he SU ,n WESTE UARDIAN Mlyblm _-___._-@--__i__-_--_i _________;__ ‘unlim- flirt‘: Mrs. John Pond. s1 . Church Streetprhono m suvmsasinr and some: COUNTy MONDAY & TUESDAY Wsoriptiouo Advertising, ma? goolrslore, Water Street. Water Street. red Bo at 2o pa do). or 10¢ d" you’: order to the h H" column is reserved for Go Ii l) He: eG-sudretnn week. Ph u! responsible for demon?» should be rm with n", p,“ my he boulhstgily nausgny of the following atom u, "Ill. Water Street. Granville Street. in Summerlide by for this servioq II Y0!!!’ route. '0 lllyhom ROBERT TAYLOR ' IN FLIGHT ~00MMAND new: u [our interest, but advertising --B_UY Corn. Peas Vetches t Also “Traveualk” uinewsv Mill"! m! "thaw-ed Blms- '1,.453.6_14_§,_ Shows at 7.15-9.15 11mm‘ “ "mt ‘k m’ """‘h" -35“; i" Matinee Tuesday at. 3. l; advance by expem dlpulgstllsrtigtion filled ,5}; . a. l2. l3 AND l6 gslvsm, Dru: 00.. xensingwii. M ‘gills?’ .. soft brace. stake and lacing wirei ---- ‘ . retail and wholesale at Bruce's. t '-THE ANNUA], meeting b; C L-463-6-l4-2i. ‘Beltlieque Skating Rink Wm be m,“ I J AJALHANIZED and bright stau- 811px. ‘kirk P§d$°¢f,'§“y' "m" 17 i." ' ind galvanized Barb Wire in a an cordial” summerfld“ , ‘yo; wholesale and retail at ,, -,_ L-463-6-l4-21. JLAY AT KENSINGTON. The Oman players of Charlotte- , will present a farce-comedy , Min-d from Missouri" at Ken- ., on, Wednesday, June 1B. L-iili-fl-li-ii. JANAD N ARMY RECRUITS: d will meet at Lhp summerside. on Thurs- A. M. to ex- L-460-6-li-4i. JETURNEI) [MIME-—Mrs. S. G. lam has returned to her home siimmerside from Annapolis Roy- y,5., hci- lcrmci- home. She was . oaniod on her return by Mr. Mrs. Licliltlt‘ Wilson who will lheflllésl of Ml‘. and Mrs. Mer- ior a few days.—S JIECEIVE. SAD NEWS — Mrs. laincti of Summerside received ilezrani on Sunday of the death oer niece, Blanche Blundell. of ‘n, Wisc. The message ‘said was killed in an automobile uc- 111i t there Saturday nightf Her r was formerly Miss Blanche not TTl‘0ll-~5 l -—-——— t JASSING 0F MRS. MAR- 1‘ CAHILI. - The death cc- ehe, . was B4 oi are and will be kindly re- liered bv the residents of Mis- . where she resided until lier -- driied when she retigned to invited to tie . remry‘ ll- lld T. J. l Must Lawson Cotton, W88 8 100d attendance. M17 mlgkptlhe president occu Wu quilts for refugees. i? several veal-s glam her late home to the -_._. “G-QSOLINE Washer (Beatty). sold before Saturday, see Si. Eleonora. 11-524-6-16-31. ans were disc . "d Am with d on Sundaveirt’. ggrelgilatléhfl: Bedeque. Mrs. ago. In addition to . Mr . Lo th _ . at Foxlev River on Sunday, Lenard. ‘(gong two 5mm R" A wright lira Margaret Cahlll. widow of 511311 Lem-d lite ‘Thomas Cahlll, formerly cf hail, to mourn the 1055 of a dévoh e on B] Beflsque. and Mai"- of Danvers Mass, are other. The fu l t ' lguesday llfieliflrfllgifla ataléesofglgccnl: United urch at Bededue.__3. former home- in Lot The 431L133 N» will take place on Tuesday The regular gonsthiywngfif: ' | at nine cvclock from St. | Church. Lot ll.-S Jll-ETTY WEDDING —A very tvwedrlitic was sdemnized at. iy Manse, Summerslde on nay afternoon at 2:30. Rev. L. ilhavics officiating when Miss - lxWi-i, flflllilllifi‘ of Mr. and flurry Lewis of Cascumpec -i the iiride of Mr. George . son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd - oi Sunimcrside. The bride i- very u-iiisome in a coral dress with navy blue coat lut and matching accessor- llfldfll bouquet. She was tied by MlSS Carrie speei-s mdresscd in rust cont and hat. Mr. Ncil Marks acted pooritsman. Aitcr the ceremony irony couple left amid show- oi confetti tnr a honeymoon to the mainland. on their re- ~ they will . ake their home in eislrlex-S. rtlfday gram at erhrooke IIJII Que. June l5 - l-llore than 5.000 citizens of urltil of the eastern townships N. .._.¢- I the Do ‘ii en route to Britain. Tmh WES carried from Q116- lliiras the nearby Windsrr iirinz flcld in a twin-motor glanbrliici ihm brought here ' ‘ no l." or Josrnh Labrecoue motored iltlinilm: ficld to receive the - lie \\'.'ls accompanied by lli 0. Howard. Maurice s. Lilr-iuil member of U? oi Ctmninns for Sherbrock lib-Col Jnlinnv Bnurnue, Un- ionals- nicmbcr of the Legis- issemhh for Sherbrooke. 1 demciislmtlon, the most im- l! held here in many years. zed on the exhibition ' i. Later. various military un- ‘llluiet “fills which 000k mm s‘ reremnnics paraded throilrh iv rtrcets ‘Fliilt the ceremonies. the received from I-lon. Col. J. L. Ralston. Min- ister of National Defence on Sail-l urday morning in connection wi - the Victor Summersi‘ pennant before the campaign l! over." Children's Aid Soci ~ County was held inety for prime Thursday. President Phee presided. The 'I‘riiant Oflirer €eported thag ltéilere had ruanc ' - s" _ D85; JOHT}, let w°a‘f.,°'}§-,",ofl§§'“,f, ‘gélcupfcd territory in France. Stltilety that the Y's Men's Club "“_‘ were making Children's playground on North Market Street and that swings and other fcrms of amusement would te- brovided for the child cletv fe badly needed. The field obtained isi large enough for baseball and other sports-S the Town Hall, D1‘. J. A. Mc- en nn arrangements for a ren. The Su- lt that a playground ulrs Personals —Dr. Gerald Tanton of Debert. 5.. has been spending a iew hays wim his parents. lvn. and Mrs Jarvis wanton. Summersidc-S —Mrs. David Gardiner and two small cnllclren have arrived from. vatawa. to spend a holiday at Cncl-. ton. stall of the Civil Service at O wa will loin them short Mrs. Summersioo and have many lrlenas hero-S Sol. Ralston l Congratulates Summerside h/Lr. uarduier who is on t-he tta- ly. Mr. and Gardiner were formerly of bell of silmmerside Mayor 051:“) followirlE irlesrem Loan camlluisll- amendOllSly pleased t0 ‘t’. “I am have the honour of being the rep- resentative of citizens who in this war have done another fine job to support Canada's war effort- It rlsed ll’ I would ggetilitfizd Silo? a third d J. L. RALSTON. . Slfl" Minister of National Defence. s. George bled the , Several bodies were found in the i Mystery crash 0f Nazi planes In Portugal By John P. McKnight Associated Press Staff Writer LISBON. June 15 —(AP)- Three German warplanes and a fourth of unannounced natlonalit have crashed mysteriously in t e Span- ish frontler zone of Southern Portu- gal. it was announced today. Presumably tho planes crashed during the night, at least two of them falling in flames while a third caught fire after it crashed. wreckage. They plowed into open fields of the back country about three miles from the village of Amarelela. vlt-ich itself is only about five miles from the border. Near the wreckage two opened parachutes were found, indicating that. the crew of at least one plane had bailed out and upon landing hurl vanished into the countryside. There were no further details in the first report from Amareleja but Lisbon sources concluded there had been an air battle over Portuguese or Spanfish teri-Pory. 'l‘l-.e place where the planes crashed l5 about 200 miles north- iwast of Gibraltar and nearly 500 miles from ire nearest German-oc- A German attack on a. British convoy in the Atlantic west of Gi- braltar was claimed in Berlin but the regulnr high command com- munique, which frequently fails to ‘covsr events immediately preceding its issuance. did not. mention the aerial attack. A dispatch from La Linea. Spain. which faces Gibraltar, said that two warplanes of unidentified na- tlnnaliiv ran a gauntlet of anti-alr- craft fire Sunday morning to fly over two British aircraft carriers, a battleship and a flotilla of de- stroyers as they entered Gibraltar harbor. One dipped fairly low over the warships but climbed again and turned nw-iv with the other plane when anti-aircraft fire started- No bombs were droPDtd- l l S’side team T0 play here 1g _ l. plans materialize. Cl-larloxtt-gzgztvn softball fans will be given a chance to witness tilt highly rated Dominion Silvers Juvenile Softball team from Sum- merside in action here next Sun- day. They are scheduled to meet two of the local softball squads- Playing s double header on Viv- l torla Park diamond that day, the isiimmersicle boys will meet the i Juvenile Bombers. who are at pre- seni. leading the City League. ill the afternoon. In the evening the East End Bad can will tangle with the team from the Prince county capital. qusrzTzis rum) TOTALS MONTREAL. June 15-40?)- Headquarters of the Queen's Can- gdlgn mind for Ah- Raid Victims announced tonight total subscrip- tions of 8355.122, comPBffll with British Subs Sink seven Axis vessels I B floluld Norgurd Aflfliillykd PIOsI Staff Writer IDNDON. June l5 —(CP) announced Saturday to have sunk “van axis vessels and damaged my” other; in the Mediterranean and trern blocs were recorded n- gainst German efforts to get Nazi surface raiders loose in the Atlan- tic. “Attacks not only have been cs:- ried out at sea." the admiralty said of the Mediterranean warfare, "but our submarines have sought» out W! enemy and destroyed him in his harbors." By gunfire or torpedoes, British uriderseas craft raiding axis com- munication llnes between the Ital- ian lsland of Lamvedusa and the Aegean sank an armed Italian trawler, four schooners. a largfi supply lighter and a fully-laden supply ship of about 1.000 tons. In other raids, an Italian armed mechant cruiser and two tankers. of 5.232 and 8.000 tons, were dam- aged by torpedo hits. and the barg- est was "almost certainly" sunk. Harbors of Lamvedusa, which lies south or Sicily; Bengasi, Libya; and the Aegean island of Mytilene were listed as the scenes of much of this activity. The period covered was not made public. Elsewhere, berths of Nazi war- ships at Brest again were bombed heavily Friday night and early Saturday, ‘and the seqenth ship from the sunken B!smarck's flotilla was destroyed. Britons generally asumed that s. northbound German pocket battle- ship torpedoed arnidships in a. plane attack off Norway Friday probably would be out of commission for months. N=l'l‘*r the air ministry nor the admiralty offered further word on this 10.000401: target of coastal command fliers~apparently either the Admiral Scheer or the Leiltzow -v:hich was l~-‘ renortrd nos‘ng homervard at a third of her nor- moi speed of 26 knots. llttawa police Tangle with soldiers UITAWA. June 15——(CP)—f'.sts and night-sticks were brought zntzi plsv Saturday night when l2 Otis- wa policemen tangled for more than an hc-ur in the lower-town secti-n of the capital with more than 30 men from the Cape Breton High- landers. stationed at nearby Con- naught Ranges. There were numerous black eyes and bruises but nobodv was serious- lv injured Alex McDougall. G. White. Mich Curry and A. R. Glllls. were turned over to military police when the fray ended. Police said the rumpus apparent- ly started when four soldiers. havlnn won a box of candy at a. carnival tried to sell it to a colored man who wasn't mucih interested When his resistance to their salesmanship continued they began to pummel m. Constable Thomas Daley. Ottawa Roughriders football star. rushed t0 the colored man's aid but the ~01" soldiers were iglned by about iii! me . mggieflllglmglfll! constables 101M‘! "it fray and. with night sticks swin - in: the police gained control of s situation. - - cc _ Claim Two Lives nanmorrru. u s. June ll — (OP) ~Accldental death claimed twgkvlcitlms near ilere over the wee en . Guam a. Grant, 40. died today in hospital, a. day after he was electroculed in the power Pill" M the Imperial Oil Company at lie"- by Iinieroyal. His sister Katherine of the Saint John. N. 8.. tubercul- osis hospital. was at his side at the time of death. Parker ‘Thompson, 19. Truro, N5. died before reselling hospital af‘er s motorcycle crash near here to- day. Another Truro youth. Harry Chapman was taken to hospital. $352,431 last gut. :-::' —- ='r.> ' .1 kit for llennfield, u. B. “urinal... s . i l3‘ 0f Toronto, 80i- nll ninc on l0 DO e ill lilting, was bitten three times by snarling cubs be- ., t. The wolf's den was almost dug out when "lltounced he was going in. in spite of the warnings of Duke * _, "mills! wlte and a driver. with only his heels sticking out r boy was pulled out by Moors. blues wolf cub in his hands. m boy originally m out. l- toewo dn. Victor I and each time he held “Braves Wolf's Do n To Capture Gus __ lng the cubs until the game with them. _w u ,_....___........-....-.._._. . ;_--. A1 with his dog. Trix, to shoot s big she-wolf that h dog in the bush. He stumped on the cubs gambolllrlg, and they I scrambled into the hole. If the cubs are three months old, as is thought. the bounty is m each; otherwise it is $5. Moore is keep- .i_. .._-__._..__..__.._._.__.-_..__. .. . . .04‘ . M! attacked the decides what should be done British submarines were officially Five soldiers, Ptes. Neil Curryig m, . ‘Churchill Will Speak To U.S, Today ROCHESTER. N. Y. June l6 — (AP)— Prime Minister Churchill will speak to the United States Monday morning by radio in ec- oeptirig the honorary degree of doctor of laws from the University of Rochester. Coriferring of the degree by Presl- dent Alan Vale “ and acceptance by the Prime Minister, son of s. Rochester-hem mother, will be broadcast from 12:45 to 1 p. m. Six anish ships Go into service For II. S. today WASHINGTON, June l5 --(AP) —The maritime commission sn- nounced today that six Danish ships would be placed in active service of the United States merchant fleet tomorrow. 'Ii'ey are among 84 for- eign vessels tied up in American waters which were taken into pro- tective custody some time ago. The names of the owners were not. announced pending completion of negotiations for payment of compensation. The commission said it plans to take over the remainder of the idle foreign ships, which include 28 Italian and two German, as fas’. as possible. The six Danish ships were selected as the first to go into active service, an official said, be- cause they were in condition and “we had to start somewhere." ‘Officials were non-committal as to whether any additional ships would be released to Britain as a. result of return of the foreign slips into active service. g the gov- hese ships legislation authorlzln and Dill them into operation was 13 of the qubk geminaling vs,- rietlos. nssturtfums, m sh vals until July to provide a suc- oesson of young plants. which will n late summer and early Till- Cir- rots and beets from summer 50W- mgs will be better p more tender than the old, fullv ma- l tured vegetables which harvested late seeds. sprouts are fall crops. and seeds should be sown now for P111105 W be transplanted. are at their best in the f3ll—-(‘l1(l‘lV9 md Chinese cabbwtzc. The endlve or chicory, sswn new and trans- planted in midsummer so that each plant has a foot of room in the row. leaves. Wlfch are blttci" un-tiil frost cwnes and then make the most de- Pcious salad c-f the season. Chinese cabbage is diffcult to grow in the summer. because it runs to seed, but in the short days of autumn it makes of crisp leaves of cabbage flavor which are deli- cous cocked or raw. of Canada's fruits will be sent to Britain in the form of Jain by the eminent to requisition iena-cwd by lltlllgress two weeks ago. ‘It requires that “just compenmt. ,i0n" be given the owners. The six Banish ships will be the first requfsitloned under this lasts. lation. They are the motor ship Nora and the stamships Mama and Jonna, now in New York; the steamshfps Rita Maersk and Herta Maersk at Boston: and ths steam. clin Jutla. at Portland, Mo, The gloss tonnage and speed of the vessels;_ Nora. 2.937. 14 knots; Mama, 1,700 l2 1-2 knots: Jonna. 1.517. 12 1-2 Canadian Red Cross Society durin fruits this summer and tall. Cans. labels and cartons are being suuw plied by the Red Cross en of Ontario and British CCvllllll ONICLE pLate Sowing Gives Some of Garden's Best Brops Planting season ova? Not ei- ell. For early crops W11 must plant early; but late crops are d6- sirsble also. and seeds blunted now will g-row so much faster that the harvest will not be relatively‘ as late as was the seeding. 1 Annual flower seeds sown by Julie , such as zinn as, poppies. arisolds. aselaium and cosmos will produce fivwtr! by August. In the vegetable sur- den there are many seeds which culd be sown for late crcps Beans should be sown at inter- eld much better than the old ones flavored and mav be from early sown and bl‘ll.=5t*ls Cauliflower There are two salad crops vrlfch . will produce czisp, curly beautfif elongated heads vin! a suggestion “l. Jam for Red Gross ‘IRSSIITDF GUARDIAN PRINCE COUNTY CHR luck It up rig! “in? and feel like l ml _ Your liver is till llrlbll "Ill l" W" h~ lid most important to your health. R93" lilo to digest food, gels rid oi not!» aewener . "PNWQ "mfiumd m, H _ whm "u; L!“ "is out of mid decomposes in your intestines- Y0" 5'1 come constipated, stomach and EIJMYI "n ml properly. You feel “rotten —-l\"4lf=|'!l Illchclry, dizzy. tit-ill! W! l“ if" m" For over 35 years thousands have Vi?" 0'0"!‘ reliel lrorn these miseries-walls Fruit-viii: So an you new. Try l-'_ruit-l-llvfl-iull_ imply delighted how we“! you'll i=4 iuei new person, happy and well spin. 25¢: 5M i FlllIlT-A-TIVE Borden f Mr. Preston Uarrach R. C. N. V. ‘ R. uho s V15 L11; h; wile 311d iz-lr. ems at Borden 1s being warmly uel- comed by many lrlens here 0n ills l'E.L1Lll A‘->\;A Sol... ll|....... .n the West Iiirlici, di .l Gllirirci‘ Nelsn Berri‘ ' i who spent a siicrt fut cugn at 11$ RADliH IYPES Early, Mldesason and Late Rad. 153185. fur a Continuous Harvest, l AUBll-st. so they will mature in {he autumn. Sweet corn is a crop for late sowing. Early kinds may be Dill; in as late as July 1. and the finest corn is produced by late sown chairman of the Jam Committe. Mrs. Allan Stevenson, lted Croses‘ huiie in Bowen llst. week has ro- culiled to his llfllL in Perawaiva, l Mss Jean MacDnniId ha; bePn Vegetable "ops which should not visiting in Stlmnte 51cc this weal: be sown in Juice include peas any}. . guest cf Miss Mylt e Nllllfiyfl radlshes, lettuce and sp nach. All, _ '"*"“* these rectum cool weather and Mss Jame Sharpe, Ali's. l-lettle you may 50w very “my kinds m Webster. and Mcasrs, John Sharpe, Alex Dsuglas of Ncrboi-s were guests of Mr. airl Mrs. Geo.ge Sharpe of Borden on Illiursdayi, M15565 Patricio. Rodgers and Helen may Eagles accsmpniied by Dr Ted __ :74 Z _ Beecher of Monctcn. N. B. visited .___——Z~—~.___ _:_—_~— ._~ admn Red C 05S sddemfi-tfi-E-al ‘BOFGEZI over tize week end guests of Mr. and M s Regmalcl RZaf-ZGlS. Nutrition Service. is supervising the M!‘ Arthur “mas R- c N- V- prolect under the direction of a - "n M ”» 50111!‘ = 0f (Plvlillle- national committee. WW1‘! attended lire dim-lee in Borden In British Columbia and some r" * a ~ - Three hundred thousand pounds and clie parts of Southern Ontario, where; the fruit season commences earl‘ strawberries have inoriey or sugar in support (‘if the bmi since 71m i< nov: raicncw‘ at une- l . .. . . Mrs. w. AflvFllel-(i. M.s. Frank been ; Dalz cl M's. Néil Darrach, Misses, already the Season of “ML d C‘. canned in local lrrltchens by grotlrs Bertha Smith and Pauline Viac- Branches and the _Women's_ his ngsvyfuntgof Qgifillell- Gft-‘at uuozil- Isaac of Bordon wer- visitors t0 Lutfs m mm .‘"°“"““ ‘nsimls “Q cocsebe ‘ ‘D blxfllclltfilfiflflgg riyairclrlc“? ‘ Cnmycltetcwn on Friday" 0V») Canada are now organizing... hum ~~ p ~ m, -~~ - ~- caiining kitchens to preserve tliei D ' “in bi’ The reguizv aliczicii pgflv of the Borden WCm€ll'S Insiiute was ‘neld _1n thetown hall on Tlllllllsdjry even, .111; \\1.l‘. .1 ill’ ~i. ‘l l iy- r N] '15 Women's Institutes members are - in»; i . ‘ . - 3am prolcct and the Western mow"- Y " pr-ze “as “on. by Mls- P~ “is a support. of every province ln the Qf film" q.‘ .e‘e[.1.gent5 m“ D l“ b> Ml"- Dominion and has been greedy Gram Bfliai“ h?‘ already 513'” ‘ ha)? U“ .- 5 “'11 *1- stimulated bv the success of ihsll "f? “m .311 ‘he lam W" Pa“ be‘ 0mm“ “ml "lwlei-uu Plim- season-s jam project when the wcm_i shipped \\i.l be greatly lii (VX1137). go m": to Mrs. Fold and My. M“. Aleer. The frecroul prize Wis W011 knots; Rita Maersk, 1.883, 11 knots canned 125,000 pounds of fruit mostl m“ Y "with. by Mrs. Fvnile Gallant. - . Harts. Maersk. l8't0. 11 1-2 knots; of which ‘was shipped overseas for‘ B“ a I - _ Ju ta, 1.549, 12 knots. British civilians and military 11051113252‘? ‘U, ‘m c Ham“ ‘r5 f7 i MANCHESTER _ lCPl __ More In another phase of m; angry/mes tals. Womens chilicn and club. Year o, Hm “Ulinsiiilér g-mpihver I than trio ‘veirs SlXDDlY of clearer tc- the maritime commission prgdicusd groups throughout tne country h_a\e a Vicam “ivfle- who. "ind sus Wows- 1bacco-7l40.000._000 pounds - is stor- _$1gu|-d8y ma; the manly expancb also offered their CCUDCTJLIZH.‘ She had‘ a male m ‘he houselxéhén ,e_d in the Ulipil€fl States under or). g ing shipbuilding facilities in the °°1°“°1 Jm“ 5- °°°“‘“- °’ ‘he can‘ ihe vicar and 1 were absent." 1m“ ",1, ‘E’°§~..TB,§"“'"- "Y5 ‘he lUnited Suites will tum out 135%- L "- 11 » T" ' 1"‘ » ‘ - ~ "1 ' o '" ' " —; 1U Ee__-_2_“f'jx?- ._' i000 deadweight tons of merchant ships this year, with an increase to 3500.000 tons ln 1942 and 5.090.- l 000 in 1943. In its first comprehensive sum-- ,mary oi’ a vast three-way con- struction program, the commlsitlof) ;placed the cost of 705 merchant- } ment "built, building or under con- tract" at $1,625.000,000, with an ad- ditional investment of 386010.000 in new facilities. bringing the total cost to $l.'l'1l,000.000. Divided into three parts. the con- structlon program now includes:- LOTIIZ-Tflng! DPOZTILm calling for 500 ships in a 10-year period. This now includes 283 ships, of which 91 have been delivered Ex- cept for the liner America, re- centlv taken over by the "B"? 811 contracts have been let since Jan. l. 193 2. Emergency national defence program calling for 200 "ugly duck- ling" cargo carriers. Of approxi- mately 10,000 deadweight tons and designed for mass production. the first "ugly ducklings" are ex- nected to be completed in Novem- ber. 3. Construction of 222 vessels for transfer to Great- Britain under the lend-lease act. This program in- cludes 112 "uglv ducklliigsfl '12 high-speed tankers o! 18000 dead- welght tons. 10 C-l. 2'1 6-2 Md 6 (7-3 carm boats, The "C" boat-i, g- mong the world'< finest of their class. are the backbone of the long- rnnve pron-am. Ti-ev range frori 1,500 to 12.595 deadwelght tons. Three wounded _ln accident lb HALIFAX. June 15 -(CP> - Canadian Navel authorities en- nounced tonight three workmen were wounded, none seriously. Sat- urday night by the accidental dis- charge of a rifle "fired by a naval sentry on duty at the north end of the dockyard" here. This statement was issued: "Saturday night, three workmen returning home by way of the north ferry were accidentally wounded by s ricochet bullet from r. rifle fircd by e naval sentry on duty at the north end of the dnckyard. Although admitted to hospital for treatment. none of the three men was seriously lnyui-ed. ' .___________ IN Slzls FOR EVERYBODY minnow-rcpt __Minisi.ry of Supolv factories have procured ll.- 000000 steel helmets for the fictit- lnp forces. home guard and civil defence wnrlrerl. FACTS OI‘ INTEREST Gold nroduction in Canada dur- in: the first two mmtha n! the cur- rent veer amounted ta R4608!) oun- ces valued at l32.609.070 compared with 820.748 ounces valued at $31.- 045321 in the corresponding period s year ago. _______________ NEWCASTLE. Fftwiand --tCP\ - ‘Britain needs available silk toi- th- mnnufncture of parachute; and when a local deal" was convicted ~.-- of selling ilk tocki i m“m;“lhn“n&n exeessof V HITLED l 1r o TH CD I p] f \ . 00.0w £59m Another in the series nf Victory Loan 104i car toons contributed to the press of Canada by out- standing cartoonists in the United States. This is by artist Rollin Kriby of the Bell Syndicate.