MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN qi-u- fll‘ “Qlllfl- m ‘pom children oven Covers Prince Edward Read by Everybody Island Like the Dew We are all Indispensable to one unotbcr. MAXI M6 01A MERE MAN llllll, TI: OBIFI: "flafil? Iouldod um zsoiLAJ-t Planes IngRaid 0n Ge cunkoorrsrowu, “ADA, MONoAY, JUNE 1, 1942 .. .______;1_. l s PAGES A I i u, "u" P. r Lnuuu ublrrlpflon Dallvorud. $6.00 $1.0m to other Pruvfuncn and 0.8.0100 nesert Fighting Turns In Briti 1,000 Canadians Take Part In Raid First over Germany for many; “Never saw Anything like it" Is Douglas Amnrnn, Canudlan Press Stuff WIN") , N, May 31-40? Cable)- uian 1.000 Canadian airmen art in Saturday night's aer- mur at the heart of the in- » uul the Rhineland, estimated than 1.000 Jtivoly more -. l the size and with - times lint immb-currying ~ca- ty of tiny force previously sent st (tori my, loft Cologne. the ,,, mygct irrctt, a mass of ,,. gflflf tho 90-minute raid .. was of viully termed “an dint; success.” piusquatirons of R.C.A.l". . sqn s of the Royal . i- t-e, illClllding one t»; Ion 1i bombers 1'01‘ m; and hundreds of Can in the R. A. F. mt ‘rial armada which ry six seconds. . ed that about one z. more than 6,000 uir- .. taking puff in the gigantic t. on; n Canadian. The others -- Britons, Australians and nir- Inm other parts of the Em- andihe nllied air forces- tt- Czech; auri Free French. e ma, a mastrrpiece of or- 11011. Was the first over ,4I-1o1_ many of the young Rns. Volt-runs of scores of us attacks assured them at had ncurr before been any- Ilk; n. filming 1111015 snld planes " W" Ct-Iwzue In such mun- "mun gun crews and ‘curlers were tumble rgy single ma- ntlnucci on page 1, Col 3) om‘ gfvonts --Q_ for some, in n,“ f rout: our word column ‘Show-Moron Tuesday. 0-1-21. “hiiw-Cfltdiuan Wednesday. 6-1 21 “ iklfk-JYIIIIIYXY River Thurs- - c-1- mmdfiumlll-"lilgSalc St. James ni, 3r - I , _ PIMu bl uiutu. Juneadojg}. EMF-i 31111;. St.‘ Avards open “i do“ our. 5-30-21. t , it wlfétlflt Pt-tyvrs prcsent "Ann's a Ill Milton Hull, June 9th. -1. ‘i Allsusius Dramatic Club vrrscir. their play in Fort uis }1;<.I_ ppmda); June 1_ 5-30-21. Teresa's, also Iot- du)‘. June 2nd. iru. 5-30-21. n , “i iii“; kgllllston play “Ann's Pm- l -\ isruustou H2111. Wednes- olum- on, 5-30-6-1-3 , M v?‘- WIIXIZQIIC“ Lodge No. 8 meets u‘ M“ 008mm Refresh- ' ' 6-1-1. oddiflltnv. fatten-lion Regular W111 -l i, ' "m. in Third degrecé-fi n" -—~§ oratlirlOllfiinl car good qual- m kit-J? hcr cwt, Canadian ‘ ' ‘llfilllston. 6-1-2I “n” 10 ‘Wofnerrs Institute . ' l" Wiiutiire Hull on June 6-1-31. m“ im-nscurrc scnooi wcu- YJHII» 3rd. mo Rod Cross. 6-1-11. "' County H “iteeung o‘ the u! "Wlmgl (Bi/eclirliegrllltiy? m‘! Annual . ""- 1‘ Miiiiriiii’ Qlxou "-1-? ‘-- chm“ c1051"! store at. 7 oft Pkndnv End Friday or ' .Juiv until"? the months of t. m. kullmgltérrzlust. J. hm, i gfgfnglflfla as usual for the Q mo?“ AI-llésxtn vgurd 6105a ~- y n . . ‘ ‘maid 5-6-7-1 -W-T-M-tf "B r L '- n2}; s Mvndav at Fred- - l‘! Your “1="It?,°‘.‘,§‘°“‘ a“ Mt. Stewart 0' w‘ Wniervnle.’ ‘I P.‘ M. - - X/ggnfisdav 1o A.M. i p n s Store, wh§,‘,”,,§,"3f°”- r ‘Wiiishlro. t; p_ M] “EH51; over 24' ‘elicit? alicr ones. Knud O-l-Ii, t teen minum leavi comment. food Iiioto Break Out In Iliohy VICKY. Ml)’ 31—(AP)—-I'ood ' riots broke out in Paris thig morning and a._ police sergeant and a cycle policeman were kill- cd and three other pollccmen wounded m an exchange of shots. The ollce intervened offer I crowd ad mobbed a. food store on the left bank of the Seine. The store was looted rmd the food thrown out to 3 crowd queued‘ in front, The scramble for the bits rc- sulted In it brawl. The looting of the food store was officially claimed to have been the result of Communist activity. and several Dersonl were reported arrested. Pierre Laval, pro-Axis chlef of the Vichy government who was In Paris, personall paid his respects In the pol a vic- tims of the battle which was the first of this nature known to have taken place In Paris in the food rush. In another Sunday Incident, u Rfuup of youths ripped an equestrian statue otf Kng Em ward VII from Its base and fumblcd II InIo the square In front of the Edward VII theatre. Named Governor 0f Gibraltar LONDON, May 31 —(CP) —Maj Gen. F. N, Mason Macfarlane, head of the British military mission to Moscow, was named governor and. commmidcr-Ji-chief of Gibraltar last night. The colonial office announced his selection as successor to Lord Gort, who now is governor and conunan- der-In-chlef of Malta. Gen. Macfarlrtne. 52, went to Rus- sln last June. He has been describ- od us "essentially n fighting sold- l... Before the war he WES a military attache In Berlin and was consid- crcd to be an authority on German military tactics- Girl flown t» To Hospital In Montreal _._,.. A Maritime Central Airways plane was converted into a flying nmbulnircc yesterday to convey an accident victim from St. Andrew's. N. 8., to a. Montreal hospital. The plane, a Barkley Grow. left here at 12.35 yesterday morning and landed at Pennfield at two o'clock where a IZ-YBBY-Old 8m- who had been kicked on the face by a horse yesterday morning, and her brother, Mrs. C. F. W. Bums. Ottawa, were picked up. Taking off again at 2.45 the aircraft landed In Montreal at five o'clock and the injured child was rushed to the hospital. It is understood she was learning In ride horseback when the accident occurred. The victim is a grand-daughter of Senator Corinne Wilson. Ottawa, one of the two lady sen- ators in Canada, and was staying at the latter‘: summer home "Glibrifl" In 5t. Andrew's. Capt. Jlmmy Wade and Chief Engineer Ralph Miller of Mari- time Central Alrways made the trip to Montreal. ‘may made the rr-tum trip In three hours and fif- Montrcal at 7.15 and landing at he Charlotte- town Afrport at 10.15. Four Ships Sunk Off U. S. Coast WASHINGTON, May 81—(AP)— The forpedolng of four ahipa In eastern United states wafcrs was announced today by the United sumo navy department. ‘Three of the ships were United states mcrchmtrnen, one describ- ed ns medium size and the other W0 mill. 'l‘hey wen torpedoed In the Caribbean and end survivors have been landed It east coast ports. An earlier announcement had told of the torpedotng of a med- ium-sizcd Nfiirweglnn gin 1n m; 9"" 01 M98100. from ich aur- vivom were landed of n gulf port. , destructive days 4oo Bus, Vehicles Itro Knocked Out Germans Having Diffi- culty Keeping Forces Supplied. ‘(By Frank r. Martin, Assoc! - - Press Staff Writer) CAIR/O, May 31—(AP)-—'I‘k_ie fur- ious tank battle in the torrid Lib- yan desert south of Tobruk turned, 1n Britain's favor today after five of fighting In which the R. A. F. alone knocked out 400 enemy vehicles In the prev- ious 48 hours. The turn of the battle of swift attrition-fought In a great sandy triangle bounded by Tobruk, Ain E1 Gazala and the dirty water hole of Bir I-IacheIm-caused the British command to say officially with typical understatement that. "the situation is not unfavorable." Salutes 8th Army Gen. Sir Claude Auchinleck, commander 1n chief In the Middle East, went farther. In an order of the clay, he saluted his sun-block- ened 8th Army-a. polyglot group of Britons, Indians, south Africans, New Icelanders and Free French, backed by United States service and supply troops-In these words: “Well done, 8th Army. Stick to It. Hang on to him, Never leave him. Don't let him get sway. Give him no rest. Good luck to you all." Indeed, the buoyant; tone sug- gested that the British forces might have drawn the North Africa corps of wily Marshal Erwin Rommel In- to "an explosive trap by allowing Axis armored forces to swing wride- ly mound the southern end of the British defences at Bir Hacheim. Main Posltlons Hold Firm Since the British main positions between the coast at Ain El Gaz- sIa, and Bir I-Iocheim field firmly, the Germans and Italians had a difficult problem In getting gaso- line to their scorching tanks and _ water to the parched throats o! their men. Reports from F5fi3ai§c “Col o‘ Three-Ileld After Week-end Manhunt WOODSTCCK. NB. Moy 31- (CPJ-Jlhrcc men were bring held here tonight following a week-end manhunt in which shots had been fired at Police. No diarge had b*en reported laid azarst the trio t0- nlght. Their names were given as Law- rence Lcur and Alvin Ccllorrf, both of Ontario-possibly Windsor-mud David Hogan, N-w York. Police could the shots wcre fired jikiday before three fugitives flsd Into rhc woods near ‘Pinker, in Victoria Count-y. Chase by an in- tcrnatEcn-nl posse of Maine and the front lines New Brunswick pzlloe rrsulted in m“ capture of one man Saturday mom- Ing and the other own Saturday night. Tllr- hunt started durlm an In- vcstlpaticn cf a sWes cf minor breaks and thefts in New Br-unswck I-zst week. Princess A1158 _ Addresses I. 0. D. E. In Annual Session MONTREAL. May 3l-—(CP)-- Mrs. W. B. Morklns of Toronto, national prrsident of the Imperla. Order Daughters 0d the Empre placed a wreath today at the cen- otoph in Montreal's D;m'.n on square fp highlight the second day of the national chapter's annual mee ng. The brief ceremony was followed by a service of Inmrccsston for the work of the order at the church of St. Andzew Mid St. Poul. attended by the 800 delegates here for the week-long sessions. ‘me two oemmcnies completed today's ob- brcviaited activlfhea. The opening ceremony Saturday evening-preceded by two days of closed featured by an address by Princes: Alice, wife of the Governor-Gen- eral, who read to the delegates g cable from Queen Elizabeth which c ressed "warmest thanks" for girfpts to Britain's Auxllitsry Terri- torial Service Omnfortc Fund. The cable added:- "A; patron 0f Iho fund I In happy to know that our courageous 5nd unselfish women nervlns with the umy are In the thoughts of their Canadian sisters. Such human and practical sympathy is deeply appreciated by Us nil." _._-_--—-— T0 SHOW TORONTO LIVERPOOL - (O P) A film of Llvemonl bomb damage has been made bv ford Mayor, su- Sydney Jones. for the people of Toronto In recognition of uuistanco received “Om lh! QIDCI C1 ccmmlttec meetings-qua, i’ War Situation Last Nighri J (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) There are Indications that the apafllflchihg lust half of the third year of‘ the war may bring devclopmen periu fth t. l. QBIIIQQB which will make It the crucial is not to say that the war can be lost or won by elther no; m the '19!“ 5,30 dflYB- N0 imaginable happening short of a successful revolt against l-lif-Icrism 1n Germany could do that. Even optimists see no hope of a revolt in the Reich unless an d until cumulative military defeats and the advancing shadow of impending starvation weigh down on the German people. U I O I c 0 Within the next 90 days however there may be portcnh from which can be adduced sound Zyudgmenf/as 0o whether this is to be a long or a short war. From them could be predicted the nature, scope and direction of the Allied war effort. As this potentially all-important. three months starts war fronts are flaming with action. Battle is joined in Russlia, in North Africa. in China, ll'l the Western Atlantic, in the Mediterranean and In the air over Britain and the European continent. Yet It still is fnr from certain whether these are more than preliminary skirmishes of the Cflllllllllgll, . . . cruclol I U O It seems fantastic to say that a battle In Russia. In which at least 1,000,000 men are engaged might be merely a "local action,” a tactical rather than a strategic engagement. Official Russian and German rc- IW"! (film the Kharkov region are so utterly of. variance. Iimvevt-r, that there is no possibility of rcconcilung them to get a true perspective on this monster battle. It certainly docs not yet mean that either the Russians or the Ger- mans have committed themselves to an all-out offensive. It is still un- cerlain whether the preliminary German thrust in the Kcrch Isthmus wus designed as a distraction to cover Nazi preparations to move in the Eastern Mediterranean, or as a first step In a major cffort to overrun the Caucasus and seize Its oil treasures. There are strong indications that Marshal Timoshenko vlnced if. was against tho Caumsus Ills Kharkov offensive appeared Intended to beforejtlcglibccxtggntcd, WES C011- that Hitler was preparing Io strike. disrupt that Nazi design Fighting Shifts To Moscow Area — Russians Announce Gains In Kalinin Sector; Battle of Kharkov Drawing To A Close. (By Henry C, Cnssldy. Associated Press Staff writer) M%-C-OW, Mary 31—-(AP)—'I‘119 Russluns announced today they had token “important enemy lines" on the Knlinin sector northwest oi Moscow, lcuving about 1,100 dead and wounded Germans on the battlefield after three days of re- ' pulsing counter attacks. The midnight communique re- verted to its previously repeated phrase that "thcre were n0 sig- nificant changes at the front dur- ing the duy. Three Ships Sunk It reported sinking of three en- emy strips, one transport and a truwlcr in the rfinnlsh gulf and an 8.0i'.0-t0n transport in the Black Sea. The communique revised the number» of German planes destroy- ed on Friday to a total of I43 in- stead of the previously reported 94. A supplement credited the sov- "et air force with knocking out ll tanks, smashing eigui. infantry compahtes, and destruction of 32 railroad cars, '10 motor vchlcles loaded with troops and ~15 am- munition carts along with numer- nus guns rind other equipment in in” up and down the front Sal.- .15. A special communique announ- ced that Marshal Tlmoshcnkos Ukraine army had scored a bril- hunt success in thwarting a Nazi- pinnucd drive upon Rostov, gotc- way to the Caucasus, declaring that the bottle of Kharkov is drawing to a close after 19 days of violent fighting. [AS883 Heavy The Germans lost more than 90.- 000 killed or captured in the Khar- kov engagement, In which only local encounters were reported t0- day. fndicating__tlie_e_normlty of (Continued on page 3, Col 4) Two Killed In Lake Shore Mine KIRKLAND LAKE, Ont. May S1 —(OPJ -Tra ped in o. rockburst "of medium in nsity” In the Lake Shore mine here last night, two miners were killed Instantly and two rcleas The victims were M. Brnun, 4B. and Wilfred O. Chartrond, 20, both muckers. Rcscuers released Victor Young, 29, a machine helper, after working an hour and I5 minutes. He escap- ed with bruises. C, Ron. 37, also n machine helper. was thrown clear by the explosion and suffered only slight lrlrjiglel. MoroII Airman. Passcs away Friends in this provmce W111 learn with regret o1 tnc passing of Ac. U. J. Nturphy, R. C. A. l-k, of Mur- ell, which occurred. in hospital yes- ocltzziy in Hamilton, Ont. Death fol- luocu 1 lengthy ilnrcss. _ The deceased was in his 22nd. your" and was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Filbert Murphy, Nforcli. Afr/er attending the school in his native district, the lute Ac. Murphy entered St. Dunstunl-s College where he completed the 1939-91 txirm. Shortly alter college closed he sought admission to Lhc Royal Cr.- nndion Air Force mid wits scnt to 'I‘0r0nto for tfiillllllg lll ivory 11:41. Later he was transferred to Jarvis. Ont, The lot-tor prtrt oi hfarch this your, he was taken ill ond was re- moved to the fiospitol ll\ Hamilton. He foiled to recover and passed n- way ycsterday. Bcsidcs his parents ho is surviv- ed by the following brothcrs sisters: Aloysius, AVLLUYICU, Ernest, Emmott, Gertrude und Vernita. They are oil at home. Mrs. Joseph Fnnncls. Charlotte- town, his atuit, has been uith hlrn for the past two months and will accompany the remains home. Fun- crnl arrangements were not coin- plete last night. $8,148,549 In Red Gross Drive TORONTO. May 31—(CI")—N:1- tlonal headquarters of the Cuna- dian Rcd Cross Society Saturday announced that a totul of 83448549 11nd been subscribed so far in the nation-wide campaign for $9,000,000. Totals reported by provinces fol- low: Prince Edward Island $48,000; ' New Bruns- 109; Saskatchewan $235,000: Alber- ta $350,000 and British Columbia $648,035. Huge Wave Sweeps Three To Death CLEVELAND. O». May 3I_—QA:PI— A hu wave swept the south shore of Loire Eb-Ie between here and Geneva. a distance of about 50 miles, before dawn today. drowning at least three persons and damaging numerous small boats. Four other persons were reported missing. Thomas Duly. asslstont coast guard captain at Phirport Harbor, said the wave was "unprecedented! He did not aggulow on its cause. Join Ihe Hos’: of Home Bakers who - n; tossoy CANADA /|='|..cnun c/m it/eér/ sh 1' Early lfavgr Three - F ourths 20 More Czechs of 59108118 I3 Flaming Ruin Are Executed “IDNDON, Mov ci-(cro-uozi P1112 squads in the old Czech Capital of Prague executed 20 more persons today in connection with the Gestapos sweeping Pepflsg]; for the attack Inst Wednesday upon Gestapo leader Reinhard Heydrlch, Tfh-Suvas tho fnzst time that. Hit- lers firint’ Squads had done their Wflrk 0n Sunday. ‘Those executed today. the Prague radio announced. included two high officials of the ministrv of agri- rtilttire of the protectorate of Bo- hemia and Moravia Toydxxys executions made a total of 8_ smcP the attack on Hcydrlch Wcrinesrlzrv. The Sermons were reported work- Inf! on the theory that pnruchutigfg drortncd from fomicn pianos hm o Iirrnrl in the attempted assassin- nixon of Hcydrich. u. You. L. r. Lowthor Gets Appointment Lt-Col. L. T. Lowther, who has already hold several important pests In the Canadian nrmv since the out- brcak of _tl_ie present conflict, re- ceived official word Saturday night that he has been appointed Gen- eral Staff Officer 1 of the 6th Can- adian Division. Recently he was on board ship lo sail for England to take over his duties as 65,0. 1 with the Canadian Military Headquart- ers in London when he was detain- ed on official orders from Ottawa. Since then Col- Lowther, who was formerlv Principal of Prince Street School. was awaiting further word hero in Canada. Finally over the weekcnd he received the good news that he had been transferred Io the new post with the Division headed by lVlay-Gen. A. E. Potts, an int-rid of his. He mudc the ac- rurxintance of the latter when both u-‘nt overseas with the lst Division shcrilyr after the outbreak of war. Col. Lowther. while in Englund, was attached to Divisional Head- quaricrs with Lt -Gt>n. A, (1_ L. Mc- Naughton. commandcr-in-rruef of the Canadian Army Overse s. He returned In Canada aft/er a your and o, half and for nine months was in charrzc of a Senior Offlctvs School at Kingston, Ont. Tuesday hc leave for the main,- lanci Io Iukc up his new duties. He expects to on overseas again some- time in the forum. - Retired School inspector Dies tit New Perth l-‘ricnds learned with regret of the passing of Mr. William Cain, New Perth, retired school inspector und farmer Ill tins province, which oc- curred ycstcrrtay. Death followed an liillCS-S of Sl7\'~.:l"<11 months. Born in Stunincrville, near Vor- non River, 83 yours ago, the de- ceased 1 ved his curly cciucaiiczn in the district school and later ut- tendcd Prince of Wales College in Charlottetown. From this institution he got his teachers license and ior several yours taught In the public schools of the province. About ten ‘ears before the turn of the century, 1e was appoint/ed a school inspector" in the western section of King's County. After following this profess- ion for o. few years he abandoned it to take up farming ct New Perth, However, again about 1910 he was back inspecting schools, a Job ut which he continued until approxi- mately 20 years ago when he retired. For several years, he continued as a prosperous former but later re- tired from this work. However, he has since remuiued on the farm which is In charge of his son. His wife predeceased him by four years. Survivors are: three sons, James, at home; Rev. Robert, C.SS.R., Cor- ner Brook, N. B.; Dr. Wank. Anu- heim, Calif; two daughters, Cath- erine. at home, and Slater Mary dcRIccI, one of the Maryknoll Sis- ters at Hong Kong; three sisters. Mrs. Catherine Donahue. Arlington, Mass; Mrs, Ellie 0’Keefe, urxing- ton, Mass-z Mrs. Minnie Ryan. Charlottetown. The funeral will be held at. 8.15 tomorrow morning from his late residence mt New Perth to St. Mary's Church, Montague. where Requiem Mass will start nine o‘clock, Island Glergyman Ordained In N. S. BRIDGETOWN N. 8. May 3i- (CPJ-Rev. Douglas Henderson of was ordained In the first service of its to take place In St. James Church here. Most R/ev. John HacKcnley. Arch- bishop of Nova Scotla, officiated. IONIXJN — (C?) —-C7PDOSltIon flfl10f1g Norwegian Youth In rc- portrri to have forced stpon- meni of the Qulsm pan for conscripting boys flrll f4!’ “notional service.‘ Described as greatest raid in all Aerial warfa re; 3,000 tons ofbombsf Dropped; Smoke plume towers 15,-’ 000 Feet. (By_DREW MIDDLETON) (Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, June 1—(Monday)—(AP)--Three- fourths of Cologne was set afire and a great area of "the German Rhineland metropolis of 756,000 population was flattened by tremendous weights of explosives dropped by 1,250 R.A.F. planes Sat- urday night II’I the greatest raid in all aerial war- fare, British authorities announced today. Reconnaissance aircraft reported a plume of smoke towering over the ruins wrought by the de- vastating force of nearly 6,000,000 pounds of bombs still was visible throughout Sunday from the European coast- 6,000 AIRMEN The astronomical proportions of this massive assauIt—far greater than anything the Germans ever let loose upon this country-were indicated by authoritative estimates that 100,000 men on scores of airdromes made possible this flight by 6,000 of Britain's best airmen. Air sources emphasized that the raid was car- ried out entirely by British aircraft and newspap- ers predicted raids three times as large when the United States air forces get into action here, More than (LOOILOIIII pounds of bombs were dropped 0n Cologne, the Ruhr and the Rhineland in what may prove I0 be the curtain raiser Io an invasion to smash Hit- ler's domination of Europe. SIX SECONDS APART Arriving on schedule six seconds apart in a masterpiece of (to-ordination, the bonrhvrs opened Ilriiaiifs threatened 1,000- bomhcr-n-nighi offensive with a new technique of aerial warfare by courciiirniiug ihcir hail of blows in which 16ft tin’ (1t‘1'.'IlL1(l'>' (\\'t‘l'\\’1l(‘iIllP(1 by uuiultcrs. a whirlwind 90 minutes ihc sliver weight of FLAMING RUIN For 90 minuivs tIu~ crush ni bombs and the Itcllish flare of in- ceurlizusivs srtrinklctl the old Rhinclzind citv leaving it ruin from whit-Ii a smukt: 111111 15,000 ice! high r05- (‘_VC> oi lilc ltt-inltzrrtlicr'> us they departed nvrr" coast I35 mills auuy. a flaming to greet the the Netherlands Thi“, suit! Primo lliitistcr Churchill in a cnnqraitilutnrv mess- ;rg<~ to ilu- Immlivi" anti qipporiing (mum; of who‘. (i"I'lI1.'l‘l\‘ u"?! rt- 'i\'/‘ ciiv Pllokrcporls loft. Iittlv doubt. that. (Continued on page 7 P‘ t! News Briefs LONDON, Juno l-—I.\Ionrl;ry) (Cl‘)—AIr raid Mulls Hnliruvil in some London ilislrit-ie r-.rrl,\' today but no raiders appeared c and the i I Iour s-ulnrlvrl ohorfly ulfci-uuirtl have fullcn on London since July, 19-11. VANCOUVIFIR. Mu; Lil —tC1‘l— Possibilities that some oi Canada's least essential inziustric~ mm n" wholly or prirviulljv vIr-vr meet the nation's labor wills CXDIWSStWI ihst‘ ~ Elliott ‘M. Liitlc. tiiim. tional Selective Service, shoriuge .1 H, .i_\‘ AN ENCvI/ISII ‘0‘1TIII‘:J§T COAST TOW‘ lay III — l\londr\y)—((‘1‘i—(-crman mid- em phowcred Iicnvy explosive fmd fire bombs on flils lown early today and some casual- tlcs were feared. ALLIED HEXDQU ARTERS. Aus- tralia, Afny 31- “h-I-‘irrs visible 80 miles were Iig cd by United Sinics and Aus ll\1I.lTl homons which made a ‘LOGO-mill round trip to raid n Japxmcsc scaplnnc basc at 'I'lI1f\iI1 In Ihc Solomon Islam's Friduy night. CHUNG-KING. Mo)‘ fll-(Afi —Gcn. (‘hiring Kai-Shrink arm- Ios In central (‘Irina have Iaunohcd a largo-scale attack against the Japanr-sc In Anhwel Province. about 200 miles west of Shanghai, the Chirmu- high command nn- nounced forluy. Aided by strong guerllla forces. tho Chlncsc nlrrady urc hummer- fng u! the plea of two of tho province's largest cities. 'u1I<, was only "a Iicrald .. N0. DEARIE A RAILROAD Dtnficfos IS M01’ A TRAIN Anuouuctza u_ O f v f ' rln n i}- f? 0 T-x 4Q . \_ 4 High tide toniitlii -' " -q tomorrow mcrninu v " Sun sets this CVQIIIIlg .. 7.39 grid, rises tomorrow morning of 1A.»; quarter moon Juno 5, 420 m p. . Summcrsidc tide eighteen min- itirs later than Charlottetown. P. E, l.-N. S. FERRY SERVICE Leave Wood Islands 7 a.m.. ll mm. 3 p. m. Including Sunday. lmvc (‘aribnn 9 a.m- l run. 5 mm. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden — Luve 0.30 mm. 9.25 n.m. 1.00 n.m. 4.45 m. 1.55 pm!- Lczve Cape Torment no-‘Llb mm. 11.00 mm. 3.15 pan. 0.45 pm. 0.10 mm, SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 In Dec. 27 Inclusive) have Borden 9,00 mm. 12.00 noon . . . .'I.l5 . . ‘fir-Ev’: Tormznwne 10.15 mm. 2.30 pm. 6.00 pm. 8.30 pm.