MAXIMS w, become ln fact what we are lu lieut- Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew 0F A o, L MERE MAN MERE MAN gen Perseverance and study maid MAXIMS 3. Annual Subscription Uallversn. 5.11m at“, Two Cutl. ti: uluii r. u |. $1.00. n» utllrr Prlwlpenl and us. til-M 1 I fizflfidfl? Founded till‘) I! CHARUOTTETUWN, cANApA. aimlessly, JUNE 3, 1942 _....Q_____ __ _ ____ __ I i iitish Forces 0n 0 lieds Seek Hint 0f N Try “iiiltRkov Essen Is Blasted By 1,036 Planes R.A.F. Returns To Germany In Force 48 Hours After Wrecking Cologne. i tlly E. C. DANIEL, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, June 2.—(APi—-A mighty Royal Air Force corps of bomb- “; anti fighter planes-HHS of them including nine squadrons of Can- “mns-cast down fire' and explosion with terrible effect upon the Ger- m“ Krupp munitions centre of Essen and its war plant environs last light in a second major raid on Germany in 48 hours. Great as were these raids, they were proclaimed by Prime Minister Churchill as htit been experienced by any country "They will iiicrcasc_ markedly in male \\‘il(‘ll we are 10111811, Ho‘ W0 50011 shall be. ' 10TH‘ 0i the Uilli-Hi U19 e c1 (Jtiiiiniotis. Hczfuiioii. s 0i tons 0f bombs were ii the Krupp and Iiiicin Metal 1J1. plants and ii‘, _ would seciii obvious from the vtvzigii oi the attack. the damage caused it R5911 was as great as in Sutur- ‘lliilills 1.000-odd plaiie_ra'..'l on go ogiic, persons familiar with inr- cn DCIlCl/Efi a ilcotl- itagc o1 the R._ich war 11d he marked down as 93 v Will Creep Eiistwiird Discus-iii; future raids London iources s.iit1 the iuain vtciizht of the summer intact; probably would be directed iit. ivcstern GiTllitllly, bu; tints; the nights lengthen the ctiecitlie devastated area. will ueiieaezivnrd to include German titituntl towns now relatively un- baud» Today the RAF. sprang back to ihrusiitit. going ovcr the channel in vim ltircc in one of the biggast digllill. ti(‘l‘lSli oitcnsives of the war, , ale sweeps were made over the Sravellties arid Hardelste mas oi northern France. German Exhaiiasikqllieufl 0f Military Age OTTAWA, Julie 2 --(CP) - WM’ Service htiiiistei- Thorsoii toltl the House o: Utciiiiian; tuliiliy that tiic number (.1 single mcii and childless Widwcs iigcd 21 to 30 who are llill‘. available loi- conipulso ' service wcie iaa iiiig the exit ' ti point ill atiniiiizstratioii "F" tsui Ye fay he said the age group in dii ltill "C" (King-ton, Ont.) 111s "vii.u.illy exhausted" and that two ofh :_~ were approaching thnt M10111‘ 1'. ‘Finlay he give the. House 9191101115 oi these other two. Aug Events d on (Qiicbrti and in division "K" (Van- ' .1 column 6-3-31. in tliio [II-I uuril 63-31. uyffTalkics — Motiaguc Saturday. ltiilitiii Dollar kiauy." 6-11-31. _ l play in F‘rc - Julie 5. 6-3-5. .ii'.i R ltfll 11.111, Friday _"Rl»~t"\‘i* ‘fhursclig, July 2, for lliltoii ’l'c:i. 6 3 2i. LVfff-il v1.11 season Alpha llcbckaii Mfg ». ltl Lflillglii. tiliiclal visit M-b ii i‘ ice lllaucatliiiii, Wairdcn ith: 1:. .kah Assembly. Degree. 0-3-11. n. ‘+“' smell quantity of No. 1 seed g?“ 11nd No. 1 Seed Barley for ‘uf- Aililly Department of Agri- “lre. Charlottetown. 6-2-21. da"Conic to Women's Institute argue iii Wlltsliire Hall on June ' 8-1-31. "Wllsviinz hogs every Friday may: tut with Leslie McDowell, "Mon. 5-19-20-twtf. DQ901118 to the Barn Dance at Mc- ‘"11! s. Coveheod. Wednesda “u” 3"‘ B I B Orchestra. "mm" w. 6-2-21. "3"" Klnkston l‘ "Ann' Pr ma!" i" Killilflinnp ‘ll-lvall Wgdiieg: hi. June 3rd. 5-30-0-1-3, "Trucklhf hoizs as usual for the m“? cmfzhrtgiesl‘ [Lllgt vourd 610g ' s an an . . “ma. Emerald. 5-0-7-1 -W-T-M-ti "306 Graham's Road .. pla ers re- ‘pirnt mlnilln Home the Bliicone in edericto all Friday evenlntz m" “h- ' a-a-iif "BM"! Firs Monda - ~ y at Pred- ifl§f°§f Tuesday 10 A. u. Brookfleld ‘m’ 4 Phat fifitlgrtieil P‘. Bea. viii-titre.‘ ‘uteri? 1.5111‘ - ncs av . . tilt". at: él..?.;“wll€lii§’y‘“i% P- M- Wiitsnii-ef it P. M. Kcllv" Ci . 8 1 $5M‘ M. Emerald. Thursday 11M (junwslmzton Cattle Pen. 2 l 0n Corner. Pa in: £12.00 lbs. each. Knutl Dalr for 1 w, b K5 over 2 .t~1l.!‘.‘,‘§,"_b"v mailer ones. the start of an ordeal “the like of which never has in coritituifltfijeverlly or magnitude __,___ ‘ Laborers Stage , Riot At Nassau NASSAU, Bahamas, June 2- (CPJ-(Delayed by censor) Unsltilletl laborers on a largo American project staged a de- monstration in Nassau yester- day, smashing shop window: and looting fashionable stores, and two of the rlotcrs were kill- ed and others rounded before police and troop; restored nar- tlal order. While the Duke of Windsor, the island's governor, interrupt- eil a business trip in Washing- ton to hasten back. conditions remained unsettled. A curfew from 8 p. m. to 8 a. m. was established by the acting governor, Social Secre- tary W. L. Hcape. The demonstrators were pro- testing against wages for on. skilled labor on the project. Laborers began marching into the city Monday mornlnz. Their nurnbe s increased ul they ap- proached the shops of fashion- 1777'!) Bray Street, which skirts the harbor and contains most of this tourist city's swank stores. Shop windows were smashed and widespread looting of liq- uors. expensive English fabrics card rare perfumes was report- e . P. E. I. Gives $00,000 To Red Gross National headquarters of the Red Cross has been advised that Prince Edward Island's contri- butions to the Red Cross cam- paign now exceed sixty thou- sand dollars or more than fifty per cent. in excess of the origi- rizi! objective. A numb!!!‘ 01 ‘ll!- tricts have still lo complet. their collections and the total grows a bit every day-truly l remarkable showing. Complete figures for each of the counties “ill be published before very long. _ ' battered Convoy Reaches Russia IONDON. Jiiiic 2 -tCP) -Bat- tcrcd for five dnys and nights in the ltiilllgi‘, unending light of ‘she . .ic sllillPll" by U-boats and at least 100 German aircraft, o big United Nations supply convoy was disclosed to have reached a Rus- sian port with an indicated bl. of but half s dozen ships. The result was announced by the admiralty 1n a communique which gave a graphic picture of the perils of the Arctic convoy route to Mur- mansk nud Archangel, where there never. at this time of year. is any protectinir darkness and when the breaking of the Arctic ice restricts manoeuvrabllity of ships to a mini- mum. German claims to the sinking of 17 or l0 ships were termed "an ex- aggeration of over 175 per cent." 111.12. Miiiistefifi Comment On Tubers SALISBURY, N. 8., June I —(C- P)—~C0mmentin; on Joint Canadian and United States action to in- crease potato production, Agricul- today suggested that New Brunswick fur- mers studv their individual prob- possibili- thelr screw. Planting is vieli advanced in e lure Minister A. C. Taylor lems and the immediate ties of increasing province. - Mr. Taylor emphasized the t for up to 5,000,000 bushels n im- portance of the United States mar; e o azi Offensive Plans Tactics" In. Northern Areas .The Southern Sectors Of The Front Are Comparatively Quiet. (By Henry C. Cussldy) (Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW. June 2—(A.P)-—The Russian armies, applying “Kharkov tactics" to the deep northwestern areas, attacked sharply today in several sectors with the object ol upsetting German oftensive plum from this direction. Vigorous although localized act- ions in two sectors of the Kahnm front, which runs west from Katin- lii to the Valdai Hills in the direc- tion of the German garrlsons of Rznev and Vellki L-ukl were report- ed to have resulted. in at. least 1,850 German dead and 1.500 wounded. "northwestern . from the Valdai Hills north around Lake Ilmen to the Leningrad front, the Russians were said_ to have maintained pressure which fore- stalled any “adventurous plans" of the Germans. with the Russians thus improving their positions and drawing the en- emy into costly counter-action in these regions. the southern sectors of Kerch, Kharkov and lzyum- Barenkova were commratlvely quiet. The Germans there were Dic- tured as spent by heavy losses. and the Russians as holding firmly to fortified lines. Women Mar Funeral 0f John Barrymore L05 ANGELEB, June PULP)- sevei-al hundred women. drawn by curiosity and alternately maud- lln and ribald, sow John Barry- more carried to his final resting place today. The actor said he found women delightful through his 60 years of life. He would have been amazed at the women and girls who lean- ed against a. restraining rope out- side the Mausoleum of Calvary Cemetery. Many were shabby; sloppily dressed. They ranged in age from crones to ‘teen-age girls: w small, noisy, dirty children. The few men present bared their heads as the funeral procession arrived. The women stared. A few carried cameras. Just after the service ended, a large section broke into ribald laushter- Barrymore's friends had made an effort to escape such a gather- ing by publicly stating the funeral would be Monday, then chanoins the date. Barrymore, who died Fmlday night, was buried with a brief. simple Roman Catholic ceremony. Rev. IT]. B. S. Miller To Receive Degree ' TORONTO. June 2 —(CP) —R/ev. E. B. S. Miller o! 'I‘i'enton, N. 5., will be amoiig- graduates to receive the degree of Master of Arts at University of Toronto convocation exercises Thursday, it was announc- ed today. A graduate of Mt. Alli- son University and Pine Hill Di- vinity Hall. Mr. Miller was former- ly pastor of St. Peter's United Church, St. Peter's Bay, PEI. Srop Situation ls Satisfactory OTIMWA. June 2-(CP)-'I‘he Dominion Bureau of Statistics re- ported today in its first telegraphic crop report of the season that rain- fall on the Prairies during the past week "contributed to a generally satisfactory crop situation across Canada." In the east. spring ofiratiotu have been eeriv 1n the time Provinces, although somewhat re- tarded in Quebec and Ontario, the bureau said. In the Marttlmes. rain- fall has been light and the sowlni of s ring grains and potatoes is ol- reo y more than half completed. In Quebec where sprint: oner- stlons are normally earlier than in the Marltlmce. the lack o dryln weather has tended to elsv opera ions although the present promise ls for s izood season. ‘Throughout. the five eastern ptOViIIOI-S. hay and clover meadows and pastures wlnteied well as a rule, and are now instant: excellent the report said- _____.____i_- SENTENCE-D T0 PENITINTIABY HOPEWIJIL CAPE. N. 8., June I ,(CP) -Clsrence Murray. e sailor who had pleaded guilty to three charges arising from the hold-up of a Moncton taxi man P86011311 WI» sentenced by Judge L. P. D. Tllley Canadian potatoes for conversion to “may w m,“ w,“ in m, M3". starch. STRENGTH FOR BIG BEN time penitentiary on esch count, the sentences to run conmirrently; * He had been charmd wt bery, theft of an automobile and Reginald stevem l. sol "_' n f . LONDON - (or) - Parliament "team? afmgnvlcm o, "as." voted about 060.000 t0 continue N- Ben storing the stonework of charges today end tonne Juno ll Tower. demand by bombs lest your. In ‘War Situation Last Night (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) Forthcoming American war declarations against a trio of Axis pup- pets, Bulgaria, Romania and Hungary, take on more than a. legalistic Ilcnm°'.“°° i" “W llsiit i»: the timing 01 the President's request n» eongreasuoual action. Those three states, dragooucd into action by Hitler to aid his war plans, have been insured in Washington for months. But now the White House deems it expedient to put them in the some basket with the Axis proper as declared enemies of the United States. Mr. Roosevelt ex- plained that they are preparing to expand their activities against the United Nations- a o o o o a Two of the three states. Romania and Hungary, have sent token forces against Russia. However, if Hitler's summer campaign plan in. eludes Turkey in his orbit, Bulgaria must be vitally involved. A Nazi march eastward against the Suez pivot of the United Nation battle line must go through or around Turkey from Bulgarian jump-off. Germany would need urgently the all-out help of the vassal states either to awe Turkey into submission or to beat down her resistance if she chose to fight. And with the United States at war with those states, Turkey obvl. ourly would be as eligible for American lend-lease aid as Russia, Brit- ain or China, provided she did resist, The Washington war declarations would clear the way in n. legal sense for that and might go far to de- d termine Turkey's course. If liitlenturnfd in that direction. l Many European observers pred untrustworthy non-aggression pact lct Turkeys involvement despite the with Germany. The fact that the British forces appear to lie frustrating the renewed Axis drive in Libya is calculated to stiffen Turkish resistance to Berlin intrigue in anv case, and an American declaration against Turkey's Nazi-ruled neighbors is hound to help also. Fierce Fighting On Three China Fronts Real Threat Develops From Jap Thrust In Kimgsi Province. CHUNGKING, June 2-—(AP)— Fierce fighting raged on three fronts in China today as the Jap- anese started two new OIIClISIVtS and continued to make progress in the miru through the coastal prov- ince ot Chekiang. Suddenly assuming the nature of a real threat. a. Japanese thrust from Nanchang in Kiangsi province. which adioiiis Chekiang on the west, was aimed south and cast along the luangsi-Cliekiaiig railway and at a. possible junction with the columns coming from the east. With two claws the Japanese thus were attempting to pinch off u large piece of eastern China. Also menacing was the northward Japanese drive from the Canton area in the south China province of Kwangtung. This was following the Canton-Haiikow railway, with an- other column driving through the mountains country east of the rail- W31)‘. . Along the railway the invaders WETC IEDCIBCC approaching HCYiE- orig. Chinese troops resisted stubborn- ly and inflicted heavy casualties everywhere. but scored their chief successes in the Chekiang theatre as they closed in on the elongated flanks of the Japanese and. recap- tured five towns. To Raise Midget J ap Submarine SYDNEY, June 2—(CP Cable)- Naval men said today that one Japanese midget submarine sent to the bottom of Sydney harbor will be raised to the surface in the next few days. ‘Theycraft, one of three sunk when they attempted an unsuc- cessful raid on this city. how is secured by a steel hawser. During the period Aug. 1 Lone Air Raider Approaches London LONDON, June 3—tWedne-.=dny) —(CP)—An air raid alarm sounded in London early today but the all-clear followed shortly. A single Gcmian raider proaciicd the city before away, The last. night. attack on Lon- dozi was Nov. 1. 1941. when a few bClllbs fell in two districts. Dominion To Aid In. Sheep Plans ap- veering OTFAWA, June 2—(CPi-‘Do- miiiion government assistance in rovincial government. programs to ncreasc sheep production was ari- nounced tonight by the Azficulture Department. The Dominion plan provides for payment, of fieigtit charges on the movement of female breeding stock and for the loan of rams to farmers startuig to raise new flocks. t0 Dec. 31, 1942, freight charges will be paid by the Agricultural Sup- plies Board frcm points of origin to distribution TUiit-s on ewes or ewe lambs purchased for brcedlng. The department's announcement said that to the extent that they may be available the board will purchase and loan suit-she rams t» farmers starting new flocks of sheep. ‘The rams will be loaned for the first. two seasons with s minimum cf 15 females. No fann- er will be loaned more than one ram. AVOID l Said out the when you melee TEA You will got but results both in quality and quantity if you carefully follow those simple directional ~ 2. Use e level teaspoon oi tee for each cup oi ice to be served. 3- Usc tile exact water you require and no tint it ls BOILING FURIOUSLY before you pour It Into the pol. 4- Shcp 5 minutes. WASTE teapot to warm It. amount oi FRESH Says Education Suffers From War Activities MONTREAL, June I - (C91 - Mrs. H. M. Detwller of London. Ont. told the annual meeting of the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire tndav that already there are signs that Canadian education-as in the first great; war-is suffering from decreased financial stipport, skeleton curricula. speed-up sched- iitss nncl lower standards of teach- k (By HARRY CROCKETT, Associated Press Staff Writer) ' WITH THE BRITISH FORCES l\' LlBYri, June ‘.5-—lAP)—lIarrieIl mg. Mrs. Detwller was presentintz t0 the delegates. representing 40.000 I. O.D.E. members across the Domin- ion, her annual report as national educational secretary. The deleaates in session here unfll tliursday. were urged to continue their bursaries and scholarships and other educa- tional work carried out by the or- vlsions is retiring toward two gaps fields. l acheim. Superiority of allied tanks and of the British lines. Everywhere in a 200-square mile box south of Acronia the ruins of German tanks, skeletons 01' trucks and motor troop transports. gave eviueiioe oi.‘ the fury 0t the rive-day battle. ‘the German desert high com- mand, observers said, hail gambled on a desperate sweep in the south -and had lost. so far as the offence was concerned. The big question was whether the German command can hold on tiie Tiiiimi-El LVlCCilill line west of the battle zone anti that was itUUiJLLd by observers since the British tor- cus are smashing at the rear and following tnrougii intent upon coni- plete victory. The Germans obviously did not know that. the British army 11.11 such heavy‘ Si/fliillli: power. The ilgilltl‘ (iCfllltlll tanks suittrcd heavily under the tire of heavier allied tanks. The constant. bombing of the loiiz supply route around Bir Haciielm by the RAJ‘, with heavv Boston bombers and bomb-carrying Hurri- cane and KlitiilillVk litiiiters plus the txcellent support o1 the Free French iii the soutii lielpcd allied forces wrest ‘the offensive from the s. British morale is 111411. Through five days of travel over 1.000 miles of desert battle grounds. that was always evident. llhafirgeisfihoite ‘lo llvertlirow S. ll. liov’t JOi-IHANBSBURG. Jlllle 2 -<ci‘ Goblet-A szcift army, aimed at 0\'Cl'i.ill'()\\'lllg the government of the Union of South AiriCfl. “'85 10m? ed early iii 194i and was sm. d only by a. series of arrests se eral weeks agt), JG government prose- cutor charged today at the opening 0i a prelimuiary hearing for 48 por- sons Chlléildd vritnl high trctason. 1 d r ' ‘i ei, rn rs VICKY’ June .z_(AP)"‘Alb°rt fllilgcffkillllcfifS.flilel‘l'€“fi(f(tl“llli IVRYiOllJS ‘celi- ciement, collaborationist editor of ies of me Union M,“ a series of ‘he Fmmh Pmmmr Pwtys Felvs‘ political disturbances. 2st: The we... i»- wrufiwiis wounded onggtbw)‘ sire“ Stlgglfgitrooi) oifmli-iivnrltxifim ieihsder con? in cgiitral Pills toni . ‘ ‘ ' . .' A bicyclist opened me m? the trol of the Ossenabrandaag. Clcments as they were walking iI1 the Rue Vivienne, iieiir the Bourse. The first shots wtounded Mme C-le- ment. and a passcrby. kw] l. - er. In wartime, said Mrs. Detwlier, many o! the best teachers enlist and are replaced by former teachers who have lost toucli with educat- ional work or by young inexper- ieiiced teachers. Educational ex- penditures are cut clown because ui war costs and students are rushed varouuh their courses so they can take their places in war or indus- tr y. "What will be the result? Event- ually will come the post-war per- iod ntid for this we must prepatc. Another peace settlement will have to be made and another scheme of national reconstruction will have t0 be planned. This cannot be done without a well-informed public 0p- inioii. 'I'liis means that thinking must go on while guns go off." Mrs. Detwilei" said that last year the provincial executive committee of the Ontario chapter had sub- mitted to the national executive committee for consideration a reso- lution urging that the French lan- guage be taught in ptibllc aud sep- arate schools of Ontario. ‘The reso- lution suggested that the national executive as the provincial chapter of Quebec slltllllii>_tl_ similar reso- lution '0 the Quebec government for English to be taught in French- npfilklllg schools. iic national educational secre- inry made a survey‘ on the teaching of wrench and English iii the pub- lic schools of Canada and a report was sent m members of the nat- ional executive committee. No ac- tion has been taken on the Ontado resoltitio . Tlic ord-"r "adopted" I58 schools during the ycar~aii increase of 03 over the iarciious Y€8l'-—i.0 bring the present total to 1,031. ‘Adopted schools receive libraries, education- al supplies. prizes, flags. wool to knit, and general stipport for teachers citizenship work among pupils. French Editor Killed In Paris Fanii Problems 'I’hcn Clement was hit and . . t. t - . §‘3..'t"...‘“;..':tti§ :‘.‘l1,-.“’°° “‘° Under Discussion. Ciflélfigit. wags etilletboedittoijol tlie . 0Z1 ill‘ 05 Cf) iii I'd l0lliSi. 3- ' seer in Frlizllw. headed by Jacqrues riot. foimcr Communist. who turned to Fascism after a trip to Moscow with expenses paid by the Russian government. He was the third collaboration- OVITAWA. June 2-(09-69- peals to the Government for action ist. editor to be struck by a Freud; to prevent depletion of pure-bred nssassinvs bugle“ me Omar; wgrg dairy cattle herds were made in pier-re “my now head of the the House of Commons today by Vichy overnmeni. but. who qt the George '1‘. Pulford tLlb. I/c-edsi and tfme the attack on him was George Cnilckshank (Lib. Fraser nublkliing his own pater. Le Mon- Valley.) ileur, at clermont-Flerrand. and Mr, Fulford said low prices for Marcel Deat. editor of lJOuvrs. milk and high prices being oficred Both Laval and Debt recovered. by United States buyers for high ._-—-?-—-—— grade, registered cattle, were de- ' pie-ting Canadian licrds to a dati- U%eFsurfilufib gerous extent. ‘He suggested! bori- uses to enable armors to ma ntain W ea or u er their herds. In British Columbia. Mr. Cruick- June 2—(OP)-—Any shank said. high grade dairy the cattlelcre iiig_sltiugl_it_te_red OTTAWA. action that may be taken in United states to use surplus wheat for oducilon of synthetic rubber vvcu tindoubtcdly be accompan- led by flmiiflf‘ use of surplus wheat in Canada. Agriculture Minister Gardner forecast. in the House of Commons tonight. He was replying to a que=tion as to what steps Canada was tnkiinz to ascertain what use could . made of wheat to help meet the rubber shortage. Island Soldiers (Continued 0n page 7. Col 3) Railway Report Tabled iii House tintied public uwiiersliip of continental air services iii the House of Commons today. Will Broadcast that. public 2:00 pm.. AD T.) includes- Prlnoe Edward Islnnd—Gnr. s. Murphy Bumrnerviiie; or. face), committee chairman. . resound. ma; up more. OTTAWA. June 2 -tCPi —Con- trans-- Canada iras urged by the House of Com- mons railway and shipping com- mittee in its final report tabled in The committee also recommended and privatclv-niviicd 9.25 am. 1.00 Mn. 1.45 railways be allowed to compete on OT IAWA. June 2-—t(7Pi—- their owi merits for gnvprumen "Grectiflks from the Beaver 0111b" business vlthout. departmental in- brosdcastere sunday (CBC-iam- structlons for the division of traf- flc. Dr. J. P. Howden (Lib. 8t. Boni- tabled by tank duels, bombing and straifing by planes. hitter infantry elashe: and artillery fire, the armored might of liitlcfs 21st. and 15th tank di- in the British and Gcnnun mine- The British forces. clearly on the offensive. are lashing the Axis in the two gaps-at lllteifel Es Seghir and ‘about l0 miles north of Bir uncxcclled ("o-operation of air and land artillery were factors in ending the Gennans’ lightning sweep south News Briefs ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, June 3-tWednes- dayt-(AP) — Allied bombers destroyed Japan . . warehouses, barracks and road transports in heavy attacks yesterday on Tlmor and Florida islands north of Australia, allied headquarters a nounced to- day. Other offensive units bombed and strufed the Japa- nese alrdrome at Ifabaul, New Britain Island, the communi- que said. TORONTO, June 2—-(CP)—Aiin' ed at increasing sheep productior to meet wartime wool require merits. a plan. has 170m launched bv the Ontario agriculture de- p rtment. with federal department fiance. to develop 1,000 new flocks and achieve a 25 per cent increase in existing flocks for 1943, provincial government sources said, LONDON, June Z—-ICP1\ Reulers in a Stockholm dis- Dflich quoted Swedish press re- ports as saying illarshal Sem- enn Timoshenko, Russian com- mander in the Ukraine. suf- fered minor wounds when a German dive bomber attacked the automobile in which he Was lnspeeting the lines south of Kharkov in recent fighting. VALEITA. Malta. Junie z__icp, —Aii Italian fiuliter plane was cle- stroyetl and others were damaged this afternoon in a sweep 0f en- emy bombers which inflicted some civilian casualties and downed one Spitfire. ivhose pilot landed safeiy,__ Mile ED510100 Half ‘Left ‘Wrecked BERNE. June 2 —lAPl -Ari are of about. a mile by a mile and a hal was virtually wiped out by British airmen in their Saturday night raid on Cologne, reliable reports from Germany said today. This meant a iicavy deaf-h toll in the closely packed Rhineland metropolis but anfytliiiiiz like a rfi liabfe figure on casualties was lack- ing. EVEN A RED-HOT EMHusi/isf CAN i; AND Docs oar ’ COLD FEET Hiuli tttic tits afitinititi i and tniiiorrnxv llififflillty at Q54 rises tsmrirrnti miiriiiiitz at 4.16 l1- m. P. E L-N. S. FERRY SERVICE have Wood Islands 7 a.rn.. l1 l-—- 3 . m. including Sunday. leave Caribou 9 tun. 1 p.m. 5 D-ll. (‘AR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Leave Cape Torment SUNDAY SERVICE (May l to Dec. 27 inclusive; 0.45 p.111. 1.15 p. m. -. have Torloentine IOJI on. l.‘ pa. 1H IJI- II pa. y 134 Sim sets this cvcnirrr at. 740 and ast quarter moon. June 5.1.28 From Bordon - Leave 11.30 mm. m. 7.55 pm. e-‘Mfi aJII. t 11.00 tun 3.15 rem. 6.45 n.m 9.10 pan, m" llorden s00 "n. 12.00 noon ‘- m...- 1», h, i.- . ffensive InDesei-t t Hitlerfianle Divisions See Escape To iVest Nazi Lightning Sweep South Of British Lines Was Blocked By Superior Tanks and by co-operation’