‘Wild. whose United Fhrmers o! Al- ’ liflilliilljliillTS Al. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN other “qflgauemualaa “nan oxilothna, ,...°""""""' ........1.“'-“.‘!'.£.-' if?“ Ellallan Social Credit Leader Dies VANCOUVER. May 25 —(CP)-- , ‘Premier William Abenhart of Al- - berta, who gained international l fame as the head of the world's i first social Credit Government, - died in hospital hero on Saturday. He was 0|. Death was due to a‘ liver ailment. Mr. Aberhart entered hospital for eokup April 1b while vacation- lnghere. He later waameleased but tie-entered hospital last week-end lifter attending physicians held an unergenc consultation. He io a turn for the worse fliuraday. Mira. Alter-hart and his two daughters were at the bedside M. his death at 5 am. P.D.T. Funeral services will be held at Canadian Memorial Church here Wednesday aiternoon and will be conducted by Rev. G. Harrison Vil- leii. a Personal zrlend of the prem- iers for the last i5 years. School teacher and ‘Bible class leader at Calgary. Mr. Alberhart became interested in Social Credit M11033 and. despite a stormy ca- reer punctuated by atrlfos in and out of his party. he never lost faith in his ideas based on the Social Credit theories of Major C. H. Douglas. a Scottish engineer. Until his death Mr. Abel-hart was hollcful that his legislat-ion~ruled lmoonstii/utlonal in provincial and Dominion courts and the Privy EoQnoil-ovould be implemented in r a. lie was not a candidate in the leu Alberta provincial election but, ln hi; campaign he promised eleci- ' 0n a monthly credit dividend o! I26 for every man and woman in the province and also that he would take over as premier if his party Ion at the polls. He won that vear bud swept into power again in 1940. Dlldltd to establish a financial Byitom bued on utilizing national wealth. ln the 1905 election his party Won 56 of d! seats and Mr. Aber- but succeeded Premier R G r A \ Berta government failed to win a single seat. He took over whrn a leat was found for him in Oke- Ml-Hlilh River constituency and his idministrflion was sworn in Sept. 3 that year. ENDING! BUINID WOODSTOCK. N. B. May 34 IO -F'lre starting in a barn at nenr~ ' llv Jacksonville this afternoon de- _ "Killed the residence and two _ tuna of Darrel Phillipa. The roof n. a. neighbor's barn was damaged. . Th‘ "YB spread to woods but the - Woodstock fire department. aaalat- f Si! bi‘ air raid precautions equin- "llnt. averted further damage in lie community. ."““‘""""‘"" w§“h"‘£l“lr ."ltlikiec-lrldllbona ‘Ituesda .3 | a-aa~ - . ‘mince-or a Th o . lpau g urabe&_zi "hmal-Qllwl Oove Irina . a-le-ai. "a" York ma in M no 1o U‘ lament. y “hose-u " arri C ~ “"“"'~"°'eil""'iiiis.i"~ ' v , Q70. Lfigfhflv they m. w? P. ennui ALLIED AERIAL OFFENSIVE STEPPE Islancl Giuen Drastic Going-Over __...-_.____..__..___1.__.. . _ ’ lion. W. ll. Motherwell Passes < at _________ ALLIED UABIPHIS, iliiti‘...‘tii‘°“u.iii.“... “A W“ *“ Mm Mam; m; muzlolvetmrydir; ammo May 24 —(C‘Pl— Hon. W. R. Mother-well, former Domin- mosmmlnb“! “amt w" “V” m" ion and Saskatchewan Minister of 72%’ t The People's Paper other drastic going-over by 3mm, and American bombers yesterday and the number of Axis aircraft destroyed in the Madlturanm; theatre in the last five days rose w 31'! officially tabulated, U.S. medium bombers and tight. ers blastcd-Pantelleria three times within five daylight hours with results d l‘ u "excellent"md two-engined Well- ions followed by night so puverlae the little talian island with two-ton block lyuatgrl, Acaln yesterday and last mm; i116 bombers met no fighter 0pm- s on. Though the attacks on Pantcller- la and other widespread Allied Ylldo against Sardinia and the Italian mainland brought no am nounced destruction of Gennan or Italian plane: Sunday. delayed rev Agriculture and known as the fa.- iher of the axe-operative movement among agrarlans, died here today after an illness of several weeks. 1-lc was 83. Born in Lanark County. Ont. Ml- iviotnerwell bega-n his agricul- tural career onahomeatcadat Ah- crnethy. Sash, in 1882 and became one of the Domlnionb leading a4;- rlcultural authorities. He travelled from Brandon Mom, to Izzdian Head, Sadk“ in a Red River cart. Elected president of the Terri- torlal Grain Growers Association, formed at Indian Head. in i901, he later took an active part in forma- tion of other western organizations -elevator companies, co-operative societies and pools. Elected to the Saskatchewan 1e- gislature in 1905, he was Minister of Agriculture in the province dur- Dorta boosted to 306 the number of bv the North- western African air forces alone ‘since last Wednesday. Middle East and Malta-baud squadrons how. W01‘. had accounted for at least a dozen more. Against this wholesale destruc- tion of enemy air power aver and on Italian soil was an announced Allied loss of l8 King's Liberal Government as D0- minion lvlinisiar of Agriculture. He unsigned the Cabinet position in lng the Liberal administrations of Hon. Walter Scott and Hon. W M Marlin until 1918. In 1921. a. few days before reach- ing his 62nd birthday. Mr. Moth- eiwell was sworn in as a member of Rt. Hon. W. L. MacKenzie 30 A I'll! LATE PREMIER ABERHART | ,Tronp Ship Not l f h Northwest African all? lgsslana hi’ m . . U0 o! new,’ 17_m_!_ Mr. Motherwcll was first elected H. member of Parliament for Re- gina constituency in 1921. He was a member of Parliament for Mel- ville constituency in Saskatchewan from 1925 until 1940. He announced his retirement from an active po- litical career 1n June. 1939. "When a man drops out at 80. vcoplfl will gay he is a quitter" he said at that time. He did not contest the constituency in the 1940 general election. Speed Caused Wreck DEL-AIR. N.J.. May 24 —~iAP)—~A Pennsylvania railroad SWKQSITIRI} said tocay that "GXCESblVG speed‘ caused a crack lfiooach Atlantic city-to-rNew York passenger train to lurch off the tracks on Delairis "horseshoe bend" last night. carry‘ ing 14 persons to their deaths and injuring 89 others in the railroadflr worst w1c_c_l: 11109815- “lln Old Freighter” UITAWA May 24 -(C1P)- Air Minister Power said today in the House of Commons. that. g, ship sunk in the Atlantic by enemy ac- tion with loss of 3'! R.C.A.F. per- sonnel was a suitable ship for ass- eotgcrs and not "an old frei tar" as had been rumored. Ma]. Powc: said he had received a. number of inquiries from House members and others about, the loss the R.C.A.F. men. The ship, of British registry. had a speed of 15 knots. It had a crew of 86 and accommodation for 53 passengers. The lifeboat capacity was 231 persona. Prince County Girl Victim Of Accident i}? Miss Louise Cormier. 18. Of \Vatcrf0rd Fatally Injured On Road Near St. Louis. " "‘”‘—‘*“ Sydney Strike ls Settled a q Miss [Dillsc Cormicr. l8 of Wa- ° lierford. Prince County district... was killed Saturday fright on the road near st. Louis. she was walk- ing with a girl friend when she was, struck by a motor truck. The acci- dent occurred aixrilt 8 cfclock. l sparring in preliminaries l0 an ex- pected great. summer offensive. Red Army troops made a fceler thrust today into German positions cn the western front, strong group near Rcstov, the Russians reporter. tonight. line. soviet artillery and airplanes hammered enemy tanks and troops moving up‘ to the front. and two German air‘ let mllltnrv ends of the long [rent were shat- tered. said (Inc midnight communi~ l-beaverhrool? SYDNEY MINES. NB" MAY M-l Miss Cormler lived only a fewl minutes. She was dead when Dru. In Canada Lnuis Hall. 5m“ 155i Th._ _i__urlday'.__ ____ The driver of the truck was Gil- BUsuqn-Ss MA}; D“Q\VNE|) bcrt Hudgins. it was learned. ____ Miss Connier was a daughter of WOODSTOCK, N. 3.. May 2i (C Mrs. Cliillde Cormicr. Her father is Pi-Swlrling water of the St. Jchnrdenti. the victim of a drowninil BC- River took the life of Albert E. Bab‘ cident. a few years ago. In adrii~ kirk. prominent Woodstock si- tion to her mother a sister Miss "e35 mm, ,.,-1.L.n a 13ml, cm): ll Floienre Cormici". also survives. while he and his sun. Wilbur. were.‘ Funeral services were hold yes- fishing here today. Unable to reach! lerday 1110111111: from the Palmer his father ‘in the awlft current. Wil- l Road Roman Catholic Church. bur finally swam to shore after n Burial was in tbe Palmer Road Ce- hard struggle. meiery. l Jap Counter-Attacks ln Making At Attu Enemy Launches Second Large-Scale Air Assault To U.S. Positions. By HAMILTON W. FAION Annotated Pres! Staff Writer WASHINGTON. May M (AP)- Despornte counter-nitric: by the Japanese in m attempt to resflln control of Attu appeared in the making today as the United States navy announced a second inroa- scale enemy air assault on the Aleu- tian Island. needed. The fighters went into the aerial battle on the short and of o long- odde engagement, but. came out on top. Five of the l6 bombers were snot down in fierce fighting. Two American fighters were lost. one shot down. t a other listed as mias~ ing. One pilot was rescued. Whence the bombers came ro- ‘n: mained in doubt. Many observers The raids came on day], the navy reported with ahou believe they were baud on Parr- 15 bomber: participating Satur- m u, a Japanese sea and air d. ' mu m gum“; base eao miles to the west in the Kurile islands. The possibility ax- iata, also, that they might have come from Japanese carriers hid~ iglgcilfrlehlnd fog banks in the North c. 1n the event they were carrier- bued. a naval engagement la at least a possibility for it is unlike- ly carriers would be there with-l out escorting warships. o naval units, attacked by the first. flight of bombers. turned them back. U. S. Army lllhtel’ 171m" me to battle when the sewn-l my: wu reported nearing Attu. a ilily came from the U. 3- nirf l at Amohith. some 200 miioa to the out. lndicetlnl $11M efficient systems have been set uP on Attu to call for air support when i ions as to tho purpose Beaverbrooks visit to Canada. Conway Airman Presumed Dead 511111118 David Brinks oi Conway. P-E-l. was listed as previously re- ported new for official purpoms presumed dead overseas. in tonights 583m R. CAP. casualty list of the war. {its number was given as 1272892 and his next Banks. \<.._._ [fleas must now o to buy Tea and Covers Prince Edwardi Island Like the Dew CPIARI-WTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, MAY 2s, 194s War Situation Last N 'ght By Glenn Babb, Associated Press War Analyst filmed by Winston Churchill-Ac determ b)’ itself could bring about the collapse ll-llnchod. The Dortmund raid evidently usher; in a new phage 0g m; w,“ Dortmund showed the Germans what they can expect the war on the home front w be like from lhh point on. It must be remembered however, that Mr. Churchill said the ax. Peflmef" W" "("111 "Yin; only “so long as other llwnourea are not, 0x. eluded.’ The terrible punishment German industrial centres are getting and will get in ever-increasing measure will not mean any release from the constant menace of invasion. There la no basis for any Nazi hope "l" u" ellwflllmll will permit the slightest relaxation of the guard that must be maintained all around the 11.000-mlle perimeter of the European fortress. ‘Mr. Churchill .in his speech to the United States congress was v31"? 0" "l" W516“ 0f "It! "Wflfllflll." bill he did say that the ivcstcm 5m" m1!“ d" “everything in our power that is sensible and practicable to take more of the weight off Russia in 1943." There is no reason to bc- lfeve that the bombing campaign alone would satisfy Russia’; insist- ence on a. second front in Europe. That insistence must be mcf. this slim- mer unleaa relations between the western powers and the Soviet Union are to be subjected to more severe strains than ever before. lne whether "the use of air puwe of “ The heaviest air raid of history, inflicted by the RAJ’. and lLC.A.l~‘. on Dortmund Sunday night, seems to indicate that the experiment incn- MAXI MS 017A. ltlERE MAN Sticks and stones may brcak you bones, but nnmcs v.11) my" m”, you. _.____._é._._ 12 PAGES l Famous Island Airman Back In Canada r ny or llzly"—is well I 2,000 Tons Of Bombs Dropped l On Dortmund l lnhocrlpllon llellvornll. $5.00 I1". $4.01“ olha- Proflnreg g u,g_,\_ 354,0 D- l German Industrial Center Given . Heaviest Raid In History Of Aerial Warfare. LONDON. May 24—(AP)-—Beating down the world's thickest anti-aircraft defences guarding the primary source of Germanfs war power, the R.A.F- and R.C.A.F. dumped more than 2,000 tons of bombs on the industrial city of Dortmund last i i l i A night in the heaviest, most concentrated attack in Where and when it will come ls for Hitler and his Generals to guess but there is nothing more certain in the war outlook than that them will be one or more direct assaults by sea, land and air by Canadian, r British and American forces somewhere against the European fortress l this year. These may not constitute the final, knockout bloug, ivhich ‘ may be withheld while the softening up continues a few months longer. but they will be major diversions which will compel Iiiilcr to withdraw hundreds of thousands a! lighting men from the Russian frnni. The immediate, primaryiobjectlve of the raids, of course. ls the do- atruction of Hitler's war potential by knocking out hls factories and lim- iting production. But the morale factor may prove in the end the determining one. As the fury of the storm rises the conviction will he horm- in on the Ger- man people that this is not just a passing ordeal but n scnrge that. must continue with ever more terrible effect until the war is fended And it must be clear In time even in Germany that in such circumstancrs it can end in only one way. Russians. MakerFeeler Thrust Into Nazi Lines Preliminaries To Big Summer Offensive Still 4 Underway On Soviet Front. illTEIlNATIUIlAl. . ar A GLANCE reconnaissance LONDON, May 24 -—<CPl—~5tlll i9 and German AERIAL- Dortmund blaisli-d with Jnore than 2.000‘ tons of bombs do, lscribcd as heaviest raid of ivar; l bomber command. chief says more than 100.600 tons have been dropped , ‘on Germany; RAJ’. Beaufightcrsi i t . ‘ o Warez: :P.r::.."'r.""a.:.':.":..."" RUSSIAN- Patrolling and rccnn- l naiasance continues prepnrafnry to 3 expected offonsives; 13 Nari bomb-i crs shot down in raid on Buiflisk-l Elsewhere uionrz the fluid battle at concentrations of ttacks launched upon prime Sov~ ue anc a separate broadcast re- orded by the soviet Monitor. Gaulle and Giraud effected. Gir~1 aud spokesman says: London nh~, servers say Dc‘ Gaulle will be rfrnb‘ - ral figure of Hench North African l -,» regime. A iinue mop-up; l6 tons of bombs Mining magnate and l: d I i’ . - < . iory Aircraft. The two c“ o VG ‘dropped n" Rahal" m “m”, mun’ in. a car to an stlnation. drove away‘ unannounced‘ de- llietoria liay ; ls Observed t By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadians celebrated the VlClnf- ia Du holiday yesterday much as m‘? ave been accustomed 1o in the past, although Dominion Gov- ernment employees across- the‘ country found themselves at work throughout the day. , Victoria Day was one of the 1101-‘, ldaya eliminated by the Dominion} Government in its effort to boost war production but in most cen- tres the day had been proclaimed a civic holiday. Thus most rclnll en-I terpriscs were closed along with schools. liquor stores, and some Provincial Gplemlgent offices. Both men brushed off all quest. of Lord his native OTTAWA, May 24 -—lCP,>_ 53¢, missing on active scrv1¢e f kin his father, I. D, At Your Service "SALAM" TEA 8: COFFEE further it is doubly important flee by the "flavour” standard. 0 history. The unprecedented assault also carried the Allied air forces to another milestone in the aerial battle of Europe, for, Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur 5QDN__L])R_ .1_ g ypflLgAN I l-iIarris disclosed; it beought the; tratthal gveigéit of ex. -, p osives roppe on ermany y e om er com- l l l l _“--{;-..;' :~_~i --—~--' ~—-_— rtcrzni ALGIERS — Union between Del‘ OTTAWA. May 23 AACPJ_- 51x members of '01-. < of The tviirguil Bi.‘ the flitPflriill-loy- lrlcnrl 311111?!) l lit have Wfllkfll out llrolii cnenly L01 ‘ii list fl.'_ RCJLY. ‘lxniiziel who ihnvc arrived from ihr- United llciiigdrun tn lake up varied p051- mrlis n Canada. T ‘ \\\"l"l’ nnlcng rhunngrd aircraft behind en lines will remain untold f0 (my tic (iuiaiimi. for .~c:\iriit' reasons. in tho cases of Squadron Lender J. A. lvlacLcan D.F.C.. Bcaionis P" : Flight Lieutenant Van "' and Bar. address Sergeant J. V. ll B.C., and Sen‘ "nth, of VZDPOUYCI.‘ Pilot fiiii Robert L. D.F..‘tf.. of Hluliczito Ont, "Jinn hnntlznr pilot. and his lion air purine", Fliciit. S91‘- Jolm K. Wood of Hornsbil. Non" South Wales. l-f‘(‘il!“:I}' does rlri 09in‘ tho case o“ mi" of the mo! iwculnr Willklilg fonts of’ the u. v n For Sperm’. W: ‘l k who trniixer‘. for a time Jon, NB. and Wood plod- 0 parched miles across the desert mid t e Qimitarn dc- ll 1100' k. for ?'7 days hurl been shot dcd i0 I iii rzl commanded bi- Fllzlit Lieiitenantl N. A. Yiiiichcll. London. Ontario. n-ns rolilpnsed of ground crew air-t mun nho llfiW‘ roinrncd to Canada in l"‘.‘lll7Sl,{‘l‘ for nircrcu‘. Soimdron Lcndcr MncLmn was a member of the first Canadian irmnbvi" squadron lo he formpd in Fnuli cl. Ho unified his DIIC. for -\ l iliini niece of piloting when ‘no ii< Halifax bomber info the Allisouuh his aircraft. " . dninaucrl c i‘. back to a Sale lnndingn Cnnlnizmdcr E. W. Kcnl Hamilton. also was w. . in l \. he mnnaccd i-fci buck- Dortmund. h, we} ready Wes billowing u ‘mand since the war began to 100,000 tons. l ranging up and down the industrial by their breaching of the Mohne and Eder dams. ln a shattering inaugural of the i Churchill’; promise to bomb the Axis ever more heavily. an average of 35 ‘If ESCRIX‘ "l?" Dflfichllllhll, more than 33 tuna of high explosives and inccndiaries plunged down on r‘, the eastern Ruhr city of Dortmund every minute for a full hmir, l The total weight of more than '2.- 000 tons was almost five times greater than the amount dropped? by the German air force in its big- gest raid on Ilondon on April 16, 1941. The Germans used 250 tons in their mid on Coventry’. Nov, l4, i940. when 300 persons were killed and hundreds iniured. The irresisinblc fire and de- struction on Dortmund was de- livered at the rntlo of more than eicht pounds for everv one of the 500.000 residents of the iron steel. coal and transportation centre. To reach Dortmund the R..A F‘ - R..C.A.F slcv fleet, three-fourths of which was made up of four-en- rzined giants capable of Britain's biggest had to cross the system. regarded as The world's gim ____.———f. -~———. The Vichy Rzulln fell silent just before midnight. indicating possible new raids upon the con- tinent» . (The Budapest radio also shut down aficr giving air raid pre- caution instructions. the feder- British heavy bombers also blasted other objectives in the Ruhr, al communication: commission 7 reported in New’ hark.) most concentrated network of guns. l planes. searchllghts and detectors. , Thirty-eight of the big bombers in- j eluding four Canadians, failed to i, A Vi/hen the last plane reached| however, smoke as high as “mung from a m," cnursel 15,000 feet and one plot sflld "the. '. On lllP sum» course, (filflilivglad become 5° ‘mi-fatal; l RV," worrv us." The Dnilv "limes v‘ " v sioff for hull n I"‘i‘llll'\', rii §ill'.“lf\l'l\llli l or oi ..lomr= A W‘ mm" Prcrliiiw ni lit. .<; First Kins merz Conference Here Concluded Saturday iCPi- Officials of the United S. Handler of Alberton beached hen; _ __ was c Crirrimmitlol‘ Ralph Dav- h - 1. l d _ n . =4 scare... ’ e O it H! ~ ' ~ ‘ ~13 “or inf ~131uh M1 -. - , ' 1 ' ~ a '_ iimnn- 0. men mpoyoi onl per cent unionization of Princess: A Jury W115 lmllfliielled and Vlilweill ;e§a‘,;?1s,?;,,1y ‘,f,’,,",}°‘,,,,$snjp,,, , 35"?“ l" m” d"! "iws l“ 31" ll ""5 ,‘ the air raid defcncese of ivéstcrn 00111913’ ¢YIVPI°Y¢¢B hid bW" SWY-lhe bod?“ Tm“ the hearing ad‘ lisher. arrived at nearby Maltonl PACIFIC I ~ r ‘n h l M“ 24 ‘Cl Gellmnm" cessful and work WODIL be resumed l iourncd until Wednesday ‘night Air-pom from New ymk wmgh, and. A - ' r‘ - avmej" ='~“‘ ml“ P‘ l~"\\'- 87- W110 The Canadian force nflrtlclgotinfl ton-‘Drl-gw an" a elem; 1a5t1ng,FV‘l(l'l’ll(‘(‘ will be taken at St. was mo, by J_ o‘ 8mm“ Canadlmf- u" l" Alwmms "5 "S" l°‘"'~‘°‘ "‘“" W l‘ "l Alli‘ hlollfflml‘ in the attack was described v R 1C AT headquarters as "of great in Ivlcmorinil < ' and its bomblohd as; ' :l:li(‘ hafilc-irwiod Dominion flior< l Wvd ilicrc hadn't boon flllyilllllli __l_lii§_fl:_l_fil_‘_lll'lillld_lflildwfilllq‘ Colo; l | l l l Mr. W. J. Kirby Of Moncton Is Elected District Governor. W. .7 Kirov of tho Mnncion Kins‘ y mcn Club svns elected Governor oil District No. 7, Satirrday. Maritime Ami Newfoundland Milk fol’ Britain ’.‘f‘iill(‘l'(.‘llf'(‘ vmirillrivrl fit The Charlottciowii Saturday niglu._ The Governor-elect. succeeds J. C, conducted. it being the concenszin‘, AM_ ____ l, Johnson of Sydney. .()tl\cr officers l of opinion that this year's confer elected included Deputy District? Governor Hugh Mac-Crush of Glace ' Buy and District Secretary J. Mllrplll.‘ of Mrmcton. Kinsman Gcnrpc Sinclair of the cllllflftllPlfvlVll Chili, rccontlv trans , fcrrcrl hrrr‘ from Amherst and lmir: n prominent mrmbci" in Kinsmen circles is the nominee from DlSlflfLl N0. 7 for mo National vice prcsid ency. Three sessions n-cro hold on Sui-f urciay with n business session ink 1m; place in llic morning iollowwl by tho luncheon at which the dcl-r . gates hoard an . nnri‘ timely nddrcns hv Col. K. S. Rngcis “ tho text o; which nppcnrs in this issur; election of officers and dis , cussimi of tho Milk for Britain= fund and wrist war problems no‘ cupirtl the afternoon. the conference concluding with the Govemors banquet. hold in the evening. r The conference proved a highly successful one and the Charlotte . town Kinsmen Club. hosts to the as the‘ large number of delegates present, and ~,<~,n,;,,~,~,--,\v mgr-fling M 5mg, rocoivcd ur-il deserved tributes from.’ ihe visiting clubs for the manncr in which the conference had been‘ once or District No. 7 had been one‘ of the most successful both from, rlm entertainment and business out-i 00 Tho new Govcrnorclcct and past.‘ District Governor J. (;_ gunner,“ were named as the doicgnics to n: tend the Notional conference to he held in Windsor, Ontario. l Site of the i044 District 'l c0n~l fcrcnce is Saint John. N. B_ i Morning Session The morning business session was . presided over by Governor .7. C Johnson win iii his opcninu remarks warmly welcomed the visitim: dole l gates stressing particularly the two. new clubs added to the district. Pictou lill(' New Glasgow. tho ialtcr club bcnuz the 100th to ontcr the» Kin. on circle. Minutes of the last f “(Eontimled ion Page 7, Co. 3) A ‘swinger-en i‘. g valley they flooded only a week ago western half of Prime Itliniswr mic was pulvenzcd last February. and Sgt. Vern Tonxkins of Kin- ciersley. Basic. summed the oper- ation up neorlv with “I guess we washed the place up." The filers included ilic squad- nons led by \Vlil;1 Cmclrs M. M. lillemixig, 1) P‘ C- of Otiairn and H. W. Kerbv of ‘Toronto. A vcicrun of raids on Gcmnnv, PO. Knowles Crosby’, of Yul-mouth, N.S., said "at one point during the raid there was such a curtain of smoke hanging over Dortmund that it appeared to be n tornado cloud forming with bright rod fires (lnnclng in and out of the haze." It was only l2 days ago Yhnl the R AF. land set a record for the wcicht of hOfllbg dropped h): l1Tl~ loading 1.500 tong on Duisburg. another Ruhr cltyfl LaboTShortage At Fertilizer Plants SAINT JOHN. .\'. 13., Jinx 24 iCP)—l.alinr shortage at Saint John fertilizer plants Ls threat- ening to curtail farm production In this and other sections of New Brunswick. snld J. E. Mo- lntyre. Mrmcion, in an interview today. He is agriculture agent 0f the Depflrllnclit of Colonization and Agriculture, Cnnarlizin Nu- flnnai Railways. ' 4am: v.‘ i-izsnai...» ,< w. fill: Pouch 0F POVERTY Siioui. N’i' ‘(Rouble {is Woman WHO wEARs diallf SHOES f High iirio this {lflcrnomi ni 334 Sun rots iliis cvr-niiitt nt 8R2 and rises lflmiWljOW moriimu. n! Lnst quurtcr ritorm Ni-w 2R. i CAR FERRY SERYIFE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY From Borden - 1.0.111‘ 0.05 a. m- l n. m. and 4.55 n. m. Leave Cap!) ’l‘ormcniinc—ll 3.05 n. m. and 6.30 i1. "I- DAILY AIR SERVICE (EXCEPT SUNDAH - Suvnmc aide mm- Charlottetown blunt-ton Leave Charlotte-foam 8.30 n. m. .. . . 4.30 ll- "'- ngfir rem (‘hnrIoiu-iow" l n- m. 5,45 p, m‘, 1.05 n. m. REL-Na: nrnm’ srinvivi: DAILY INCLUDING sr-YIMYS Loaves Wurul Isl:\i\'.ls-—‘i.00 fun. and 2.30 IT-"lg IIPXIVPS C.ir|bo\|~il.00 mm. and (.30 p.m.