' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Bald bh alone truly fortunate who has rudtd hi! l"! lll DION‘ _ odl-bollag. l.‘ MAXIMO OIL M DRE MAN JAP '51s! ‘Wounded Veterans On Board Hospital Ship smiths- NIJWYORKJmnI- (APl- 1m Jaattered Jonathan Elmer, with S00 l troops. docked today after weath- eflng g an hour hmricane en route from Prance, which canard theahiptorollasmuch n40 m"; from centre. Coming Events "law — Hurray River alon- by, d-U-il. "Show — lflsrray Harbour aoutn, latunin. 0-20-21. "Dance Alcrell Bell Pridaszl lune 20th. Good music. d-fl-li" "Dance, Patrick's 8t. Road Ichool. llm'&y, July 2nd. d-I-il. "T? "Dance Onwell Coven-ail. July hdJlllviewOrcheets-mioeamaeaaszn. "IOQGQMBOCIIISDNMI Lon-l m c", my ~"=*=~.-.:u szne= or: ' u --_ all-esutaecf-L £12k Tucker! ofuidosltgesl "gaps name Iergmanlfa on or h ac on w en warehouse, Montague, aauiroay. battalion htlliqusrters of the Es- June 80th. 6-22-2i. sex Scottish was surrounded in the fighting near Csicars "Dance, .us School. Among Military Medal winners wadngday, July 4th. If not fine. was l. Harold Taylor- of Brent- un my», 6-2-11. ford. t. decorated in the Leo- ld battle for his part in the cap- "aec. cv.rz.r=.=v...:r u...“ or i“ ... . u; . ong e a rmen a or Thursday. July om. 6- -8L' tgge 1:3,.‘ oi; glennie,’ ago.‘ 32.11 . TB 0 Oll XE , "Stanley Brtdmlillvfl 9N"!!!- who had been with RAF. Bomber, their piaiy in :1 0t lllvyhgtgi aldmgoasttlali squadronsn man‘ ‘m’ --—-' Gelmaieuy since lélilsgnftgfi c “rm Store will be closed on plane was shot down, until April! asonday, July hid, Joseph 1".‘ oi this year. cra. - - "Dance Emerald Hall algal! Jul 3. Sponsored by Hi1. B y Deighan. d- 2i and Mrs. i9- "Graduatlon Dana, Kinkora hail Friday, June 20. Summerside Orchestra. Aitanni meeting at 0 ghlgck, Q-TI-IQ-Il "l Cream Social. M BIILOQEQRIIIQY. June 80th. Aus- vices at. John's w. o- 6-14-1941- Rumms Sale Saturday aft- ernoon. Jun‘: 30. C. W. 1.. Bail.‘ over Provincial Bank "Pantry lale at Holman’ Sat- urday. Jule 80th. Bread. ‘Rolls. home baked Beans. Pies. 8t. Char- lea Auxiliary 0-9-21 "Parties hav lnity please con- tact our almt Win ‘AicRae for trucking service and information. Livestock Marketing Board 6-29-21 "Unloading cedar shingles at Colvllle today. Order now and avoid disappointment. B. A. Mac- Phaii. New Haven. 6-28-21 “Crane Bros. will truck hogs to Charlottetown from Mlilview, Ver- non and vlcinltiea Tuesday fore- noon July lrd. Please contact for service. Livestock Marketing Board. 0-29-21 Pigs t Proderi ton m- damm. Pzving $18020 a pa for good pigs 80 eachlbtlig lbs. .°".“;..’.°' “'2.” ' i: "if... . a ' . or- lenaon. w 6-20-20 i- , mm w ahip from; " farmers: For depend- able t service and expert marketing please contact George Hwy. Always ready, always ob- ll . UV G Ma eeto k ng Board. 6-20-21 ‘Jwe u u m exoep: urea , an m... ’ ". ° ii; ‘t’ s... market prl and m? settlement vi-s 8v , 1M1, 6-28-121. “Clidfcrd Peters. Rollo m. will not be loading hogs at Courts week i July Ind unless niflolent num- b“ are m rl Jtly om. ‘Livest l... ions. to advance. again Mar- as 28-2! ..:.=.".~....=~=:-.. M“ "1""- l? fie 5 2 5' H» ,the 6th Anti-Thank Regiment while 6-28-31 d (I The Canadian Pram) AX. June 2s - Wounded veterans of the last few heroic weeks of the war in _ liber- ated priscners of war-some from Dieppe-sailors and alrm headed. for their home provinces Canada idhlglit after arriving in rt late last night aboard the ospital shi Lady Nelson. Bulk of e 51a returning vet- erans were army men, with six REAP. and three naval person- nel. They stayed on the ship last an were transferred today trams that waited at Many oi the wounded had sto ped Nazi shells or bullets in Anril or early May. just before the Nnsl collapse, while others had spent months in hospitals after serious wounds suffered early in the Sicil- ian or Italian campaigns. Decorated Personnel There were ! f0 several personnel. including Cross winners. Maj. DE. Po of Winnipeg. Lake Superior Regiment, was wounded by a German shell while lfldllll a company of the Super- lors in Germany. Capt. Kenneth Wharton of Hamilton. Ont, won decorated , ree - i a member of e Pte. L. McCallum of Camp- , N.B., a stretcher pat- ient. was wounded near Ol- denburg Daring the battle of Germany. L-Cpl. E. C. Jay of Charlottetown, had been o- verseas l0 months when a snipers bullet caught him in the hand and put him out of action. Another wounded Marilimer was Lleut BC. Armstrong. quiet- spolsen artilleryman from Saint John, N.B..He was wounded with his unit was advancing on Amster- am. Iappy At Getting Home Happiness at gettinz home was written all over the faces of ti: wounded veterans, both those wh lined the decks to look over the‘ mlst-shroude’ harbor and city, andi those bed-ridden below decks. "We‘ve walled a long time for this." said Pte. Jim Bnssinger of Brighton, Ont. His churn from the Royal Regiment of Canada, Pte. Jack Keating of Toronto, a- greed wholeheartedly. Many had been wounded in ~the bitter hting through the heav- lly-min bullet - shattered Hochwald Forest in Germany. Such a. one was Capt. W. W. Jan- sen oi Regina who lost both, legs while he was lea his com any through a mlneilel in read ess arr-rear .> 3% GEORGE TUCKER T-ON-MAXN, Germ- any, June 28—(AP)—S.S. Gen. Se Dietrich, who came from the tra e unions of the old Weimar republic to become one of the most notorious Naais. has provided the Alli amiss with the raclest catalogue yet compiled the leaders in Hitler's circle. Dietrich. close friend of Ernst lioehm who was purged in 100d, was a German tank commander in the battle of the Ardennes e. e following blunt excerpts were taken from official interro- gation reports giving his opinions on- men and events which brought German to its osltion today: Him er: "Ths guy tried to Oh - 31mm" imitate the Puehrer. His appetite molar. o. n. .ltR.T.Hcl- - . M» w. may. we will Irw- §i’§¢."°‘<'>§.' £35‘ §?“ii'.l..“°i.."°w§§““. 1° 5° 5- 9'7’ - great hand at hoarding and "nu-m: n-mun mid ?°...".i?’€i?§ws'§& .i..s"‘£$‘§~£é’§‘-'-’ lwaa url w o! Jill." Goa = "He waaa my ‘sauna. aafcllcws: llondamllmlra. St. g flqyn, g; 1.9m u... b“ and 1 'ur uififlglarloa Sig’: gahuhlln: filgieifu aegis“, town and all ' r idem mints some Loy. use.’ net's» leader: V“ o! all Niltollclla- "An old dreamer but a good-nat- 49- i ured guy who wouldn't harm a fly. m y Mn‘ f-liemhnas done a ice for the working m‘ , Charlottetown. nie eneral staff (Fuehrerh . tar ltlver. - he ua era): "Keltel, Model, in, and y un il Bush er and Jodl and all the oth- ‘su- "" ' “W... t -' 2r. lit‘. .22..=°:".*'."..:*"':~.v,: ' all‘ v a o ‘ooalim n {olng Welchs and Woehler lacked any. Q-al likewise in ccu e to say some- thing. One ougb to beat urgtbe netted the fisheries 8568.250 more. l Si l Compiles Racy Story A On Nazi Accomplices ‘whole bunch ofjem. Only Ecltzler mrenunouail slam. Pa... Extensive AT A GLANCE ._-__ PACIFIC — Sana-forts hllfl lwii Ink of fin bomb on fear Japan-i eao centres; Hamil; communique-i discloses fiilk- » lean control. ‘ CHINA - Cbinac battle to re- capture liuchow. POLAND — Formation of Polhla Govunnaent announced HOLLAND - w!!- h; liber- comq; Queen Wilselsnlna ation celebration 1011194 by Can- adian troops. DEW May Fish landings For Maritime: flown HALFAX. June 38—(CP\—P‘is.h. landings in Maritime waters last month dropped sharply from those‘ of May last year. it was shown in the monthly report issued here to- day by the Eastern fisheries Divi- slon. Landings in May this year total- led 81.065.l00 pounds with a value of $4,295,242, compared with 95.‘.- 809500 pounds with a value of SANQLBN in May, i944. The de- crease wes most marked in the herring and sardine fisheries. with catches of lobsters. cod and hor- rlnr holding up well. Though the over-all Maritime‘ catch was sn1aIler_ that for Novel Scotia. showed a slight increase] despite adverse weather conditions during the month. with heat-Y: losses in fishing gear. The total atch was up 746.900 pounds and: i Biggest drop was in New Bums- ‘wick. where fishermen landed 11-’ 921.200 pounds less than in .\f:~~.', last year, and as a result new their incomes slashed by STsBcG. Heavy storms between May l1 and May 10 caused extensive losses in herring nets and prevented the fishermen taking advantage of {he peak herring run. The sardine catch also took a drcn, but the_ lobster fishery was better. The lobster catch in Prince Ed- ward Island waters was good wh-‘rl weather permitted but high winds and storms hindered the fisher. men. The total catch of all fish mgr-eased 499,300 pounds and land- ed value was $116,253 better- lleport King Offered Seat In Glengarry OITAWA, June 28 - (CP) - Reports circulated in political cir- cles here todsv that. Prime livin- lster Mackenzie King had decided to accept the offer of Dr. W B MacDlsrmld, sitting Liberal mem- ber to vacate the Ottawa district riding oi’ Glengarry to give Mr. King a seat in the Commons These reports said nomination day for the by-election would b: July 30, with the voting, l! neces- sary, Aug. 6. knew what was going on. I did a lot for this boy." Hitler: "Knew even less than the reat. He allowed himself to be taken for a sucker by every- one." Hitler's death: “Killed in action? Impossible. This guy never left his air raid shelter." Reinhard Heydrich, assassinated hangrnan in Caechoslovakia: was a reat pig." pure childishness. merely mischiev- ousnese on the part of the Hitler youth which had been stirred up by Bchtraach." (Baldur von Schl- rach, Hitler youth leader)." The defence of Vienna (Dietrich was the defender of Vienna): “Of course I had orders to defend Vl- enna to the last. I could not, go over to the enemy as I did not want to lose my head. I therefore defended the town." About Russia: "A very intelli- gent geople. good-natured, easy to be le and~ also adapted in tech- nlcalmattera-and on tgg oi that, those hu e masses. ey were orly l in the beginning but hey learned quickly. Those eas- ants have s lot oi brains an are very amenable. Moreover. their tanks were better. They were less complicated and easier to manoe- uvre. I spoke to _many Russians. They liked it better under Stalin than under the Czar. Even the pen le on the collectives live all rlgh "He| Anti ewish pogrcms: "The; was] Con tro Protest Delay . n. Providing Hospitalization l Delegation From Legion‘ Plans To Interview i Veterans‘ Affairs Minister. A resolution strongly protesting agairsz the delay in providing hos- pitalization facilities in this Prov- ince for veterans was imsriimonsly passed a: the regular monthly meeting last nigh: of the Char- lottetown branch of the Canadian: Legion. Another resolution protesting a condition which makes only bad water available to troops training on Porvua! Rifle Range was order- ed sent to the anment of National Defense and to the Pro- vincial Department of Public Health. The lack of hmpltalization facii-, itles in the Province for returning. ersormei o! the armed services, as been engasi ' of the Charla . . the Legion for the past several, years. So far. it is-‘learned the. branch has received nothing but! assurances couched in the traguest. terms. It. has been pointed out to! the Dominion authorities that ai wing added to each of the two. Charlottetown hospitals would pro- vide lhe necessary facilities and‘ thereby make the medical treat- ment of sick and wounded return- ing veterans much more pleasant and- economical for both them and their families. The resolution nsk-. ing for the immediate supplying of such facilities will be forwarded to the Minisrer of the Department of Veterans‘ Afiairs, Ottawa. l (It was learned last night ' that a delegation consisting of | Captain N. W. Lowther, K.C., representing t h e Provincial Command of the Canadian Legion; Dr. W. J. P. Mac-Mil- lcn. representing the Char- lottctovvn Hospital; and Dr. J. A. Clark, representing the f‘. E. Island Hospital, are leaving this morning to meet the Dfonireal-ifalifax train nt Mont-ton for the purpose of discussing the situation with the Hon. Ian hfncKenaie, Min- ister of Veterans’ Aflaire, who ls on his way to Europe to study- at first hand problems connected with the rehabilita- tion of returning Canadian veterans-i. A delegation consisting of Nurs- ing Sister Dorothy MacKenzle. J. W. Hogan. P. E. Palmer. Howard Court. J. H. lifcKenna. Joseph O'- Hanlcyv, G. Ives. and J. F. Leight- lzer was appointed to attend the next convention of the Provincial Command of the Canadian Legion. The dnte for the convention has not yot been set. James McKenna. in presenting; the House Committee reporfi re-- ferred to the recent death of Mrs. Frank Fraser, who had been in charge of the Iicgicn canteen for several years, and paid tribute to her unselfish devotion in minister- ing to the needs of the veterans who had availed themselves of the canteens facilities. President Lco Bradley presided at the meeting. Atlantic Storm a ls Diminishing (By The Associated Press) BOSTON. June 28-'I‘he Boston Weather Bureau said ton ht the Atlantic storm "continues o dim- inish siowlv in intensity and shows ward movement. There are insuf- ficient reports to accurately locate the centre but lt appears to be near latitude 42 degrees north 121d longitude 6i degrees west, moving ens! northeastward about i4 to 18 miles per hour. Winds cf 30 to 40 miles per hour are occurring over the water ln a radius of 250 miles _slarl o‘ secondary schools with the emolu- Jeekins refuse in Canada. of the centre." that own a piece of land, a cow an they live quits happily.” lsiy The State __ i I a, a. r. oonnasao BRATISLAVA. June ‘J3 — lDe- Lived) — fAPl — Defensive stare. trade urwrx- contrc‘. of schools. large industries. forests and 12w .- are among‘ the plans envisaged for the Slova state of the Creches- lovak republic. "Our plan is not social t. capitalist, but democratic.‘ Charles Schmiedze. communls: president in the dual party coal tion council governing the sure. This country is at the crossroad od eastern and wmern cultur and is feeling for the firs: ‘Ame heavy impact of the Soviet gn- ernmenfal philosophy. Schmiedte and Lacislav" Novo- meiy. newspaper editor. parrsin fighter and communist Minister of Education, drew a plczure o! the way the state will function. Youth will be educated in ideals of freedom. said. There will be no "private" schoU< —vvhlch means parochial so“ will be abolished although . gious denominations will be all. ed to have their own u schools for religious insiruc. outside the state school hours. Slovene will be the basic langusze taught. in all schools except eastern Slovakia where ulation is 100.000. Ukrainian will be l (i0? 511:‘. 9 .th on Instruction will be given in Rus- French and English in the sis placed on Elngiish in the burni- PS5 Talented students will be bmught: out and encouraged with libe scholarship funds. Under the g of President Joseph Tito‘ all except a favored few children? had quit school at the steer u. '. Novomesky said theatres wviil be under state control because of dif- ficulties in getting private funds. and public libraries will be avail- able in every community. Trade unions will be controlled by the state which will set minimum working conditions. The state wilt deal with union representatives and employers on questions affectzng labor laws, Schrniedte said. There will be no attempt to control selling‘ prices. i Women and youth organizations‘. will be formed by the state. Great factories will fall to sum“ control by reason of their sfzew. Smaller establishments will be giv-i en back automatically to the own. crs if they or their heirs can prove legal ownership. Small landowners will be perm“. ted to operate in the same u-sv as» the small businessman. ' The land reforms fal‘. into two will be seized with ut and distributed to gmsliec§$ff§ii In the second instance. estates o. divided among small landowners. mThe state mav Pay something: to Peasants who ac land will be exp t d ~ state. m! to p“ the London Poles Seek Refuge In Canada LONDON. J _ -_ (OP Cable) -—Am Nave (ICl-iigdrlllle writer, Stefan Litaeur. said today the London Polish Government. MW winding uo its aflalrsfilfi r Montreal favored. or ln Eire. ~ Tllf angling féfirllme would - be SUPP an w lll _ “new fl éhteA es recog H m; kvgldmlzillrg administra- . ene Wm‘ we Am". y agreement The Daily Express political cor- respondent also reported the Lon- don Government was negotiating for "asylum" in Canada or Eire and had the backing of the Vati- lndlcatlon ‘of increasing northeast- 6N1 8H1!‘ RANCHER. DIES SANTIAGO. Chile, June 28 _. (AP! — Alfonso Mencdez Behety. 61. sheep rancher and industrialist and one of the wealthiest men in South America died in Buenos Aireg after a short illness. Novcn .._ the pop-i aught there in the basic schools. ' classes. Second languages in! £1: universities will be Russian and! {Edvmrd Island. Nova Scotia. i =Sasebo_ big Japanese naval cnARwrrr-zrowu, canons, rnmav, JUNE 29, 1945 10 PAGES $331, '.,":;:,,,",",."‘;,_".1‘ “M '”‘ SClTiES ARE, SET ABLAZ By The Canadian Press More than 3,000 tons of fire bombs were showered 0n base cit)", and three other Nipponese centres — Jloji and Nobeok. on Kyushu. and Superfortresses. nounred yesterday. The islunds-rtnafahnn, Sairgan. Alzuuagan. Agrihun. Asuncion and .\lZillg—\\'C!‘E re Okayama on H0flSll—-0lll‘]_\' today by 450 to 500 American Six small Marianas Islands stretching 300 miles north of Saipan. Superforiress bombers hnsc. have been brought under American control. Pacific Fleet headquarters an- connoitred for the purpose of. Jnsiaiiing facilities to receive crippled Superforts limping: b-"k. freon‘. midi °!‘_:_I_§P““- Victory Parade At Amsterdam . |..- BY WILLIAM BOSS ‘the better fcr us. for our battle. BRAGS OF SEFRlTT WYTAPONS _ wcspoxzs an expected iionzeinnd zrivaslou. whim war comnlczitstors mid 0111c! be “circuit "The sooner the do PHQXH)‘ COTHC‘. array is conlpletc." duel: 0:‘. lvhivofi Babs in a broadens: recorded by’ AAISTERDAAI. Holland. June 26-the Federal Communications Conn’ lCP Cabiei —-An1s:erviam went . ivlld wit! delight rods; as its th fin." be‘ n ‘ '1" ‘ crowned by n vtsi: from Queen Wil- ' helmina and n gffiflv parade to see me Queen for the first time. in more than five years as she stood on zhe bslmny of her lniace over-f looking Dam Square The Qilefll‘ was occonzpnnicd by Gen. Creran} Canadian army commander, and? the blzrszomnster. Heinrich de Boer. Reserve Brigade . 1 Group To Camp i At Beach Grove i i The 42nd Reserve Brigade Group, Consisting of units from Prmccl _ and) Cape- BfNOll. will go mm camp atf Belch Grove 'l‘ruimng Centreozr Saturday for two works tlfalinlllfll The Camp Commandant is Col, G. E. Full and EG. Giles is Bil-I gnde Major. The Group comprises. 800 men. __ The brigade consists of the 1i Armoured Rflilliliélli, LL-Col. R Morrison. 0.6.; m. the 5th and unit», Li. Col. K. S. Raters. ' 2nd Reserve Battalion Pic- :0.C..i lw-Jhat the “future is indeed brill was» oi ' Caisadian and Dutch troops. ; More than 30.000 citizens jammed; I the streozs in the centre of the city Encourage Best Students i l... FWIPNSIM run. No. . , daslncatmm' Lands 9mm? 1!! Ult‘ $8081 CORN-mil)‘ 1mm std"??? ihifinvrive here Saturday on the trunp-_ _ hands of collaborators or Germans 6th District Signal Company xisl-vshtp mission. The commentator nclggdi although all Japanese "regrctWhe loss cf Okmsnvn. An unnamed Dorm‘. COTTCSlFOXlFl-l ent chimed in: "I even hope for an early landing of enemy forces‘ on our mainland Just to sense the; thrill when we strike a deadlvi blow to the enemy." Domei reported that suicide vaEIQOIIS passed their experi- mental siace st Okinawa and would attain full results‘ a- gainst homeland L. ' - While closely xvntching for an invasion from the south, the Jana-I nese declarcd themselves ready for attack from the north. ' Tokyo radio reported a strong U. S fleet axvaitln: opportunity‘ to. strike from the north. establish- ment of a new American subma- rine base at Klska in ll10AlEll!iRllS_ and stationing of an American Al» pine Division at Axatlu Island. also in that group. EXYCHSH‘? bombing ThldS from tho north also. were forecasl. " These 3 Islanders Not 0n Pasteur HALIFAX. June %-"lCP\—~hllll- tary ofiiclais tonight smnounrc several delegations from mu :5 mon expected i i r i l u Pasteur. Nalnes of mon who‘ failed to embark were cabled from» Britain after lilo ship sailed. These, v lion lllglundcrs. LL-COI. G- Cmlefqmcn will be included in an earlyl ier 123 acres will be taken nnrliOC; ‘Ind Reserve Battalion Cape gran, Breton Highlanders, LL-Col Crooks. ;O.C.; 42nd Reserve Company tR. c owners of broken up estntcs.|G.A.S.C.J. ftinjor Mchellnn. 0.0:! quire shares of the; 1N5. unitl and the 29th Field Am- ‘town; gbulancc \R.C.A.M.Cl. LL-Col. A.E. t Blacketl._O_C Picto_\1_ur3i_t.i I _._._ Mo i “Screwball” Bv AUSTIN BEALAIEAR PARIS, J1me 28-—-1APi-Gern1n11 sclentlsts who now are turning over their technical knowledge to the Allies have declared their be- lief that rockets within the next five to 10 years will speed a ton of mall across the Atlantic ill 40 minutes and within i5 to 25 Your: will make regular passenger runs between Europe and Nuflll Am?!“ lcn. This and other seemingly fan- tastic dntn were disclosed in pros conference today by LL-Ccl. John A. Keck of Groeusburil. Pn.. chief of the Enemy Equipment Intelligence Section of the United States Am1y Ordnance Division in the Eirropenxl theatre. Col. Kcck said many of the ap- proximately 1300 Germnn solen- tlsts now in the technical custody‘ of the Allied Armies nftcr helping crentc Gcmianyts secret weapons believe that within 50 to 100 years a man will be able to conquer Kla- 5 l-le added the first nation to achieve this will rule tho world. To skeptical correspondents who brows during his talk of more than l 1-2 hours Col. Keck said these scientists were the snmo mon who developed Gormnuyfls V-l and V-2 flying bombs and many other "screwball“ weapons which he took off the secret list for the first time. , Such weapons, he aald. in- cluded a 200-ton tank, guns . All-foot barrels which had been found trained on London. rockets that could be launched from submerged aub- lnarlnea and a rifle with a curved barrel for shooting a- round corners. flnncicvs who did not sail re Details vlty nnd harness the rays of theaun.| his own comment that’ listened with frequently raised cyc-, Herc are the Prince Edward ls- Gnr. W. A. Chandler. Charlotte-l Pie. Gallant. Summer-Z gtdg; 1.13m J, $_ hfurrny. Kildarri Capes. or Nazi: Weapons Col. Kerk said most of thcsr‘ scientists have expressed willing- ness to go to the United Slates or Britain mid carry on there. know’ ing they will never be able in con-l ifimle their work in Goran's)". German Mistake Col. Keck told correspondents ‘that while the standard equipment lo! the German Army was “goodl to excellent." the Germans con-i ccnflntcd ion much attention on "screwball ivrnpons" a! tho cx-i pense of proved oqizipmcnt and‘ that this was a big factor in Ger-i "manys defeat. I The officer said he and British. intelligence officers learned Hitler had ordered his highcst| officers to see that nil German nr-l tillery was converted to rocket ar-i ltlllery by (Xtnbcr. i944. | He disclosed that Alllcd secret loperatlves knew practically the ‘daily routine at Germany's No. l rocket experimental station at Peencmundc. and that was how R. .A.l". bombers killed some 2.500 lsclentlsts by attacking Peenemunde ‘when opt-rations were at. a peak. He said the Germans started roc- ‘kct development in 1932. i Col. Keck asserted these same ‘scientists believe that within 50 to 100 years access could be gained to a region 5.100 miles nbovc earl-h whore they believe that gravity ls neutral. -_-.-____Ai._.. WINDSORS GOING T0 FRANCE PARIS, Juno 2a ~- (AP) - A Iiligsh lillnbnssy ntinvhz- mid today the Duke nnd Duchess of \ ‘iclsor were coming in Fmuro. 'l‘l~ ' Paris npartmrznt is being FPIlLALlICKl. They also own n house- ln Versailles Veterans Minister tier: a“ v UVIPYSTAS. cl Canadian program ‘the world" viremen overseas vroul m i: and if they did it was up to l Residents ‘ {east of here. today were attempt- ing to ref some expel‘ the well preserved remains of a prehistoric monster. a trapper on glacier-fed Tsivat River. iKatalls. -him he found a portion of a cac- :cass. l2 feet long and six fee‘. high _ mrcfrudlng from the ssndbar. l : that‘ P and a villa on the Riviera. . .4; ire A i 1 Enroute Overseas lhv The Canadian Press) \ox’rnrsai.. June ‘rd-Hon. Ian ‘mrie. Aflnister of Veterans " before leaving from here for a three-neck stay in tad reporters that Liblln on ln veteran reha iiita- work had been “100 per cent.‘ . NSCKEHELE. who is acoomo. l‘! b)’ hi! dtlvllii‘ minister Wal- S Woods. will discus the Do- j service rehabilitation pro- nm Willi Canadians still serving lie told reporters he thought the “the finest in that hiy sen find flaws bu: < -.. -\p~rnaw<¢.. fill i0 make suggestions for im- ovonlenl. _ ~11“ ._\-...».* Seek To Identify Prehistoric Monster -. Ll Alaska. “June i?’ Katalin. 4o miles 1"’? ‘if connova. N" o! s to identify discovered by in the Tom White, longtime resident n! said Paul Schneur told s sandbar '1‘ .4 0W1‘ Noam is 4n!- esev tacks Lute You. lit MAY out QRoW METEOROLOGICAL EVIOE, Tor-cumin, June 28 — (GP) -- lmum and maximum temperatures. -Vnncouvcr 56, 64; Edmonton 39 ca; Regina 46, d6; Winnipeg ‘l0, ‘Ii Toronto 63, 8i; hionu-eal 58. John 63, —; Moncton, 58. 68 lfnx 54, 56; C-‘iarlotletown b6, Syvlncy 52, 59: Yarmouth U, M. F0 CA B LDWER. ST. LAWRENCE-Node crate winds portly cloudy and warm, , probably a few scattered showers. LAKE ST. JOHNw-Partly cloudy and moderately worm with acat- lcnxl showers GULF AND BAY OHALEUR: Mostly cloudy wlm occasional ra easterly winds strong over south portion of gulf. NORTH SHORE:— Modern; tn fresh winds partly cloudy with ed showers. trams-me: wuss: - rma winds. mostly northeast: neatly cloudy with occasional light rain. MARITIME EAST: ltroug easterly winds with rnlll. High tide this afternoon at 1.81: and tonlilht at 8.24. Sun sets this evenllil lt I30 and sea tomorrow morning at 6.10. uarter moon July 2nd. 8.1} ‘ mmaa yigahgg-gai- n: ~.\.._.-;».-., .. -.. _ Sununoralde tide e htaen minu- tes later than Oharlo tetown. SUNDAY SIIVIUI Le Cha latte l i511‘. cséml-FPJJ‘. iii‘. if: OIIAILOTT an, - ITOWM- NEW GLAIGOI Leave 'g§§ei‘m“*°"" id ‘ A Arrive Charlotteiow: 81%. N. s.-r. a. r. raaar aauvmg IDallv. Ineladlaa sealer!) scnsnuaa m! l-am. ta Leave woos mum 1 a. n. n a. m, 8 p. m. Ina Carlbo ‘m: I.la.|u.,1g|, i0 thori v trollet, "Ln ‘afffhu? Wwmlara and Tbulalaye s MI! and ‘flame the l1 a. p, , M . "fir" m" Ilsa w I ba lam aroaalag|g':flwm'