MAXIMI pr A MIKE‘ MANY not our marten. Pndonlonghtlobeiirnnnh '\ Inning dllrdl I‘ d | ooumuwwa eiianiif-‘S. an. NAZIS STEP Canadians Cont Another Boat Available For Summer Service At Borden And Tormentine 55°“!!! ODDortunlty of obtaining an auxiliary steamer for the Bor- den - ‘Ibrmentine service pending. overhaul of the S. s. Prince Ed. ward Island for next whiter, is indicaud by Mr. George J. Tweedy, K. C., who has returned from a business visit to Ottawa, Montreal, and New York. Ml’. TWWfiY inspected the stea- mer, which l5, in active ferry service between Jersey city and York, with a vie\v to ascertaining its advantages for the Wood Is- lands —- Caribou route. He found it to be too large for this purpose, but might prove an excellent boat for the Borden - Tormentine ser- vice. The boat is 207 feet overall, with 65 ft beam, 15 ft in depth of hold, l2 ft. draft loaded. It can carry any size of trucks, or 30 autos, and could be altered to carry ‘up to 50. It. has a net tonnage of New M all, indicated horse power of 1,. 157. with screw propeller at each end, trlgle expansion engines, and a steel ull. Third Opportunity This is the third o rtunl Obtaining an auxlllarypaiat loiytiii Borden - Tormentine service which has resented itself since last arc . On the first occasion the details were obtained by Mr. B Graham Rogers, supervisor of the ‘Travel Bureau, and forwarded to the Delmrtment of Transport at Ottawa. This boat was also a ferry steamer operating in New York, which was suggested could be run in addition to the Scotia while the S. S. Prince Edward Island was being overhauled in drydock. The ififiifiimfifeaflfi Farm Policies Discussed By Dom inio n President At Conservative Rally F Mr. a ' , Policies enunciated by Hon. visit fbMgfirntfgiiurEgtsgaiéLdlfilliilfldqrfiil, John Bracken directing the truer- es.s and welfare ct the iarincrs of Canada. formed the theme of a stir- ring address ias-t night by Mr. Pct/er D. MlcAi-zhur, president of the y Dominion Progressive Conservative Party and fcrmcl- president of the Dairy Farmers of Canada. r Ml‘. McArthur slpokc in the 3.1. S Hall, before a largo and repre- sentative audience, Major '1‘. B. Rogers, president of the Queen's County Progressive Conservative Association WBSlded. Other speakers were: Mr. W_. Chester S. McLure. federal candi- date for the County. Hon. Dr. W. LP. MacMillan. O.B provin- clal party leader, and Mr. J. . MacDonald, secretary of the As- p:latloirl._ nodule ElIEtlTs l "Bhow-Jikapaud, Thursday. l "l-s-ai. "Show-Canoe Cove Friday. j -5 -2i.‘ "8ll0w—Ml. Steuulrt, Sniurdayt: Bhows alt 8-10. - - - "Rollo Bay Tea July 19th. ] 7-6-111. "Unloading car bulk oats to- day. McGuigiln A: Boyle. 7-6-11. "To arrive bulk wheat. Book now. McGuigan and Boyle. 7-3-71 "Collecting hogs for Davis A: Fraser rriclay, July ‘lth at Albany and Emerald. G. C. Green. ‘l-a-zl. "Armual MeetirTg Mt. _Hel-btrt Telephone C0., rrlddv evening, July t . "special Dance. St. Peters Bay Friday 7th. Clifford's Orchestra. m 5. "Reserve Wednesday afternoon. August 19th for Bay Fortune Unl- ted Church Lawn ‘lea. -5-‘ill. “St. John's . A. I00 Cream loorlal, Orapaud Hall, July lfiéh; u h. "See Corran Bann Players in lllbcrnon River Hall, Fridaya Samdwlches and ulv 5th. Bagpipe mu "Ice Cream, Hot Dog-s, Thursday. J M S E m s< h! 2 Q. on m I!‘ "Dance lltnerald Hall ‘mu-s- day night sponsored by Mrs. Carr and Mrs. McEntee . 7-3-21 "All parties interested in Clyde River Hnll, please meet at Hall Fri- day, July 7th at 8 o'clock. John urray. . A. M - "Hunter Goes to Se July 9th. River Plav "Aunt Tillev a" in New Glasgow Hall, if not fine. Friday’. 4 fl "Women's Institute district con- vention Mt. Herbert Orphanage Thursday, July 6. Afternoon 2 p. In. Evening 8 p. m. 6-30-8l "Big concert and dance in Cape Traverse Hall, Friday, July at 130 p.m. featuring the BB. boys and the hoe-down gang from Summerslue. Both modern and old-time dancing. Help the Red Cross, won't youl 7-5-2i "A number of pigs wanted im- mediately at Fredericton. Paying $15 a pair for good pigs 30 pounds and over. $2.00 a. pair for delivery 0i some until l0 a. m. Friday. Knud Jorgensen. 7-6-11. 7-5-21. “an ,SO 1916, when he came he' i ' w Ayrshire cattle. He haslcbelgvulliifizig. onseveral occasions since, his last» View being in February of Ho warmly congratulated the As- sociation on the candidates chosen for Queen's County in the persons‘ of Mr. McLure and Squadron Lend- er Angus MacLean. D.F C. In llmuluuiing the latter the conven- tion had put itself “on the map" as giving recognition w service men, he said. - He also smoke enthusiastically of the convention he had attended at Suinmcrside. Dfiilliflll with Mr. Brackcns fnmi policies, Mr. McArthilr stressed par- ticularly his leader's pledge to pro- vide “equal opportunity for all." That. he said. was all the farmers of Canada were asking, for It was ‘lcmilihiziiii; sign. cs1? p: Third Leg 0f Shuttle Raid ls liompleted LONDON, July 5 —— (AP) -Th€ United States air force hurled three heavy bomber fleets at the Germ-| ans today wnile high-pressure sir support of the whole loo-mile iii-I vaslcn front 1n France continued through its second big day One of the three heavy -bomoer raids was completion by a shuttle- DUIHDEI‘ fleet of a 7,000 - mile cir- cuit of the Britain - Russia - Italy- bused ring of steel around the Nazi consecutive The shuttle planes, which on June 2i flew from Britain to Russia and then five days later went from Russlu lo lfuly, return- ed today vln southern France, where they bombed the big railway yards at Bezlers, near Montpelier. Simultaneously; another fleet of heavlcs from Italy - from the United States 15th All‘ Force —al—. went to Southern France andl gave a fifth pounding to the blgi naval base al. Toulon Britain - based heavies followed up the big overnight R. A F‘. — R C A F. raid on Pas dc Calais with fl daylight blow at the fly- lng-bomb launching grounds and also extending their offensive ag- ltlnst German air fields in fiance to include those in Holland and Belgium. Fear More Miners Dead In Fire i were reported to have sprung up at BELLAIRE. 0.. July 5 — (AP) _. An unknown number of miners- varlously estimated from 40 to l5- were imprisoned today by a fire in the Powhatan mine. and hlne hours later an official of the Un- ited Mine Workers expressed doubt that any would be rescued alive. "I do not think they will find one of them alive," said Adolph Paclflco, vice ,_resident of district 6 of the U. M W. "There ls no way to get to them from the nack of the shaft without forcing car- bon monoxide gas into the cham- ber where they are." The men were trapped four miles] from the main entrance of lhei shaft, Ohio's largest soft coal l1", when falling slate struck a ti-ol-l ley wire at l P. M , E. D. T. Fires information . CHARLOTTBTOWN, CANADA, THURSDA Battle For Airfield ls fiontinuell ed counter-attacks miles west of Caen. ing battle Baron and Esquay, five western sector, where Cherbourg Peninsula, the Ameri- cans late today crashed into the rubble-strewn streets of Buring La Haye Du Pults. They captured the railway station on the northern rim of that German defence anch- or and coiled around both sides of the city. Tonight's communique from Su- preme Headquarters, trailing by some hours the actual events in the field, said of the British-Can- adian attack on the east: "In the Caen area the enemy is counter- attacking strongly. Our position at Carplquet remains firm." The German-controlled Vichy radio broadcast shortly before midnight that the Germans had withdrawn to the east of Carpl- uet. Dispatches from Ross Munro, Canadian Press War Correspond- with the Canadians at Carpiquet, said the Germans were using théil‘ Nebelwerfers, multi barrelled rocket mortars. Their big, wailing Jirojectiles rained down on Cal-pi- quot in spurts at 10 minute inter- vals all afternoon. Larger Ger- man guns also were trylng to break. the Canadian grip on the key vill- age, but were cleared out after running into intense fire from antl- tank guns and machine-guns. One Nazi assault before dawn was made with tanks, followed by German infantrymen “shoutin their heads off," a. field dispatc said. The Canadians dug into imllmvlaed trenches and also. utilizing cap- tured German positions. some of which are 20 to 30 feet under- ground, broke up that storming wave. Canadian gunners knocked out three enemy tanks from close range in that assault. Three succeeding German coun- fer-attacks were hurled back from shell-shattered Carplquet. one 01 the defence keys to Caen which guards the 120 mile invasion route to Paris Munro quoted a Canadian general as sayiflff Canadian unsi- tiuns were “being maintained and improved." Reds Smash Nearer Wilno LONDON, July 5 — (AP) —Red troops smashed closer to Wilno (Vilna) in pre-war Poland today. capturing two important rail Jum- tlons on the line from Minsk, Mos- cow announced tonlBhi. 8nd Bi the same time a German broad- cast said Kowel had been evacuat- ed, indicating a possible new Rus- sian offensive south of the PriPl/BY- Marshes. Premier Stalin Personally an‘ nounccd the cnDu-lrfl 0f m9 m“ centre of Molodcczno, 40 miles northwest of the White Russian capital of Minsk, and the subse- quent sovlet communique said that this same drive byNGen. Ivan Cherniakhovsky‘s 3rd hlte Rui- sian army also had taken Smor- gonie, 2i miles farther west I1 the same railroad. _ Other Russian troops, however, already were much farther west- ward -- some reports said within 30 miles of Wilno-and also were striking within a few miles of the Baltic States of Latvia and Lithu- ania on the north and Bnrano- wicze in pro-war Poland on the southern sector of the central front. Than 40 I three entries. The number of men in the block- ed section was Dlaced at 75 by Deputy Sheriff W. S. McLaugh- lin of Belmont County and Henry Ady of Clarlngton, a member of the rescue crew. However, Matthew Stlccker, per- sonnel manager for the Powhatan Mining Company which operates the shaft l5 miles south of here snid he believed "between 40 and 50" were entom . Roland Moyes, a Wheeling, w. Va , ncwspaperman, said he had been forbidden by company rc- preseiltntives to talk with the rea- cue workers A press office was SUPREME HEADQUARTERS Allied Expeditionary Force. July 5 —- (C?) - German tank-support- today forced Canadian troops off Carpiquet alr- Brltish troops on the Canadian flank also were locked in a sway- on heights between miles south of Carpiquet, while in the American troops are attacking at the base of Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew War iS-itiiatioh L351 "_'_'TT~ __' Night? By Klrki- L. Simpson. Associated Press War Analyst " l Eisenhower's five-day inspection tour of the battle lines in Nonnorldy probably foreshadoivs a new Allied offensive in France once the Normandy invasion area has been mapped up from Caen to Gran- \llle or Avranchcs. The Allies will have nn Bil-mile jump off llhc-ivlde enough for maj- or manoeuvres in a terrain particularly suitable for mechanized warfare. 9°" ‘m the Easter’; endb“ “a” Allies superiority in armor and artillery as well n virtual complete (lum- glumdgl NOHYEmlY 5:5“; i: an‘: lnation of the air already has been proved in France. It invites Allied rc- wzgziaggsdctgggvuglgge glue“ “u,” sort in blitzkrieg tactics now that all-weather supply lines have been se- cured with tlir- cnnturn of Chrrbourg. It ls possible that the full weight of Allied armor could not be brought In boar iii Franco until a (Icon-water port like Cherbourg was zi- vallable and unlmiilli-g fhcililivs oslul shed to expedite the flow of lim- vy equipment in tllc front. Willi i assured, quick concentration-z n! overwhelming power for drop bl-enk- Iirnugh drives will become possible. In the east. the Russian stcain-rcllcr still is moving north of ihc Pri- pert marshes at a (mil-r pace and on n WIIIBI‘ front than the filer-mans ever attained. The ."lIill.<l( and Pnlutsk central prams of the RPII Army‘ drive have been rncrirvll inio n singli- \VK“‘.'.\\'5I‘(I liuluv bcnrlng down rm Wilno and Dnugnvnlls. prlruo communication keys for the whole Nazi defence front from the Pvlpci ~mnr<li salient in Psk/w on the Baltic flank. Tn llll‘. south. hclnw thi- Prim-t. marshes, the Russians have captured Kowel, Polish rail and road huh iilv and central bastion of the Bug Itlv- er lino-the Nazi sn-rnlli-d "cnsiwull" defence front sot up ziftcr partition of Poland. _ Russian Cfilltllrl" of Kmvcl lend-.- my color tn the conclusion "m! fl general Gennnn retreat in the vii I in progl-ers. It must certainly mean Nazi flight from the Pripct sullcni. Nominate For Prince County Lt.-Col. E. H. Strong, M. C. Chosen At Rousing Conservative Convention. Lt.-Col. E. H Strong, M.C., KC, was chosen unanimously at an en- thusiastic convention held in St. P ul's l-iull, Summcrsidc, yester- aftcrnoon to contest the Fod- lsland Potato , And Billet‘ traps: lot the licizt gcncral election. Lt.- ln Good Shape l r Readby Everybody Y. JULY o. 1944 held by Group Captain lvlalan. ,llille_r'To Throw In Reserves? LONDON, Iuly ii — [Thurs- day) A l — Vlllille over- whelming Soviet forces lunged toward the Bnltlcs and East Prussia almost at will, slaugh- tering German defenders and capturing tznvns in great num- bers, tlii- Itinscou‘ Rnllin Irronrl- cast curly lfllill)’ n rcpnrt from Stockholm that Ilillcr had just reached a derision to throw nil his reserves into the gigan- tic struggle on the B1519"! front. — l lCol. Strong, who is a practising ihzirrister in Sunlmerslde ls at pre- sent a member of the Provincial Remarkable growth has taken place in the potato crops of the _ slnturc ior the Fifth District! ' Ho is also Stipendinry Magistrate for the town of Sum-l Province, and growers fortunate in having sprayer equipment. are get- ting their machines rczuLv to start c. Hc is l1. veteran of the, spraying olrsriitions, reports Mr. W. F . Great Wnr. having won the. Military Cross for gallantry. Aft- cr lhc um‘ hf- jolhcd the Prince Ildward Island Highlanders anrll rost- to command the unit. I ' ':\/II'. Sirongls nomination was; made unanimous when three oth-' or cnnlllclntes withdrew in his l of inst year is making growers lllllif‘ alert to the nccd of n 1arompt spraying programme. Gooll pro- favor. gross is also being made in the, Mr Preston Kennedy, Kensing- thinning and weeding: of flic- hood l ton. President nf the East Prince crops, and much of this “York will |' Col ' Mr. be completed before haying com-| Ch .. lticCarthy, Tignlsh, Presl-l‘ mcnccs. l iicut of the Wcst Prince Conserva- It is expected that the noise of live ltssociation were Joint chain‘ l the cutter will be heard in the mcn. province by the first of next. week. Mr. McCarthy's was the first,‘ After that the farmer will be more, hump in he put before the con- than bllSy with the labours incl-l volition. his nomination being mov- dental to saving an exceptionally! ail by Mr. Mvrlc Dalton and sec-i large hay tonnage. llizlrlctl by Ml‘. George Knox. Min,‘ The labour situation is stated to McCarthy immediately withdrew! be very acute, but hopes are cn-l his nanle, tertaliled that voluntary assistance Mr Strong's nomination wasl will be provided from the lOh-OS-l mo rl by Mr. Thomas Gillisplcn: scntlal industries in towns andl Bor . and sccondcd by Mr. Johnl villages. 5 Ahcm, ‘rixnish. ‘ Excellent imsturoge is bclng ob- ‘ . _ : : _ ———-- — ... served with u good bottom of rlnv-. ‘Cllllimllffl 0n Wile 7. COL 7) crs, particularly the wild and wliltc ‘ i?"- Dutch varieties. 4 I I I fAllles Flve Miles From llrezzo Dairy Production lPlTIllll setting the .1010, destroyed, {e seven German aircraft mantly today‘, nunlber of enemy planes knocked down by Canadian fighter wings in one week. The volume oi t‘l‘9l’illlf‘l‘_\' butlcr in May of this year was almost ‘I per cent above that of 194d. and it is anticipated that the Jum- pro- duction will evidence a still great- er increase. Deliveries lo the: cheese factories are also well above those of the inst season. Willi the continuance of good grnzifig con-, ,n_ dltlons thcre is n possibility of nn l all‘ ‘ increased production lrl buttcr and, “NC cheese over that in 1943. whcn curl butter production reached a very high peak. Mr. shaw reports a healthy con- dition in the poultry flllfl live stock l departments of the province. Mauv ' 510w of the difficulties [hut were a bane | 1mm to poultry rniscrs last l By JOHN F. CHESTER troops slugg ell ' he _lilllll less flinn live important city of Are: ‘main road to l-“lorci , lllc most important g O liTl progress could b0 chpcctccl‘ season have | no, ridding that the n, itself ' C. been removed through control l fended by thick conpgrete DIHIBSOSBS, F11- 13» H C» TlllilwY- Chuflfliw‘ measures adopted by the depart- , extensive mine fields and barbed WWII P El. got two German ment in which the fullest. co-npcr- Wlrc Rcconnaissance reports said’ planes southeast of CiZtPll nnd sha- l ~ ~. .--. - » _- illn city would be "defended wmqi red in the ilestructlon oi n third aggliucul, 4i gtppbornngsg," l¥ith Eéqdn. ma". G D Robertson of ~— - - -=' "rm " : orono set llp by the company to clear in the European theatre. shot down two planes today lo bring his score ROME. July 5—-lCPl—Bl'lt,i5h am} to 35 _ _ ’ way up gory also got two "kills' ill today's ccntrc of Italy ygiuemgy w‘ triumphant swccp by the ifarladlun “n10; o, 11ml fllcis that followed lhur spectacul- tlie‘ hr success of Julv 3 when they got. rlcnrdingi 1i! of the 2-1 German Q1115 o; (be, ed over Normhildw‘ day along the Whole brazing fiom, Canadians’ shot down l3 planes Headquarters warned that cnlyl Jllm‘! 3° 11nd 35 0" JUN‘- 25- hcrc on in the push to Liver-l creditxd to R.C.A F terday. also were reported tonight ‘demonstration A parade and pic- lslanllers Home From Overseas OTTAWA. July 5 — several Mari- tilnc soldiers were included in a group of Canadian servicemen who have arrived in Canada aft/er sce- lng service overseas Among the new arrivals were: Prince Edward Is-lnurl: Pte. G A MacLczln. Freetown; Ptc A. J. Richard, Si. Charles. Flt.-Lt. Trainer Downs Two More German Planes LONDON. Julv 55 4GP Celblcl—- Canadian Sllltllrc uLlols. their 28-‘ year-old English loader, Cmdr. John b‘. ‘(Johnnyw Win i! Johnson UVCI’ Nor- 1 to 65 the: raisin: Johnson. leading Allied lllr ace F0. R.T lticltolzcift of Cal- planes destroy- thnt day’. The Three kills and several damaged, airmen yes- PLAN QUIET (‘ELEBRrATION 8 PAGES Wing Commander 1E. Johnson, MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN Learn from your mistake! but do not cry over them. llll. H-llfll other Pmvlnron I U-IA. lap; ialnorlpllnn Dollnord. IBJO UP ROBOT BOMB ATTACKS iam- In Héivvfiaihtinaf Eden Sharply Questioned By House 154cm bers -_- _ Juli’ 0 — (AP) — Dozens of babies were car. "ed 1° Safely iulllghl by nurses-some holding three or four infants in their arms at a time-when a flying bomb struck a hospital in Southern England as the ' Gcl'm>lrs' blind attacks were stepped up 0n the eve of Prime “inivstgr Churchill's appearance in the House of Commons ‘to make a promised statement on the robots. All _of the babies were saved and the casualties werl small with one falaliLw-ii nurse, rumors l’ll.0'l'S l.\' ACTION Fimwllu DUNS. Who pilrlicipaicd in the baffle of Brit- nln, now are taking aleading part in the fight against the flying bombs, it was dlsclpscd tonight. They are led by rm. biarshzil Sir Roderic Hill, commanding the entire defehce scheme against the robots. who took to the air himself io- day for the second time and joined a fighter patrol, A. M. _Solomon, one of Britain's best known film direct- OTS, was killed by one of the robots, it was learned, _Ful‘eilln Secretary Anthony Eden was closely question- ed ln the House during the day after he said he was cnn. vinced the Franco government in Spain had given no as- sistance f0 the Nazis in developing the robot bomb; Answering demands of --_-; that he ask the Russian govern LONDON, L a, _l RAF. above, is 1i1ciured 311st nf- mem whether 1 k tor shooting (‘own ii iinu enemy . 1 new of aliy‘ ' fllffilffiif. to llglllfi world acv record Gin-man lesearch at Pampkgnioén Spain, Ml‘. Eden said he wa vlnced that such reports »- Q 1118113’ broadcast by the Mos dio —— ‘are without foundation." Denis Prltt, Labor, asked him: would you consider this: You arc asked to get information, and the story comes from an ally of 501119 IIIIPOITBDCQ, and (he Qnly‘ person you don't ask is that dllyl . ..Woulcl you also remembef that‘ rlg- j cow , Says Oarpiquet Blown To Pieces , , WITH THE CANADIAN iou were very firm about your T v . . krmwlfldss of Spain when you told‘ —luigll:s (Izliaifihgcgihihllgn: us that there were no Italian troops‘ in Spain? (A reference to the Spanish Civil War) Amid the cheers that met this; sally. Mr Eden declared: “I am, Perfectly Willing to put my record in fhc_shell-shaltcred village of Carplquet have thrown back four German counter - attacks and a Canadian general said "the position ls being main‘ talned and improved.” in the Spanish business side by He added "The ~ .- .- . ‘ , _ 1 troops arr ‘Zllflig yfjnybafflils "t m“ “m”. showing grim determination Mr Edcnlv statement was in-i under heavy H" and "m" ha: been savage fighting." Lieut. Tommy Thompson oi Charlottetown, who went inio Carplquct with aFrenchspeak- lng unit as special liaison of- fended to pacify an irritable House. of Commons until Prime Ministoij Churchill could make a promisedi statement tomorrow on the robot, bombs. but so aroused were some. members b_v the damage carved bv‘ fiffialnsaiin ‘lgiiihiillfn if the enemy's "rmicngc" weapon that‘ ‘collosalubarrage {list “bl-cw it they were reported ready in ‘M; inr a secret session in the event, that Mr. Churchill's statement‘ tomorrow did not give them all the‘ information they sought. 1 to pieces." BORN IN I’. E. I. ST JOHN'S, Nfld. Julv 5 ~11 P Cziblcl — Dr Hunter Cowperth ; waits, an outstanding Neufoundlnztl surgeon and physician, died hcrl undny Ho had practised in New foundland for more than 40 years Born in Trycm. Prince Edward Is- land. he wns the son of the intl Rev Dr. Humphrey Cowperthwalte l wrll known minister of the Mcthodis. Church New Saskatchewan 0. C. F. Government § "REGINA. Jllil’ -l-lCP/—-'i\v<ivc cuoulcl. ivlllilslcrs will be sworn in when inc new c C r. saskatchc» wan government takes OILlCE next‘? Monday. Personnel of the Cabinet, aunounn iced by Premier - cicct ‘LC. Douq gins tuiuglxlt iii the Clusu ul .. mu; is ui. C C.r liicmbers 0.1 lzle iBQI-J" ‘lgnturc, Willi constituency‘ in lift-CK“, dine Doesn't SEEM i0 at Mitten“; holes OEMOHPiLW-INQ 1mm A Huron! Premier and Minister of Health] —I‘ C._ Douglas lweburnl Provuiclill Treasurer-C. M. Fines (Rlffllllfll Auolscy-Gcncluil-J. W. Carmen,‘ K.C , lMoosc Jaw) ; Minlslcr oi Agriculture-Ala). G.‘ H. Williams uvudcnal Minmtcr of Municipal Affairs-J. H Brocklcbanx viisoalc; Provincial Secretary and Ming. r 0i social Welfare-O W Val-I lei-in lMelfort) ; Minister of Natural Resources-l J.L. Phelps (SBIiCOBSlSJ I Minister of Highways and Public 0 .T. Douglas lRosewwnl I Minister of Education-Woodrow Lloyd (Blggor) . Minister _of Rehabilitation and Rcconstnlotlon-JJI Sturdy i521:- kawonl I Minister f c - l i <1 " W" " ~~—— ~ Industrial Dgvelo ingllietflvntié‘. léi/lxiz- High “dc ""5 memimz m‘ um {mosh (Prince Abel-U qand tonight at 12.47. Minister ol Lab '-C. C. W 1-‘ . 115mg (Reg-map “u ' ' Ezun sets this evening at 8A9 and arises tmnorrow morning at 5.20. WILL CUT SALARIES REGINA, July 'l—lCPl--§g1arjc5 of cabinet ministers in the Saskat-L chewan government will be cut b_v= . to $5,000 a ycfll‘ when the 0.1 C_F‘ govci-nntcnt takes office, Pro-l lmicr-clcct. T C Douglas Efllfl to. Lia/ft quarter moon Julv l2. silt ‘Summcrslde tide eighteen minu- tes later than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR SERVICE SAINT JOHN. N. 13.. July 5 — (CF) i Conforming with wartime custom. Orimgciucn in Saint. John and district will observe the "glorious 12th" without. n public nic will be held. The 100th nn- nlvcrsnrv nf the founding of the Grand Lodge in Now Brunswick will be observed with a church scrvlcc lu-rc Aug. 6 and a banquet nu Aug. 7 FIRE-PROOF ‘MATERIAL Canada is the world's. largest- gfilgniglchggvillllgrenle Openm“ of “ p31"; CharIotletoWnMJ-Ictgxmmerslde - ecision to red ~. m - _ * lucL ministers diisc his”? iii cilikiei 1123a” c:‘;"::“°"°w“ 7 mm" nilcu. b~ CJLF‘ . . _ - fl-"I-i - - c s \151,~,,|,u1-e_ Fmmbers elect‘ Arrive Charlottetown 12.45 p.m.: t thci l a c“ l s. l ‘lPredicts Shortage Of jDoctors In The U. S. CHICAGO, Julv 5-iAP,|_pr4-.@ sent United Stairs manpower" nob; lclcs will result in an annual deficit 11"" (‘himmewwll 1 lull- of 2,000 doctors each year niiel‘ the! Arrive Charlottetown 5-50 v-Iu- war. the Jmirnal of the Amorlemil Medical Assocullloil declared today.’ P. E. I.—N. S. FERRY SERVICE 'l'hc Pfllllllfljl. appeared us President.‘ DAILY INCLUDING SUNDAYS lirosi-vclt in Wilslnnutun (i’l(‘]lllt'd' to litter-fore with a selective SPTVICK‘ leave Wood Islahila-‘IJJO A. M. 11.00 A. M. 3.00 M 45 p.m.; 8.40 p.m. SUNDAY SERVICE Leave Charlottetown l2 noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 p.m. Charlottetown — New Glasgow (Dally except Sunday) producer of asbestos board order banninu “ccupmlm-lal , draft dofcrments for pic-medical Ileaves Carlboo — 9.00 A. M. 1.00 P. M. 5-00 P. M. students after Julv l.