____ .._-»-_ JHE WESQTERNGUA lllrs. mil. Pond. a. Church Stuck-Phone m SUlilMEBSIDE end ‘NW5, sullscriptia-lc AdTPIllllY- may m- bought Bookstore. Water Street. [Ivllfl Bakery. Water Street. PRINLE COUNTY l. lhcnld be left with Mn. Pond, suféllcgriselzll! of the following rim-e; u, u“'"'“" Dflllutorle water Street. Mark Gnudet. 8'! Grenville an"; Tile Guardian will b0 delnered to any hum. m summer‘ , u, "m; 50y at 2o pa lluy. or l0: g "I Work Phone £89 for this service, t "l" your order to Ine boy leeptllulblg in; duh-en“ on "l" rum‘ column l: reserved for new: |l local inlere t. but advertising fl g nellsy nature may be inserted it 2 cents a lvurd. strictly payable h glirance. wet seasrlll means chang- Wlqlr serdlil: plans. Buy seed ut nice‘; L-432-6-li-2l. Jliyi-rydtlT-Capsules. ll t" litre‘: l RfXR s - “uh” L-396-6-l2-2l. ,\\',\§TEl) About. 500 gcoi my,“ mi 1s ’I and 8 tt. Stae lnfn} m ze at clllélil en".' u" price liwl‘ rrrci Sumnlcrside. or Bruce. McKay Ail ll lwllfl‘ “ml L-384-6-l2-2l. i W, slllnmersldr. ..l.u.lvi:s l-‘OR ova scoria 4);, Rlisiou. \\'llfl is tlle Domin- Insp-cltwl- at tlle Jelikilis thicken lllctoljv at. Siinllnerszde p; colllplctcd his work for the “W, and left on Thursday mynnlg for points in Nova seotia. m Runs-n was accompanied by w; liusioli-S- JUCCESSFUL Y.P.U. COMPE- TITIONS- A seriespf literary de- nies, sponsored by tne _Youn$ P50" pits Ullclis of East Prince County mi part of Queens county have m held dlnung the past few my, There were eight groups tak- hgparl; oll lVcdll day €\‘Clll'.'g Vic- wlii and Hampton Y.P.U. !\.£‘l ill Ylclora hall for tlleir debate. The 71mm Group presented the songs my poems of Robert Burns and |llricf sketch of his life. Hanlllton dim Lrlnafellow and dramatized ‘The callrFllip of Miles Staridtsll‘ lull the yllltcs. Miss Vera Simpson, ~_ Pumice Nlavber- and Edon fieard. ‘ flilOllllffd the Hanipon Group u; winners. Oizers in t-ne HEB-i m; Kensiugtoli. Ffeetown and my; River, i-ie-rlsington won this leiles with the dramatization of ‘m,- C0tt9l"s Saturday night." ‘llle third series included Tryorl. Bsdeque and Cape Traverse. lh Illirh Bedeqlle won with scenes from the life of John Bunyan. The finals are now rommenchg and not interest is bang taken in llleln. The debates are very educa- iloltil and are gaining in favor as titty progress. -S. -W. u, S. .\lEI-2TS—'I‘he month- llniectlllz of llie Kerlsington Uni - ti ClllllTll w. M. s. was held lllilisililll evening. Jitlle_5th. In the thence oi the Pf9Sldt3tlt.--~Mi‘5.— lllclrlas Humphrey led the meeting. The . vitamlnes. 313C65- |allt laxative, 16 oz my Elli/His serve vou at. v0, Aellslngton, ‘ -SPIZClAL __ , Chocolates we a ; uni: Co. our. y _i_ » —SUPPLIES fo~ ‘l ‘Dilllllfy tarmers} Galina-halal}; ma? L-432-ii-13-Zl. -CENTR.\L Young People's Un- ‘iay lor DOlmu. L-i-il-o-lz- erse Hall. June lath. L446 __-§EE US about lllfllallllfllO. Our pilcc-s are right. Ennlalls Drug and rilcto §€l‘\'l(€. L4-lT-6-l3-2l —1\G.\REX. ‘The safe and pleas- l) til G . . Gpllrlies Rexall Drug. o e ‘I00 L-396-6-12-2l. 411305005: UNITED CHURCH. The services for Sunday, June 15th, are as follows: Beocque 11 A. M. Uabe Traverse 3 P. M. Albany 11:0 l’- M- R"- Rfllilh W. Barker, Min- lster- L-406-6—l3-li. ——€0LGATES tooth bowder 20c size free with each purchase of 40c tixi. Enman Drug co, Lid, ' 14444-6-13-21 —LEF'1‘ FOR OTTAWA — Miss Evelyne B. Rogers. daughter cf NH. W. ‘l’. Rogers and Mrs. Rogers. Freetown. lell. Suiillllerslde yester- dav for Ottawa to visit. her lulele and aunt. Rev. B. V. biacbeaii and Mrs. MacLean-S —TRANSFERRED-Fiight Lleut. E. Russell Johnson. who has been ;:a- tloried at Summersidc. P.I<.'.I.. dllr- i g the winter months has aecn transferred to Aylmer. Ontario. He was accompanied by his wife, for- merly Miss Wnnlfred MacLennan. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. MacLennan. of Brook-field, Lt. and Mrs. JOhIIStOn will tflke up resi- dence in Aylmen-The Truro Daily News. ion competition finals. Cape Trev- 45-13-25 ifl —-CONGR.ATULATIONS — Mr. Allison MacLean, representative of the Great West Life Association at summerslde. is being congratu- lated by his many Sllmmersidc friends on his having won the in- ternational competition between agents. Mr. MacLean held the honour for the Island against stale of Washington. Mr. Mac- Lean is the highest. individual producer of new business for the Company and was presented with a beautiful tea service in recog- llli call to worship "O Brother Man.‘ “mun o; his 5eyv]cg5__S_ folitu thv hftilt thv Brother." wast followed bv the singing of hymn 50f lni prayer hv lfrs. Peter McNwt- BIflll-llle reading and devotional uiless, Mrs N. Ramsay. prover bf», . A. D. Stirling. hymn 383. of-. ieling and dedicatory prayer clcsedl tile worship period. Communl-yl ftrndsllip \ra.s_ the subject of the. dllily period. with Mrs. Hilbert Mc-y Neill gave a splendid D0991’ 011 Pntndsllin and was followed by l0: PéfCv Aici/lnrdo who 0k fllllllilllllltv ll‘lC'lldSlllD for her sub- itil A solo by Mrs. --ELF.CTRIC LIGHT COOLING SYSTEM — Mayor Campbell and Mr. Louis Hacker. engineer at. i-hc Summcrslde Electric Light plant are expected to vist Yarlnuuth, N. 8.. in the licar future to look nvcr zlze cooling system for the Electric Light Plant of that city. It \v:\.s explained by Mr. Hacker at til" Council meeting on Tuesday. that there was a growth in the electric 1R Caybeckjllght pond. which was interfering rulthorouehlv enjoyed and Mrsiwlth the circulation of the water Irltiile McMurdo gave another tn- lurstlnr paper on “Gardens of Ynellilillless". The business D6 tompleed oialls for the sending oi W. G. Sllnusoil spoke briefly Christian Stewardship. Letters were ind bv Mrs. W. Cotton and Mrs. Jlulnphrev concerning the annual {or book and baby bands. Hymn ‘lqifland the Bened ction closed the lrill. Personals —Mr. Leo Carver, Llnkletter left lbil week for Winnipeg-S. -.\ir. George MacKinnon of Grind River left recently for C1- lirtl “i re he has entered the all] Service-S, —l/ll=i Imathn lvtltheson of Fort lam. Qiltfllltl, is spending her ‘lair l i Silnlnlerside. the .;il=‘5t’ 57'1" "arellts. Mr. and Mrs. Wll- llm inllwsnn. _s. l"! qllllll. 11-year-old Coventry an "l" Fayre. Betty well tire youngest recipient of the George M P" time at e retent. Buckingham invewtere. Betty Wlll recoallllfll l" °°“'"°°“' 1mm shelter-a during her an. duties. in the cool'ng system. The system used at Yarmotlth ls said to be mt- lsfactory and Mayor Campbell felt ] that an inspection oi the Yarmoutli m“ l“ Lflllladm‘ ‘m5 mmlu" system m’ght prove “'Cl‘l|'.\'~'lll10.—S l --BR.ILLIANT STUDENT-At the ~ annual convocation of McGPl Unl- versltv the degree of Master of Arts was conferred upon Mr. Lloyd Henderson with first class honors tCum Laudet. The thesis present- ed was in the department. of Eco- momics and Political science and |vva5 entitled “The Innovation ZTheory of the Trade Cyole?’ MT- IHGndPTSOII was granted the Senior evecutive award of the Studems lCouncil of McGlll. Thfs is a silver lmedal and was granted for work done in the Debating Union So- cletv. Mr. Henderson held the fol- lowing positions. Debating Union SOClPT-y’. President: Philosophica Society. secretary; P. E. I. Clllb of McGill. President. Bands. lllcmber. inst. vear he held the Alekfitlflffl MllcKenzie Fellowship ln ECO- liomics and Political Science. Ancl —E.\'I'ERIENCED URllGGls | 5 l, U11“ m Ganonzs Assorted . Llllll 1's] i _._-_ ___.____.._i___.i __._-_._.i_._i__._m___ ._ .___.___.._._ . _ . _. _ .. The S MM RSIDE GU AND’ PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE RDIAN ‘ilsudlien death THE KING 0F CONFUSION _ ‘GEORGE FORMBY iyn his NEWEST l. Laugh Maker KEEP YOUR .. SEATS PLEASE Also Short Subjects Shows at —7.30—9.l0 Matinee Saturday at 3. SUMMERSlD Federal plan; For marketing l Surplus lobsters OTTAWA. June 12—(CP)—To lis- sisi. the Canadian lobster industry lll marketing its stirplus productlcn this _vc:li' the government spent $62.- ‘000. of which 550.000 was for an advertising campaign ‘Fisheries Minister Michaud told a question- er ill the House of Commons tu- flight. Tile expenditure was made in the GXDICJIHCDS scme 55.000 cases. each nf 96 half-pound tins. would have to be disposed of. Because there writs a reduced pack. the amount mar- keted bv the government was 5.365 cases. Gordon Fraser (Con. Peter- borouglil questioned the minister on this sllblect. The actual back was 58.898 cases as compared with an average of 97.000 cases in 1934 and 1935. the minister said. Ordinarily the local consumption is 3.000 cases and the United Stars ' market took about 12.000 cases. the awflflillllilffl‘ being marketed in toe British Isles and EuroDB- To make up for the loss of these markets an advertising firm in Toronto was paid $50000 to carrv on an adver- tising cambaign and 312.000 was spent. in the actual marketing work. Conservative House Lleaderrl-Ian- son said that. less thliil a l-lllfd 0f the iiicliev made available lust year to assist the lobster lndustiy was received bv the fishermen. He sal Parliament mid voted the money to lieln the fishermen not t-he canrlers. The canning of small lobsters should be discontinued. he contend- ‘ he could "not. fllvl ad; ieclives s one enough to condemn the uollcv being followed. The minister should d0 everythlnil to encourage the lobster industry rather than encourage further can- ning. If the present policy Continued it umlld be "suicide." . Mr. Mirllautl said that both fian- ermcil and calipers had. feared. be- fore assistance was granted. ill“ they would have to abandon the lobster lIIClllSIW because 85 DE!‘ 050T’ of canned lobster used to rm over- $935 to markets now lest. UD to Mill veal‘ the fishermen received from sier but when the government agreed to assist marketinll it. slit?“- lated packers should pay ilshflmlfn 5 1-2 cents a pound. The same proc- tice was being followed this year- Mr. Mlchalld said there was a limit for the. fresh lobster market alld ti. was impossible to ship fresh lobsters profitably from some areas. LONG 001' 0F XCTIION Mt. Lassen. California. only active volcano in the United Statei. 155* erupted in i917. . _._:_----—-————- also a Scholarship at the Presby- terian College. This fall Mr. Hen- derson wl‘l enter 2nd year theo- loizv at Presbyterian college and “lat. Doctor of Philosophy work at lvlcGili. Mr. Henderson is a native of Lnt. ll and the son of Mrs. nendrwson and the late cummlnfs Henderson-S. v v_=_____ “It ’s Beautiful, Sis ” P worker. lies her Geolye Medal inspected and admired by her anal vvhfn they were [ncseltiul for the work in Raoul.‘ Land discovered him lying in i The funeral will be held Satur. d airmen was a visit three to four cents a pound for lop-' 0f Bedeque man Mr. Hubert McBride. 58-year-old Central Bedeque farmer. was found dead in the stall alongside his horse early lest evening, Dggth was due to e heart ailment. it was believed. The deceased had been in ill health for about a year but was able to be about. He was at a village store may‘. I08 some purchases and left there for his home about five- o'clock 5nd ‘Dresumably reached there shorLy after. It. appears that. 11¢ lhad just finished tielng his horse n the stable when he dropped dead. ‘sometime bet-ween 5:30 and six oclock. the hired man re-I tumed from working in the fields the Stall alongside the horse. He was a. bachelor and. with the excep- ,i.ori of the hired man. lived alone. ‘The distance from the store t.o his lrlloirlile is about three-quarters of a Surviving is a brother, r. , P. McBride of Kensington llindwa sister. Mrs. Jim croken of 5am- merfield. day morning. More Canadian Airmen arrive (By Pat Ussher) (Canadian Press Sta-ff Writer) OME E ENG WI-fi-IR 1N . June 1l-—(CP Cablel-Scoies more l Eyewitness Chase And Battleship He new the Rodney and King The Briton unfolded this account of a drama that had its last cha. ter written 400 miles west of t e Gemmn-held harbor at Brest, France: "We got orders May 23 to inter- cept Lhq Bismarck if she came south. so steamed westward. Early in the morning. we heard the Hood and the Prince of Wales were Lri sight of the enemy and later heard the l-focd had been blown up and that time Prince of Wales had been danlaged. Enemy Breaks Through "We wer¢ informed the enemy had broken through and was steam- ing south at about 26 knots. We continued an intercepting course. "Late the neict night, the com- mander in chief aboard the King George V signalled lie would en- gage the enemy at niue o'clock the Canadian airmen have arrived m lBritain. eager as the thousands prey ‘oédljng them to get into actionl - against the Germans. l. "Give us planes and let us fly; 'over Germany." the typical comment of all. v I Graduates of the Commonwealth, Air Training Plan. they included- lsergeant pilots. air gunners and UlJ-i servers from all parts of Canada. The airmen said the Alalitlc crossing was uneventful. with rlo‘ WES cnemv submarines or airplanes ' sighted. v l After landing the airmen en- I trained and came to a Royal Air’ Force reception depot, They will spend a few days there and. like. all arrivals receive anti-gas equip- ment and steel helmets. Then they‘ .wlll be posted to operational units. l I Sgt-Observer C. J. KelLv of Ot- tawa said "it will be a lot of tun when we get into action over Ger-= many." = Sap-Pilot Albert Hemphlll of: Winnipeg declared “I hope to get hold of a Spitfire soon and see some excitement." Sgt-Pilot. lvlac Fraser of Van- couver said they had a swell voy- age across the Atlantic adding; "the D6004: ate darll Emu“ hell: tl.'.d we like it fine." i One cf bile first thrills for the to Wlilusa‘ Castle. where they saw the Queen‘ and the Princeses. Her Malesn shook hands with all of them. talk-- ed about the Royal visit to Canada and asked them how they lllollklit: London was standing up to Ger-l man bombing. l Fraser said “the Princesses are lovelvrpictunes don't do Justice to. em . I xtll‘ Commodore L. F. Stevensonl ,of the Royal Canadian Air Force; welcomed the newcomers. declaring} "we look to you to do good things for us and for Canada." 1 Kensimrton And Vicinity Mr. Albert MCIJILE-n loft 1'8- cently for st. John. N. B.. where .he has accepted a PUnltUlfl for the lsJillmfl‘ months. Mr. P. N. robin"; was a business visitor to Sumnierarls on Tuesday Miss Annie Cole rezcrneri to Kell- alr gton on Wecinasdw after visit- llfiq her home in Sol u; rook. Mr. Vincent Blake of Charlotte- tUWll was a recent business visitor ‘A Kensington. Mrs. P. S. Howatt of Summerslde was n visitor to Kensington on Tuesday. Messrs. Oliver Campbell, Herb lvfcmen and John B. Thompson were recent visitors to Summerslde. lottetown was a business visitor to Kenslngten on Tuesday. Madeline Doyle of Charlottetown we; g, visitor to Kensington Tues- day the guest of Miss Lulu Toombs. Mr. Evans Inglis ts now busily, engaged in painvng the interior of the Bank of Nova Scotla. -H. BRITISH AIR (Continued from page i) Soon after the first wave of Royal Air Pbrce planes streaked a- cross the channel tn a follow-up of Wednesday night's and this morning's heavy raids on western and northern German industrial centres. observers on England's southeast coast heard heavy exulo- aiorla and felt concilsslons so great that they concluded an extraordin- ary raid was in progress. Formations of bombers and tight- ere continued to speed toward the Nazi-held French coast until dark- neon. Principal objectives of the raids 0n industrial eeclfons of the Reich. the air ministry said. were at Dulaberg end Duesseldorf, where ‘large fires were started and exten- aive dlmoge was done to industrial buildings. Attacks also were made on the docks at Rotterdam and on flou- lone. While these raids were in pro- gress aircraft, of the coastal cmn- mand and fleet. air arm aircraft. poerlltine wlth that comm-ted Mr. John McEachern of Char-v“, next morning. At threg a.m of the 25th. the shactwing cruzsers lost sight of the Bismarck and the cruiser Prinz Eugen. so instead of engaging the enemy. ms command- er in (due! and all others involved had t) go in search of him "Our position that moinrig w-as favorable to intercepttol if the en- emy made for France. we remained roughly in that area all day, stecr-_ “FTP l" ing a course acrrss 'he ERDCCIEC. line of advance by the Bismarck. Reported Again "Olbiflfi 25th about 10:30 a.m., the Bismarck was reported agaiil, by a Catalina flying mat and soon by aircraft from the Ark Rcyal. She was still going over 20 knots and it became obvious that unless something was done t0 reduce her speed she lvculd almost certainly elude us. “Two torpedo-bcmbzng attacks were launched frzm the Ark Royal but no hits were reported The ship's company were informed at 9:30 that night that it was linlfltely we w.uld Bet into actlcn. But a few minutes ialer a report was received that the Bismarck W35 turn: in circles and making smoke. A little latel- has was amp. ‘fled to say the enemv was steer- ing north at about l2 knots. This put ‘ a completely dvferent ccm- plex:ori_ on the situannn as the enemy obviously was disabled and now was steering d.rl.-<.-'-ly' toward us. Glad News ‘The glad news was given to the ships cc-mparly and they were suitably gratified to send up a tre- mendous cheer. Soon after dark. we received reports from the cap- tain of a destroyer flotilla that he was in touch with the enemy. Dur- ingthe night destroyers of this flotilla made torpedo attacks on the Bismarck. one at. a time. while the remainder kept in shadowintt pcsltiom. “The deetroyera cos-rack and Cossack reported the enemy near- ly stopped. At this time we were under some apprehension that the Bismarck might sink before we got at her. But this fear was soon dis- mlled by a signal from the Cossack at although much reduced in speed the enemy was in lull posses- sion of his main and secondary armament, "The Bismarck was ncw some 400 miles to the west of Brest, - ."r- rounded by destroyers who rgpoflgd her every movement. The commard- 91‘ in chief decided to steer west- ward so as to have her against the morning light and to attack at dawn of the 27th. Action Station: "Th! ship's company went to ec- tiori stations in reedineee for any. thing that; might happen during the night. When light came. vis- illty was ncor and there were heavy squails and showers sweep- ing acrosi the horizon. "The commander in chief there- fore postponed the attack until the visibility improved wxloh it did about nine am. when ll was poss- ihle to see some l5 miles al‘ around, 'I'here was then a strcngish wind from the north-iced and a rough sea. "At about 8:40 the commander also attacked the seaplane base at NOTdETTIPY. East Frisian Island. From the latter operation all alr- craft returned. b\, indicative of the extent of the attack on the lnnlls- trial lcuhr. was the fact "lat the air mnlslry announced loss of 8 aircraft. BAR G ‘bombed docks at Iimuidell. the Nether-lends, end Durlkeraue and‘ Maori both scored bite and the- blew debt of! we Went W" —€. xv-aue.'.e.qiln"le;ele.e§et'.n ONE DAY SALE i Balance of Fox Wire. g g l: Story Of Sinking Of Bismarck _ (By DOUG HOW, Col-milieu Preee Staff Writer) Details o? the battle of the Bismarck were disclosed ln Canada by e Royal Navy officer who saw that spectacular struggle end in destruction of the 35.000 to-l German dreadrlaught. George V fight u. weaving battle in which they suffered not e, llngle casualty, in which the Btflmarvk‘: ex- plosives neve: got closer than 20 yards. end in which their only "M11155 were "folir or live holes" from bits of exploding shell. in chief turned the battleships Kin George V and Rtdney in to fin the enemy. The first ship sighted was one of t-he shadowing cruisers who had pursued tre Bksmarrk from the Denmark Strait. Enemy Sighted "She prted the enemy ill sight N? from hei- and shortly after. at 8:43 am, to be exact, the Bsmazck was and King George V ward them at a distance of l2 miles. “Our battleships were proceeding toward her in a line abreast and almost lmmediateiy opened fire at 1-2 a range of 23.000 yards. The Bzs- marck. who did not appear very manageable, turned to the south “The enemy‘ opened fire on the Rodney and t so as to get all her the Bismarck. The irst enemy vo fell about. 1.000 yards siio Shortly after. it appeared the Rod- In Full Action now, both Bfllbh l1. full action, sillftllfifly ecurse lvlile niarck steamed norm. o:urse sidcrable ccd f.c. if possible. Thus was mace e about then the Bismarck changer’. his fire to the King G-crge V. "When t-lie Rrdriey ".ll'l‘"i‘l the range closed very id during the next qua: Bismarck was very seve cross fire from t-lie Rodney on n9." port bow and the King George V i similar courses and to cu: l on her port quarter I Fire 0n Bismarck y " enemy salvceo still coritzn-y l ued to arrive and some fell pretty l close to the Rcdiiev. Bill fires- csuld be seen aboard lire Bkmarck and her fore turrei- was pointing in the wrong dlrecti u aiicl appar- ently unable to more. “She was scoil hit. 1i. the fore part and another turret was seen to be out of action with the guns dropping almost dzrvn to the deck. "By this time the Bismarck was moving much Flower alld lll order to keep close to her the Rcdiley and King George V nad to turn completey around two or three times. The Bismapcka after tur- ret was still firing but lit longish. intervals. The ranges closed still more and frequent 111's were scored on the enemy both with main and secondary armament. “More fires were observed and the back of one of her turrets the ‘side. Another spectacular hit yl-os seen on her bridge and yet another on her quarter deck Enemy’: l-‘lre ceases "At the end of this phase the enemy's fire had apparently ceas- ed-it was about 9:30 rl.m But her colors were still flying and courses were steered, as it W\S noces=ary to try to sink her by gun and tor-y pedp as quickly as possible as both‘ submarine and air attack were to‘ be expec . “Now torpedoes. I um told. were fired frcqn the Rsdrley, two of which hit the Bismarck amidshlps. The elieeny was a mass of flames and black smoke and lvas very low in the water. Firing ceased. ‘The commander in chief ordered the cruiser Dorseishire which had arrived rrvxn the south, to fire tor- pedoes at the enemy which she] did and the Bismarck sank short- ly after. about ll am. "I believe the first hit was mor- on the enemy by the third salvo from the Rodney which had opened fire with her A and B turrets There. were no casualties on either the Rodney or the King George V." GREAT BUT 511A LLOW Despite its great sire. Great Salt Lake has a maximlln depth of: only 40 feet. i av Lennon's bTI-IbITIONS LONDON —— tCPl - Sl.\'l€(‘ll hi?- tleships or 4.800 tanks M‘ 200 nlerrh- ant. ships could be bought hv the 2111000000 155.34.000.00» raised ln London during War Weapons Week. " TT-m ' l AINS Special Prices Saturday Only June 14th. G. Ii. MacllilAlilllE Suminersicle sighted to the east. of the Rodney.‘ steering 1.0-. and shortly after back "o the north; at shipturned wpor. provinces. until this fiscal your in lrls bearing on 1 rcxipt of special grants from tile 1 ‘Federal treasury in addition to the d ‘wartime income tax proposals Fin- .d:e i t ' , get proposals. l terccptioii. Alcoa. flavorful YOUNG ieo leaves in u new lea bull ihuiWMw 7- illld~ 11-1-1. puckelges. F alifax, . visitor to hi5 home herte. . t ' Special grant" j lllllflllllll l To Provinces l’ m M ML y! m n a L X H k S us: a week-m Now discontinued ' Mr. Go dcn Kerr _ Charlottetown. was e week-end Ylsitor to his home . here. Ztfss. Bessie .\f student at was a ieccn: heie. OTDAWA. Jul-Q l2 - (c?) - Bix retrial" provincial subsidies. have ldlcated f-Eleii" intention of accept- ing the Dominion Governments once Minister Ilslev told the House of Conlmclis last night. - ‘noes are British Coluni- by 015 bill-l " lielvrlil. Manitoba. New P‘ ice Edward Island. N0‘. .1 Sc iriade no reference WITH 1‘l‘O\'lll(‘€$ OXF- ‘oec and Alberta. nor to '. of Premier Hepburn of .' a Dominion-Provincial duscilss various umb- bellveen the blur."- a. e the lllforliltiticn spec. grants were Sifllil-C from the eszzmates. tinder his ‘.1 soerial grants to be discoéitinued and. to :70‘ M" J .= T" ‘ - . recent: bu in ss vist :- ‘.7 l’ A qilc: large circie In return the Dominion nffere.‘ Ht he L‘: _ w": cijli province a sum equal on Jame riiliei" to its revenue from the ln- MacRae. c? ~ t‘ v field in its last fiscal ve*i'. and A ‘ rise ‘re-t \Vaido ‘.\(' c y of o: provincial dc“ charges. rvllirheler the provincial govern- ment chose. Atislvarlila! l further from the Conservative ‘leader uuestlcri Mr. ".l\'.\l)l" to tile l§I5l\l2‘.<'.'5 uilctci‘ flit" blue ‘Q two options. the larger being llie amoillil likelv lo be accepted. The ailicuilts follow with tax col- lection option first and bond iri- tercs: in brackets: Prince Edward Island $250000 15275000»: Nova Scot-la $1.500 .0 152123000); New Brunswick $2.575- 000 153250.000): Quebec $i'7.000.00’1 fives an"! . has toinecl u leaves for h? . a June 12th Hrs rt". lslprscoo»; Oiltario sesooooco hm silver-s 1510800000’; Manitoba ssooocoa ls 3.1750001: Saskatchewan $2.075.- —————-—~—~-~—— ooc ($G.300.000)I Alberta 84.000000 lsseoooool: British Columbia $12.- 600000 (56000000). NIGHT FIGHTERS (Continued from page l) Says labor Situation is Misrepresented OTTAWA. Jim-e 12--rCP1 ‘No.- them. You just aren't told. In a pattering rain a conducting officer led the press party around the air station. In front of a Beau- fiullter he paused. showed where an s Dowd M“. were theflarznament. the pilot's an! the Canarfian can.“ éegétt orig Ina of the observer. box.’ 581d mam. a T! elluv. "n 1 d h! n last night to Prime A l ri-e gne mac m. s kenzye Km‘ ‘.65. graceful fish - shaped fuselage made to look like a ferocious shark bv the painting of a white eye and a lilrillthflll of saw-teeth on the "nose". was one that. had brought down several enemy bombers. Others also had been introduc- ed to the enemy. bringing down nine raiders in three nights. Pilots of the squadron hold five D. F‘. C's and two D. P. Mfs. One or the awards was rvon by a youth who shot down two raiders on each of four different, nights. at the Selgnfory" ed the Gt'\\'l‘f‘T‘.il‘l‘l‘l' est possible 1P:- inlitiediatelv. its and become a grdve nlez. Besides the Beaufl hters ti.- . e -, ‘m station has squadronsg equippeld ,';‘,‘°.h€§“1§§u.,‘{3,.'..¢“~‘W’l“ with Paul Defiants. the pioneer “fife 1abm,‘;.',,'1, 015M‘ fighters with‘. swivel gun ‘tormmyinsy. 3i ‘ turre hind the plot, and Htll- My“, cnnh.___r_‘._ l. ricarlcs. sturdy little craft used by Canada's two fighter squadrons. of the R. C. A. F‘. Etxcept for the hlack coat. the Hurricane appears the same as that used in daylight operations. ' All flight fighters have nroven themselves as expert daylight m... \ u combatants before they change In‘. m‘ 1.5,... over to nights. Most of them make v Pf...’ “m0 ‘l. . the switch without. difficulty and lniziuitiofi‘ W all become accustomed to operaf- 1 mm' “aé-‘nf. lnz in the dark within a short ‘ fmyngyn \ . . time, " l lfm‘ ‘ Host of them also average about lurllllimlj. the same ability to see in the dark. 61m l‘ l m" l Some were reputed to be able to ' ' see beettcr in the blackness bllt ll ‘ Rrolm captain said that if you I allowed l0!) marks for seeing in 3 the dark there would not be 20 nlarks difference between those f obtained hv the luau reputed in have “rats eyes" and the pilot with ordinary sight. ‘g _ 011v iloillt in‘ favor of Right ln- coliutrv tile dav al sol 1e soea er. was — - -- thrlt liv- Nazis were able to make "big efforts" to stage concentrat- ed raid; on'_v on moonlight nights They crillid. of course, drop bombs fll‘\' illrzht the weather prtrmltie-l tllcm to get off the ground. ‘ "Rilt." lle added. "it is on moon- Lcllt nights they have done the? bic1"=i icbs and that is when we are nolv doing our best work if e call nnnage to shoot down ‘.0 (‘Pill of their bombers on tilrasc ‘ proving as holin- "There is no t". "groups of lcs are ii"! s-lll ma’- it*.'.~“.~ IIOSPTE“. liEfil-..»:l{.\<-.\ls- LONDON --- iCPl » ~ l For common /'-’\ ordinary sore t root i ~- 'l“.(l I think wt- can l‘ i l lvlivc we have beaten ill? llzjllh‘. lzonlber." l r171}; ‘\\"SF. ca 1"" (‘Tl ‘t’ e rvrr- o- .l "'0: eclipses as eirly es 200d 13.0.