MAXIMS OIL t pear: MAN mi bflfi omtewl "mm" T" 0"“ fill-IL" Dunn", rounded Ill‘! Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ii gw CHARLOBTTETOWMBCANADA, MONDAY, MAY 11, 1942 s PAGES MAXIMG 01A MERE MAN Teslhnonhls are to be weighed not counted Annual Srlblcrlptlon Dcllvurod, ID.” B! Illll l’. I L. ‘Lily In otlur Provinces 1nd 0.5. ll.“ LEGIVES cniivt wn gjlied Bombers Pursue Defeate Jap Invading Force along Burma Road. _._.._- ~ Br 5W1!“ “minted Press , , Ma Ill-MP)- ~'°",,“,’,i§3fi“$.nn. grtlllety blast. F‘ 0mm“ troops slaughtered ‘M than 3.600 Japanese soldiers m“). night in a battle on the a mad and sent the remain- b’? tize main body of the Jap- “ invading force reeling bud! “a Bttrmii in a _ i-ou. tho w.“ ailnounced tcnlflflt- Chinese In Pursuit Liilnese soldiers were in hot of the Ja one>e who rush- ” .0 trltznlpilant y up the Burma {d 1.1.1. week. Advancing to meet £1. fleeing Japanese, it was re- lied. was another Chinese force Eastern Bitrma and the 011111999 ltclarcd the invaders face certain g-tllllillfiiloll. m ~ gement, took place near _ , tniles frcm the Burma. ‘alter. a er the 1m and ram p; of the Japanese force had pen (‘l‘llcllf(l. p, Burma itself, suddenly active mimic soldiers laid down a heavy gsault on tile ruined city of Man- iuiy, ntrgt the Jamnme col)- M . Md » spokesman plaid the ii h. e cache e ou - fittest! itlitnidaliay from both the git and the west in 5P1“ 01 m" use Japanese bombing and shill- additlon to Mandalay itself, be Cilincse in Burma have t;vv0 flit! objectives: recapture of 3m- rut. on the railway a 19W K1151" "uni of Mandalay, and the recan- mdof Myinmu, 30 miles west 0t! alav. Pro-Arranged Plan The Chinese in the fightil18 0n {Burma Road followed their arranged plan of allow’ the ha... to sweep into the un- It: Province and lengthen their mmuziicat-ion lines, it was said. "than tile first-line troops struck Id struck hdrd. Prst, it was reported, 1.020 men Bethe Japanese laft. wing were d in an engagrment northeast fChepang last week. Next. the Japanese right wing of bimen was wiped out Saturday tliemoon. lapan’s Largest lolcano Erupts ‘BERLIN (From German broad- Iltft. May i0 _ (AP) -Asama- “mi. Japan's largest active vol- llttt. 100 miles northwest of Tokyo its greatest eruption in years "first night, according to Jap- mtfltll-ipticitches tolday. ‘Thtebgezr- 0 ama “named. 8e as no ye n ‘lite German-controlled Brussels 0. heard in London, said a ti! ram or clnders covered an l!!! of many miles and described "ltmzon as a “catastrophe? mlssnrna-Yama ls 8280 feet high ‘mllllfls a crater three-fourths of “ma; around. A severe eruption i, destroyed several villages but mfifelgzg its activity has been idles and stiiligefiy In ahovwrs ‘x llar-—25 Years Ago Today (B! The Cnnadlrn Press) 1. hill-Severe fighting the Arras-Vlmy sed- c, hurling back German as between Gavrelle and the .... aerial. .”'“.':l‘ Wain?"- wit"! from logic so. n “y inkinga in i-larbor to 1'75 shiltl. last wet‘ two British, two Panamanian. Norwegian. one Dutch, one Nicaraguan. one Domin- Jf-W-w 41 Enemy Planes Downed lit Malta g Routed By Chinese 3,000 Nipponese Soldiers killed in battle VALETTA, Mny 10 —(CI’l- Fourty-one enemy aircraft were destroyed or damaged in raids on Malt-a Saturday night announced it night. Wl! and te- Thirty-three of the total were bombers. Eight were fighters. Of the bombers l2 were des- troyed, 1D probablv destroyed and ll damn ed. One was rlcstrnye . two fighter probably destroyed and flve were damag- Ncw Nazi War Df Nerves Seen 0n Blitz Date N DI HI —(cPl _ Tllleomrllla lmhrvyersary" 0f Ml! 1o, a. fateful any in the Wll‘ calendar of Hitler, was ntlflwd today by what IPWSN“ l“ b’ 5 new Null war of nerves timed It Sweden or F1111“- Espoolllly acute seemed t!!! problem of France, faced with insistent interest of the Unit- eg slates in the neutrality °| the island of Mai-Unit!" ""1 the question of the French t hi h Hitler wants. neisogwvo cbe dismissed. b. wever. '35 the poaslhlllt that Hitler was a victim of h; own nerve! as the result of Increasing talk or Allied invasion of the con- tlnent. The tension which has been min; ll the spring advanced to the second anniversary western Hitler's of bl lt-lkrleg through France and the Low Countries became mull wit" when telephone commllnlvflmlfl! between Sweden and German! were suddenly cut without "l" plnnation for several hours. A freiful Eurtll" It "l" 1"‘ called that the snapping o! com; S munications often in the la three years has been the pre- lude to events or the new“ importance. Although some military com- mentators In recent week: hlVO expressed the view tltll 5W‘ den is llltcly to be the next aur- prlsc on Hitler's schedule, Swedish Dagbladet sold rlllrlll that France WI! the Svenslsl certain editorial tobe in the foreground of 00ml!!! vents. ‘The paper unscented "t" Pierre Laval. Vichy cm“ d government, might- IN lbw‘ ready to make an unreserved stand by Hitler's side and ill!" the large French battleflect Ii 1s Allied Ships Sunk In Atlantic By The Canadian PMII Axis submarine! FY1111! ping in the Atlantic more United Nations vessels, it was officially reported last week. brill!- 5V6 ‘Jmfla the announced total of Allied that area since Poul Seven of the vessels announced loan and one Honduran. THE TABULATION: toning Events nag- u‘ ‘I Intlrn l] m“ ' "M! in word O "Until further notice I will b9 mm“ “W! t0 Charlglttetown (E ma!“ Bflfllég. Georg.‘ g, .431. comm“, m? ~- m, m“ r ver Starch Factory is n °* the spring bcsso Wznhaub t0 fifty cent; p" husngras "Dance Goo Wll Hill. W G- it‘??? May tail. Webstsr‘s5O;:{\1- - . “ckmt? hqzs as usual for the A‘ c onths. List. 0mm Gnifen. Alban Enter d. 5-8-7-1 -w-'r-M'-t.i i:'.',°"'",,§;gv& 1",.‘ . will a. y olllflhl. M I'l- M "*- y s-iiili. from tat tr ining elude Margaret Louise Cairns do. P.I.I.. Norma ulllan navi- son. Kensi ton. EIEJ. Marla I-I 0. filttngbtil, N IIIOTSl Off the 11.5. ff Olfllda In the Carib- bean In the of M ll, Off South America .... Gulf Total exico .. Week ‘May Si 4-"10 O 8 I 1 18 Island Nurses To Graduate Brazilian. were United States ship!» two one nee Pearl Harbor 02 24 OAMPBUJJION. ‘N. 3.. but! 10- the I (OP) _Nurses who will Soldiers Mentor-is QOhOOI hero TUOIGIY - and ldilllt Hos - , Surn- Dita d Jap” Armada Toll Df Ships Sunk, Damaged Raised To 19 Expect Nipporiese Naval And Air Forces To Re- turn In Attempt To Wipe Out Disgrace Of Losses. tWfla-r Situation Last Night List Names ______--___-_-=..l 0f 35 Officers (n; mum-z L. SIMPSON, Associated rm. w». Analyst) g Dnunatlc wu- developments in the Indian Ocean and the Coral Sea. have tended to obscure u significant change in tone in Moscow and London comment as to the probabilities of the immediate future on the Ruskin alnd Libyan fronts. ...Tn§.‘iw.’t'..M" ‘Lltclilswz gov- e ans-range importance of the Coral Sea nav l battl t ' Qtlncsme" “t? °' yet be fully assessed. But there is no longer any dolrbt that? lzillrlillfll g§f,°¢‘§,§“§,h’,‘,“m°‘ 9,33 Gag; "Vlfllmy" offensive in Russia is badly off schedule. Weather conditions, prisoners or war stuffed: a "w even in the Leningrad area, are no longer an insurmountable obstacle The list was based on f. e-“iigre- to mechanized attack. The snow is disappearing even that far north caved 90m the Britsh 4.11108553- aml the road‘: are beginning to dry out, Yet there is no sign of the gfigeftkgliilllllifkingtIghglii. 131% H1115 i; ' 1| l ' e rom .-‘. i Wlgiwrigntti l ei-s promised annihilation drive anywhere along the Kuk0ng_ China’ ° e The announcement said that the (By C. YATES McDANIEL) ' i ' ' It (Aswvlflled PWSS 51B" Writ-er) Out of that Russian commentators are increasln l ad cables “L” "tenuoned abm" 54° A-IJIED HEAD U _ 5y “mdng "If other ranks b t , "a118, MW A-‘lillilgd Possibility that Hitler has been beaten to the punch by the Red annys The govcrnrtliengitavgtgtoeriigrrixtes ac- winter offensive. One Moscow radio voice says that “spring is more like- ly to see a general offensive opened by the United Slates, Britain and the Soviet Union on all fronts than any particular German offensive." London assessment of the strategic effect of British occupation of Madagascar Island is that it removes the possifbility of an Axis often. sive of major consequence in Libya in the near future. I Q Ii If U it bombers relentlessl pursued the remnants of a. de eated Japanese armada fleeing from the Coral Sea, damaging another seaplane tender and tarrer and raising to 19 Lb; number of enemy shins sunk or fiflppled, according to an announce- ment todav from Gen. MacArthur’: headquarters. companying the list of names said til cables would seem to be based 0n tile same unofficial sources of information. The information in the embassy telegram was apparent- ly secured through Col. Ride and is assumed to be based on the per- sonal recollection of himself and others." It added: “The omission of names therefore should not be con- strued as unfavorable." ‘The statement said “the infor. matron ln_ these two cables has not been con-firmed either by the inter- national Red Cross or the Japan- ese government. through the pro- ‘testing power. At the same time, it ls also noted that the Information relates only to 35_0fficers and about, 640 other ranks in the one named camp at North Point “The Japanese government re- porting about Feb. 24 stated that there were 1,689 Canadian prisoners of war in Hong Kong. It is assum- ed therefore that others are in some other location." An informed British observer is quoted as saying Britain's position In Libya ltad been “secured for the summer" b_v the itfariagoscar coup Axis failure to snuff out Malta in more than 2.000 bombing raids, and’ the steady toll being taken in the Mediterranean of Libra-bound Axis troop and supply ships. Gen. Sir Claude Auchlnleck, he added, ls strong enough now on the ground and in the air "to halt anything Rommel (the German general in North Africa) can throw at him." LIFT VEIL 0N TOKYO Expect Japs Back Ten more Japanese planes also were destroyed or damaged by air attack wnile victorious warships rested after their six-day battle and braced themselves for an e- cted return of a strongly reinforce Jap- anese fleet. intent upon avenging Japan's worst naval defeat- Pcwerful enemy warships and air strength are known to be concen- trated in the general area northeast of Australia. The battered Japanese broke off the engagement a ter severe pun- ishmem was inflicted by the ship- pltme teams of the Allies Saturday and todays communique said:-- “No combat on the naval front." Saturday's casuaJtles were millet- ‘ News Briefs ALLIED UARTERS. Aus- tralia, May 1i—iMon<layl-(CP)— Two Japanese submarines have been sunk or damaged by Allied planes From Winnipeg G-enadiers d m 1 i t off northeastern Australia, General The list of names, issued from ioufixhdeeiggfigéziéhstgflthélast t‘; gggczgéigpra headquarters announ- thedPfliflE MIIlLSY/EYS office. was New Guinea toward the Solomon ' a; ‘érggnggefslféjfeg? $6 ifilfadvgglgfi‘ Islands‘ whether the Japanese had LONDON. MW l0—iCP)— ers staff, with one exception The We" mm“ “P” ‘everm! M5‘ Brlttish aircraft awnrmcd over exception was Major John n Price tralia‘s lifeline to the United States or‘ invading the island continent still was not clear. the English Channel today and ' returned from the direction of Boulogne and Calais in forma- of the Roylai Rifles of Canada. The list: Winnipeg Grenadlers: Mej- Hem-v WASHIWGTWI- M" ltb-‘APJ- lions which stretched 2o miicl William Hook Ma ' _, , _ ~ _ __ _ , J. John Albert Official Score The United Stats _ ar Depart up and down ‘he Enghsh Cont“ 38mg M“ Kenneth George Balm’ mem BmY-HnWd “may that the line May Ernest Hodkinson Ca t John But the official score attested by April 1a air attack on Tzkyo and ' N Norris’ ca,” Edwara Bpwalkel. wreckage in the exotic and island- studded Coral Sea, stood at 11 en- emy ships sunk and eight damaged. ‘Those on the bottom were an air- craft carrlcr, a. heavv cruiser, a light cruiser, two destroyersu four gunboats and two supply ships or ether Japanese cities was made in daylight by American Army bomb- ers. It said large fires were started which burned in some instances for two davs or more. V quiet today bogged down by snow From low eltztuoes, military. nflv- and ice at the centre and north and a1 and illdltitiibl DHHES were the Russian communique reported bombed in the vicinity of Tokyo. “no substantial change." Yokohama, Nagoya and other lo- —-—-- MOSCOW. May 10-—(AP)—1A caPtres, a, communique said. ‘ “Selected targets were lmmla- two-hour fight between border takcatbie and were accurately at- Illflffli 01' Rltmllllfl and Hilfi- taoked with demolition and incen- "Y. Balkan iillfillllefi 0i Hillel"! diary bCIIIIIbSQEtiIt “Itfl-cd- f; [a] i] firggivllyizgyogfib,lylissilaegsfniagtliayt- Put‘ t ‘ trv . fc ve - of Larges? nbecu? the s-psc- l Wlenlm ‘lllmllllcal-lfl" helm"! tacular attack, dtlhe ccmgriunigue “l” “is “stem “Pm- qrctrd enrmy ra o reuo s a i‘ _ three Japanese interceptor planes AlégNfiioN-ronti- éuagonljmtcge hcd b:en 10st and between 3.000 u m” e5 em‘ e .. g y 4000 warn/e mfvcted bu, still were without a fair lcacbto “l? l dk“, ; fim wimt “ha,” work on" in the kidnapping of six- m- ed t‘) "c “e r‘ ' ' month-old Barbara Ann Wood, who MOSCOW May 10-(AP)-'I'he Russian front where Tax, Soviet news agency, has reported the Gor- mans used poison gas, appeared Capt. Donald George Philip, Capt. Nyall Oielgur Bardall, Capt, Alex- ander Vl/illiam Prendergnst, Capt. David Aaron Golden, Lieut. IPred- erlck Victor Dennis, Ueut. Harry Leslie White, Lieut. John Edward Dundcrtlnic, Lieut. Richard W. Queen-Hughes, Lieut. John E- Park. Lieut James D. McCurthy. Lieut. Richard Maze, Lieut. Ieonard B. Corrigan, Lieut. George B. Harper, Lieut. Hugh Edward Alexander S. Black, Lieut. William F_ Nugent, (Continued on page 7, Col 4) Raids Bring War, Dloscr To India. Tilolnas A. Blackwood, George Porteous, nitxiliary’ services tat.- tached to Winnipeg Grenadiers). Royal Canadian Anny Medical Corps: Maj. John N. Capt. Stanlev M. Banftll, Capt. John A. G. Reid, Capt, Edward L. Terry. Capt. G. C. Gray. RAoynl Rifles of Canada: Maj. By Preston Grover the Amflfictln PYRYYTS Oiieffiled o!‘ t k f h 1, p“. J1 E p1 _ Asaociaicd Press Staff lVrlfcr whether any vtlcre icst, ‘avg; ‘$1.332 hlégmzgsféagiigfdagrgother oégadquargrcs (“ca For“). Capt 0119 Mmb?“ 13nd“ an“ the shopped in a downtown grocery Uriah Latte- - raid in a Russian maritime r0- vlnce and its crew was intern: by Bowel, atiilzoritlcs. Officials noted cs significant that the original Javanese radio reports of hettvy/ casualties and dam-cgng fires wece news broadcasts in the Canadian Dental Corps: Capt. James C. M. Spence, Capt. Winston R. Cunningham. Believe Schooner NEW DELHI. India. May l0 (AP) —- Japanese bombers prospect- ing for new fields of conquest raid- ed Chittagong, eastern entryway into the industrial province of Bengal. Saturday for the second time in 24 store. LONDON. May iii-AC?)- The Paris radio said today that fivc hostages had been executed and’ 50 others condemned to In connection hours, bringing relatively close to death l" Film the we“ port o; Calcutta {he w“ Japanese language for domestic with attacks on Germans. ma; India m, dreaded m long. consumption. -—————-ii The raids were me mm; and Subsequent contentions that only hospitals and schools were btmlced obvzcusly were made for pom:- gazlda punposes atbrcad. While the communique shed no bgirt on the bores frrm witch the planes operated or the number of raiders, the Japanese have guess- ed publlclv they came either from unoccupied Ch‘nn. srme 1,200 miles distant lit the newest po‘nt, ol- from naval carriers. and have fourth attacks of the war on the Inrllim mainland. A high level bombing and ma- chino gun attack upon Chittagong Friday afternoon caused slight da- mage and some casualties, the Brit.- ish reported. The Japanese apparently were testing the defences, of Chittagong, which doubtless is among the early objectlvcs of any advance into In- Will Attend . A. R. P. Course Councillor B. Earle lVIaoDonaE, Controller of Flrc Services f0!‘ t e Charlottetown sub-committee. A-Rt LUNENBURG, N. 3.. May 10- tCPh-Shlpping circles said to- night a vessel shelled to destruc- tcn by an Axis U-bont on the At- lantic recently was believed to be the James E Ncwsoln, one of the last of the four-mnsted schooners which was owned hero until re- ccntly. Loss of the 23-year-old Newsom _ , ~_ . . ly a few s mrday for Am- dl propel. There was no confirmo- fd the” wrm on P. will leave next a would make he, m n t h tiritn, however. of vague axis re- fwd-Ts iierst College, Amllfiffitt M-wsachu‘ to be sunk by a sugmaxrlnescori] Since the attack the Japanese . l to si e traininfl have heavily brmted Ctlfnese all‘ ‘atm’ to mke an n q v mum or twp weeks covcrlnt; W? technical phases of handling incen- diary and high explosive bomb!- ‘Ilhis was dccidcd at- a Joint meet- fielda in divas nearest Japan. . . See Plpehne only of the Provincial A. R. P. Com- mittee and the Charlottetown sub- Solution For East m“ committee. Hon. H. H. Cox presid- side of the Atlantic in ch15 war. Several were sunk of! the North American coast in the First Great War. is believed to ports that enemy natrole already have penetrated India. While tire Japanese jebbed at In- dia's defences from the air, British forces eluded a Japanme trap in Burma and took up positions in the mountains near the Indian tfron- tier. , WASHINGTON, MRY l0 —fAP)— The proposal for an $80,000,000 i,- I iluits Post alto-mile ipc‘ine from ‘Iexas to the New Yor -Philadelphia area was again brought forward today with B C. R. Blackburn Canadian Press Staff Writer UITAWA, May l0 4cm -ctov- the contention it offers the n- clpal hope for lifting motoc- in S a t. tion to alter the Wm" emmen nrilimry per-vice law in pro- the eastern United res from ex- ml hedry for this week-possibly w- tremely short rations of gasoline and for assuring adequate oil hi‘ errow- and indications will? .1‘... that it nuirht be "W" "lg heating homes. ' Government oil officials said pet- fclzec by resignation of a 811101‘ cabinet minister. The fouresticker be the vessel from which eight Canadians and one West Indian, who were brought to Bermuda last Week. escaped during a gunfire H-tttwk by a submarine. Bennuda dispatches said most of the Cana- dluns were "believed" m be 1mm Luncnburg. Waste No Sympathy On Motorists Who Use Up All Coupons ed, ~ tion was taken following thweaarifng of a letter from Geoirlle S. Mooney. executive secretary of the Canadian Federation of Mayflfi and Municipalities, Montreal. in which Mr. Mooney conveyed an in- vitation from the Chemical War- fare Service of the United States war Department to Canadian mu- nicipalities to send representatives to take part. in this training, which also includes dealinfl with 8M. d0- contamination, etc, i-esultlna from air riflda. l"t°“'.i‘. ifimflit”? ‘limit... p... n en su o e ductlon board this week a third an- A 15'“ "mbef ggfgaflfllesczfif plicatlon for priorities on the met- towns from cons kod to send t“ al needed to build the line. He has ads. have been‘ as“ d the school‘ been turned down twice. manbers each o a en =- -Ma.v I0- (c?) _ Dlftmeflt of Munitions and Supply is wasting no sympttthv on motorlstg who become strand- ed Without gasoline afrai- "ping up their ration coupong, Pr!“ Wilt-Em‘ “““‘““' "r: a motorist n has given notice of a bill t0 9m "4 “"1 m“ °l "c "“i‘i’i3‘;.“f.‘°ii8“ii8l’.‘l“i2i°.i QAKING l-AUQ .35. "’““.‘.iil.w‘é’i“‘°.‘.‘é xtmog observers m om“ u m“ t gasoline whatever and must get his car removed from the road- ie will remove the banter to 00m- ne because of the situation in $11G! he was placed when the 53;? majority of Quebec electors not. to release the government from muitetixgiidin ierened mature" W Prime Minister Mackenzie runs and did t deny the resignation report. m- nlgtng refused to comment. he may call the nearest rrasoine station and the station attendant wilt bring gasoli in a can, check the licence number of ohe auto- mobile cntnst that on the oner- atofs bork, detach the coupon mics? lervice outside the otm; izttilgnzggiegg‘ m: Ogegzrtrlfigiz n he; ted hen W!!!’ - nun It time: Cardin ma ro- OF copggngirlgm ggmaigcoustiilgf n; Mls THE All PURPOSE FlOUR ANAUA RNING GDNDERNINE GA Lieut. Robert William Philip, Lieut. i and deliver at least half a unit of gasoline. S Tells Germans Choicels Up 1T0 Nazi Leader Britain ready if enemy starts; British Prime Minister has words of encouragement; Victory for United Nations is certain. (By J. Wes Gallagher, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, May 10-(AP)—In a grim, fighting speech in the lull before the “hurricane bursts" of summer, Prime Minister Churchill tonight warned Hitler that Britain would carry poison gas warfare “far and wide" over Ger- many if he dares use it against Russia, and forecast a mighty British-American bombing offensive against Ger- many. Grim in his predictions of “misery and slaughter” for Germany, the Prime Minister nevertheless was con- fident and optimistic and brought what he said was “a message of good cheer” for Britain and her allies. Declaring that the “awful balances" had finally turn- ed in the United Nations’ favor. he predicted that "Bri- tish and American seapower will grip and hold the Jap- anese” and their overwhelming air power eventually will bring her low. "There, however, is one serious matter which I must mention ti! you," he said. “The Soviet Government have expressed in us the view that the Germans in the desperation of their assault may make use of poison gas against the armies and people of Russia. “We are ourselves firmly resolved not in use this odious weapon unless it is used first by the Germans. Knowing our l-lun, however, w! have not neglected to make preparations on n formidable scale. "I wish to make it plain we shalt treat. unprovoked use oi poison gas Islanders are I Air Graduates against our Russian ally exactly as if it were used against ourselves, and if we are satisfied that this new outrage has been committed by Hitler" we_ will use our great and growing air superiority in the west; to carry gas warfare on the largest. possible scale far and wide against nulitaly objectives m Germany.” The wording of Mr. Churchill's warning lnade it appear that Brit- " ish retaliation is only a matter oi satisfactory evidence to prove charges that the Russians already have made. His statement was made a. little more ‘than 24 hours after Tass, So- viet news agency, had distributed for the first time a dispatch report- ng that the Germans had used poison gas on the Crimean front, apparentlv in an experimental way. This dispatch said: “According to a report from Krasnador on May 7, in operations on the Crimean front, German troops used several mines with poison gas. A check-up has shown that the poison gas af- fects respiratory organs and dis- ables men.” Speaking on the second anniver- sary of the tremendous offensive of tanks and dive-bombers which Hit- ler loosed through France and the low countries in i940, Mr. Churchill made‘ only apassing reference to Britmns relations with Vichy upon which he had been expected to deal heavily. Disclosing that the decision to occupy the French island of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean had been made three months ngo and thnt the ox- pedltlon was two months nn the way. he said that in the intirval he had felt a "shiver" every‘ time he thought. of what might. happen through the "dishonor- able and feeble drifting or con- ulvance" of the Vichy regime. Mtad-rwascar would be held trust for the French. he said. Coyly, Mr. Churchill referred to demands for a continental invasion and said: "Naturally I shrill not dis- close wllnt our intentions are, but there is one thing I will sny. I wel- come the militant and aggrcsslvo s lrit of the British nation so s ronaly shared across the Atlantic n. FINGAL, Ont, May l0 ~(CP>- gunners and air observers re- iicd badges hero Saturday ltfi graduation ceremonies at No. 4 Bombing and Gunnery School. Among the air observers graduat- lng were: Prince Edward Islanci- K. 1". G. Murray, Vernon. New Brunswick-D. B. Ritchil. Upper Kent. MONT JOLI, Que. May 9 —-(CP) —Wings were presumed to a largo class of graduates at the No. 9 bombing and gunnery school oi the Royal Canadian Air Force here to- day. The graduates became air observ- ers or wireless air gunners. Graduates from the Maritimes in- eluded:- Prince Eda-aid Island - Wireless Air Gunner, John Hilary Moynagh, Emerald minctlon. AIRWOMAN GRADUATES OTTAWA. May 9 - (CPl A group of airwcmen-dlraduatc; of No. '7 Manning Depot of the Royal Canadian Air Force at adjoining Rockciiffe—were scheduled today to go on active service with the zrfttil! of R.C.A.F'. (Women's Division) posted to No. fl Bombing and Gttn- nerv $12001 at li/Iactiolmld, Mun, Others will proceed for further training at the R. C. A. F. School of Technical Training at St. 'I‘hom- as. The Alrwomen were graduated vgshardny {mm Rocizrllffe Manning Depot. where they were inspected bv Acting Sqzttltiroll lpnder h’. O. Walker, 0.0.. No. '7 Depot. Alllflllll those completing their training were:- prinee Edward Island- G H. Craig, Charlottetown. in OFTEN 4n: SHINING. Lilith’ 0F fun CLAss FtvttsHES And for those most stronglv de- manding that Britain take the of- fcnsive he offered the declaration: "We must not fail them either in daring or in wisdom." But. certainly. he said. "a British nd prceritl t an American boml in: zffenslit; Bfililflil Germany will‘ be \"\FE As A ne of the principal features in this BOOlBLACK ’ o year's world .' New In The 'l‘lme Now is the time, he declared. to strike hard at the “foundation of (Continued on page '1. Col ‘B? I I i ' ‘PFIDD Dciling Dn Bananas OTTAWA, May i0 -t'CPt 1-88.- ting of maximum whdesale and retail prices for bananas was an- Higll t-idc this morning at 8.01 and tonight at D29. nounced tonight by the Wartime Sun sets this evening at 7.10 Prices and Trade Board. and rises tomorrow mornin! B9 The board ruled also that. cffec- 435, ' New moon May i5. i2 45 am. P. E. L-N. s. FERRY SERVICE ttive tomorrow. all sales of bananas in Canada must be made by vt-citzht. The set prices are not. specific. The ceiling is obtained by [llrring a limit upon the landed prlcc an upon the markup which whclfsni- era and retailers may add to the landed price of the fruit. Insvhwood Islands 1 A.M., ll A.M. Leah Caribou s AM. l PM. s rlw.