. Ofdlnllllfls will be presented proved a resolution phone them Saturday and the annual ordinal-ion on record as oppnwd to mnscrl-p- service will he ln-ld Stmday morning. tlon for oversras scrficv and asking the federal goverrment not m a- mend the present molfllzation act. Island Nurse ts§“§.~..’§t5l°{l"l?“s.§‘5§.? is‘? F1131 M. 'l. St. Cyrtcn do Lmry 11rd St. ls Graduate ton, saint Jrhn. Jracfvm dc Course‘, Ccpks we to be s=nt to Prlmo M'n‘=l.'" Mac- krzvi.‘ Kin/r, Premier Gndlrut of Qurbec and frdrral and prvlneinl mmvbrr: in vhcse constituencies SAINT JOHN, NB., June 4- th~ towns are. (CW-Graduates of the Saint- 'l‘l~.o rrsrftllion sows thaf qny JChn General Hcspnal srhool for ndrpticn cf n mcnswe lcwdinq to nurses, who recelvrd their diplo- cotaq-rlrafinn in" evens would mas tonight. included the ioltow- rcmnrennko (‘rmariian unliv. and inglfrcm Nnvn Sec-tin: rltfms that snrh cotiscriptfcn vrmiid arjoric 14:11:50 Clarke, Upper be in contradiction of the Atlantic Kcnnctcck: Ncllfc Kendrick. Parrs- clmricr. boro; Hilda Joyce Elliott, Clar- _..____. ence; Jean Olive Nlckcrsnn. Llver- FARTllINC-S AT CAPE pool; Marion Hazel Roemfnvcrness; Evelyn Frances Bent, Melvern cAPE TOWN _lCP)-~NMdPd for Square and Norma Lucille Oxncr, change on account. of the increase Lnnenburiz. in milk prices, inrthinzs newlv The Only Bffldllflle f!!!" P711160 minted at Pretoria. have come into Eillfflffl Island WM MRTBW-fl HM‘ Rencral circulation in Cape Town tie Maclcod. 0f Mount Stewart. after an absence of 40 years. E g RCSUIHITCd n ussianSFront 'alston Says‘ Only One Raid 0n Alaska All Three Fighting Services In Action goo Bombers Blast Bremen; Commandos Land: 0n French Coast Supported By Royal Navy. Apparently No General Drive Has Started Soviet Air Force Damaged Or Destroyed I15 German Motor Vehicles And Did Other Damage. _?_ .._: 'v__ '~_€— -" r 30 Survivors Picked Upf AN EAST COAST CANADIAN PORT, June 4 - (OP) — L055 0f another Allied merchant “$5591 $0 German tinder-sea raiders was re- ported here when m<re than 30 survivor were landed by another merchant craft which rescued them trrm their liiebeets. Ne lives were 10st in the torpedoinfl. Acting 11s spokesman for the sailors the chief engineer said the crew nod been instructed by naval alli-llOfllltl not to talk of their ex- perlenoe. “You can nay we were out listi- mg and caught e tin fish," he said. "And you can also say that we're going right back to sea again." None of the men suffered any serious injury end all appeared none the worse for their spell in open beets. ’ Allied Sub‘ Torpedoes Jap’ Troop Fleet ALLIED HEADQUAiRTEfi, A119- iralia, June 4»—(AP) — An Allied strbcnartrte, presumably American, on cruise somewhere in the Japan- ese ship lanes wis c ‘ted offlo- ially tonight with the destruction 0r damaging of four enemy ships totalling 29,000 wns —one of them an overloaded troopship which went down with as many as 12.011) Jop- nnese SOIKUGFL An armed transport of 6,000 and two jammed supply ships o 10,000 tons and 6.000 tons, respez- lively, were wrpedoed and sunk, and a 7,000-ton supply ship was badly damaged. implying that the both: p181 I! a division may have peril ed l.- board the transport, Allied head- quarters said all aboard probably were lost and added; "'I‘he Japan- ese are notorious for overloading troop transports, It is known than they put more than 12,000 soldiers on some 6.000-t011 ships.” It indicated that the submarine had mane its raid ‘avell beyond Aus- tralian waters, somewhere 0n the‘ seas between Japan's numerous soulhwes; Pacific DADS. DROWNED IN LAKI MINIO, N. B. June 4—(OP)— Napoleon Bordatzv. a young miner here, was drtnvned i11 Grand Lake after he dived into the cold water tins afternoon. Other bothers saw him come to the siu-fnce once and then sink. The body was recovered. The shock of innnersion was laid to have caused the accident; Bor- dugcls home v.15 at Trncadle. H's ALRmuf To BE. Dump --.' u= You HAVE A RiCl-l . . ,,\\\p\\\trlt.t1w~ lflgh tide this afternoon at 3.24 and tomorrow morning at 4.39. Sun sets this evening at ‘HQ and rises tomorrow morning nt 4.15. Nz-cw moon June i3, 4.0! pm. S11n1me1~.="‘de tide eighéeen min- utes inter than Charlottetown. CAR. FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Prom Bordrn — Leave 6.30 l-II. 9.2.’- n,m. l.()() pm. 4.45 n.m. 7.55 p.111. Leave Cape Torn1cntinc>7A5 :1.m. 11.00 n.m 3J5 n.m. ($.45 n-m. 9.10 li-m. SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 i0 Dec. 27 inclusive) Leave Borden 9-00 n-lll. 12.00 IOII 4.45 p.m. 7.15 p. m. Leave Tormeniine 10.15 mm. l." p.111. 0.00 p.m- 8.30 pal. i . 4 . 41-F-