TUESDAY, Hurray .»\.<phz1lt Siting-fies MURRAY ASPHALT SHTNGLES MURRAY INSULATED BRICK SIDITTB {xv these two flne Murray products tn‘ ‘itflllvrirlliffllzfi m-u l’l\‘ll|i_1' and new powers of prou-cvinrnu ‘Jr-ill k_- c-ngm snow. sun and wind. Use them to reduce: W"! "D It'll - 11m, 3lu1-rav Asphalt Shingles 05.1! be laid over nld ivondvn ‘s W101i rc-roofing — avoiding ntt-fis and 1111111111111- 51-. 1r Jltirmi- Brick Siding is quickly and eavliy flliilllfil "W? . reduces fut-l cums through the 51.1111» 111- rtlpbnurd wnlls . _ gilt-titre i11>ul11tion it provides. For full details uni Telephone or BETTER PROTE-CTI-O-N- GREATER ECONOMY for your HOME Other Dependable Murray Products Incllldei NACONNH INSULATING U311 DEt‘Oit1.\'l‘l\'E BOARDS DUNACONNA HARDBOARD HLYRPAY ROI/Ir RQOFING zlml Slll-IAIITTNG _- . j 1 _.. A “ind anti Water- IYErUtllES-iilfort-vtl builtlinl! 111N191‘- , _.v PROTECTIVE Ell-gixhilxos. PAINTS and STAINS. R. T. HOLMAN LTD. g“ SUMMERSIDE ' .2 Shil-E-a."..-.-.-.~.-.-.-.-.-..-.-r-.'r-nv -: -': - I 1| 1 - 1; l-icuse of a e .- 1: By isumt. GARLAND 1 f,.-_-..-.-..=..-.-.-.-.-..'..-'--a..-.-.'1.-'.-./-.1 11,'-5::-.-.1-.i front page 2) F r . 4: . 4 L111, ' <6 111v coat . <1 1 it lliwllltjlll. 01 - '1\l1ll 110111:- icr. AN.‘ Sou . J1»: bluvk. the first 111.111: vvht-n I cat111- 11111: he neld >- 11 111111011 011 "110 111111-dert-tl .111; 10 p111 the . 11in‘ 13'. . ‘ 1. l. ruine- 1111c»; t0 the l tor 11.. I 10111161 1t : t 111111111’ hook. _ , .-t~:;1 11 every 110d ., l‘, 12.11. .1 all-dill 5111011 o‘. 1 Now 1.11111, cont has -.11-.¢1 11.11111; and Al- ticuu - but 1t has 1 t-i luvtriitlt-r heft-rt‘. . 111..~t-l;, 1211.11 docs thc H ..11 r 11101111‘! And tilt- 11 gasped Serena" - 1.1\'t:11it'l'.' .~-'111- 111111111111. of that met-t- (l. .11 the 11.111 and .- Llt'll.1l(‘_\' 11.111 50:111- ..-r l1i111. ‘Then. hilt-r. tut-m tzilkini-t lu- i tit-k Alan wllvlil- _.1 1-1g 111111-1-11111, 11-111-11 .-. .1 31111111111-1?" alv- q it. I 111111.2- 11 have 111011- woulti certmnll’ rt-mzizkilulc 1114111-1- l 11011“. ht-hcvt- it - . Ljkt- 1011, I lnu-ndcr 1m- uus 1-111- (it the .1 in 111.111) to .:1-:1.1: .11-.=. 111c- tltlllilCl‘ .- 1. $1.1. 1111~ tart-tutti‘ 11,- '1 11- 111v mat mav lime - iwr-r. The con: 11g next to \‘.‘lIi‘l lavender" . Serena said - had untitht-r (fluid-Aunt. L"- l that 1x12111011 _ ‘Q11, 1211i: Alan couldn't .1 11 111-1 auuiii!" Chad . ‘D0111 you sec how 1111r11 importance to 111-1v be purely co- ' mg-gcstlnil that "m: kc-rl Nlundcrs off thc 1y ,.t:1tt-rl that. my over- tl launder and that Irv-ml 11141"; a lavendl-r . Mo, Sr-z-cna-thc hc<t . _ *1.11k 1t would be n ,.- . , .» :1) tcli any 0119 91-"? . , -..,., l. . ' (I ~ 1 n1~ . -‘ ?' nUrf-fi a vmcc from m- the 1- and Scrcna 1..- ll \li.\\'\Y 11.. 1 1 t 1- . 11:71:1- world cover r1111 11. *1 110000 mi1"s. Wlinurdl kill.- pain:- ’1o ‘.\'l:IllL(l l0 ' ‘('11 1.1111 11111111‘. 111111145 1n ."- 52.11am y Trade Soars To All-Time High H, .14 .1(‘P» .. C1111- 11.1ri1- has smmrcd timis 1'11-t.- g0 --1_. .1 .11“ 1 111111, uiflcm s mm wlnnw 11111 N:11i1»11:1llt.:1il\\ , -. are 1111-1-11111111115; in a section of east- 1111<l southern Sask- atchewan, but. damage to date is ne-uligiirlc smnk‘ f'lli.—\'.'0l‘ll'l and wire 111111-111 dnmmgt- i\ reported from a few Rivers is a Nflrweliflfl- NOW the points in Suskaichctvtm. (‘I'll hianitoha in t-ilcct 1111s fig- .1t_\ an r-xpnrt. trade p.3- ni 111-11 I-t inm-r-tii- v.11- mnnths, I11 May, 11139. t-xgmrt 1111110 toiullr-ri $94.- c of lavcn- ,. n2. A1111 T w Q h1- nzitu-xn of (‘XDOTTH is not di- l 111 u-riitztnc but thr- lnfsit.‘ 111v l. 1.11.1 1...1t111 scvntul with x wit, nf war stim- .i-.1- 11f 1111- wny iii vrhjrh Cnnnrl-rs- 11111111121111‘ ("t-ll-"F-PY ‘f 1942, c-uvvrt. total was slfirxtirrtrinri 11nd 1112 .\l:1y 1941 total 111th ,, , in irvolatvrl arc-us between Lampman l‘ rgrudge 53am“ the German!" mid Avnnlt-n. Thc wct-k has been 11 our minds open, . 111111 1-1111r113111,-; 11101-0 1111111 thcr hzn 1111-1 in 11111-111/‘1-11 b _ 111-1-"111 1111ti'~t>k iv an 11. . I11 $1')ll'll"!'l'l Albcrin the early 1 u-hr-n: is‘ 11111k.n1z good pro- mos-: as :1 l'!‘.\illi. of rorttlnilr-(l wnrm .'(“t11(‘lf‘.'l iiutit show- 1-1- . ('1l';t"i1'.])l)~“l"l arc nptx-arlug at .1111" 111-1111- mid poi-rm is ht-lng dls- r, E. B. ‘in.’ t1. l’~‘11r‘hr-1-n1ri 1111-01: needed artist in Montreal. L. CPL villi-Oi’ 1 1G1 E911 1.1101; A11" $711 "T101190 IGSL Y’ (‘l i ARi.()'i"I‘l1I'l‘()\VN The Queen Describes Bomb Damage as “Terrible” Fund Curresp011(lent Sends Details of the "Reprisul" Raids A :1111n'.<1' of auibu- 1 11 11- d a woman 0211mm. aulnnutn I'M: column In noenol l0! nun o. um sum-m. an odvortlllll ll I COOK'S for Photon-lulu. 11-508. ' CONFEDIBATION L!!! 111503. mo; L-Wl l. A. MaoDONALD STORE will be closed each Wednesday after- noon startlng June 17th. 8-16-11. WEDNESDAY HALF HOLIDAY starting June 17th. Our store will be closed every Wedneeclsy st 12.30 P. M. t.l1l September. Prowae Bron. Ltd. 6-16-11. TONIGHT-Students Recital in St. James Hall, pupils of E. Lillian McKenzie, Mus. Boo. Sliver collec- tion for Red Cross. 0-l6-1L. CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTER. N0ON.—Moo1-e and Macbeod Ltd. wzll close each Wednesday after- noon commencing June 17thé tomorrow. Tuesday evening nt_ P. M, when the Diplomas, Get-tille- ltes, and Prizes won during the term will be presented. 6-18-11. ENGAGEMENT. — IVIr. and Mrs. James Todd of Rose Valley an- nounce the engagement of their daughter Catherine Jane to LAC. Walter John of the R. C. A. FR, son of Mr. and Mrs, H. Edwards of Vic- torla, B. C. Marriage to take place the latter part of June. 646-11.. FOUR LEGGED DUCKLING — Mrs. Reggie Kelly of stanchel got a surprise, ivhcn she looked at her hatching of duck eggs and discov- ered u four legged duckling. It ls now several (lays old and is quite active. The extra pair of legs are smaller than the normal one; and drag behind as it wall-IS. . FAMILY BEREAVED-Mr. Albert Craswell, Rustlco, has received the sad news of the death of his niece, lss Hcttle Woolner of Walthtmi, Mass. She was the daughter of the late Robert Woolner and Armella Craswcll formerly of North Rustlco. MR. AND Mlth‘. A. A. MAcDON- ALI) o1 Charlottetown announce the engzigemcut of their eldest daughter. Christel-la Irene t0 Flying Office;- E-‘lc Hold-ray. eldest son of Capt. and Mrs. T. R._ Hcldwav of Scar- borough England. The marriage will take place early in July.. 6-16-11. WELL KNOWN IN P. E. I. -The death occurred in Halifax last Fri- dny evening of Byron N. Barnes, 529d '13. a well known commission merchant. and broker, He was a native of St. John and was a. travel- ler with various Montreal commer. ch11 houses for a. number of years before con-ling to Halifax to set up his own business about. thirty-five X0515 8Z0. He has also been an ac- tllitfélllfl valued member of the Maritime Commercial Travellers‘ AfSOfllllliOll, having recently been zuvurth-d his fifty year membership -. 1.111 11111111111110: certificate, akl- 11ml . pave f‘. (f nd i-Hflll Vu-ixitlrtvlrss hill-i‘ (irate-haw. t-ncci- 1-11-1151-4- 9e "OW- to cxrcc-t tt1c11- Sover- Sttl. b111, brave Halifax 11nd the groom by his broth- ‘of er Harry of Halifax. After light 11;. 3-0 11-. i n1 work clear-mi freshments served at the home of < n1 f'11" 11 masonry and Mrs, E. Marriott of HaJffnx the nmlrii-rrs u-c-v-ftill movmg 1110i!‘ liBPPy cvllple left for a wedding mp ‘tin-tr 1\T:11c<1i".< stor-ped w to the Valley. (The groom is o. m“- n a 1111:1111 11f srrc-al con- _ 11-110 111111 111-011 on duty du-r- the late Major Galbraith.) work.‘ of the b 11y. 11.16 .0 tho/n: "I iii nk you . - s‘!'¢"‘i ‘r 1.. Y"u inn-c of you." The Queen's Canadian Fund npcrutt-s in all parts of the 111mm Kmkdflm tun-urt- lhfl Lnnl E\l-.1_vor's National Air ilaitl "NUTS; Fund. Send Contributions tn the Royal Trust (‘11111p1u1y, Char- E lntictmvn. 1'. . 1f -.\'.11n1cr 1r 11-11 1 _- qifi-a N1;l‘\\'l(‘L"i and s illfl victm of two “rif- ' ' V15"- b-lt- Pretty iveclding took place at St. Their Matthews United Church Manse, .; and Halifax the Rev. D. M. Grant of- . Cd m-m- 11011115 of flciating, 011 Friday evening J1me -v[‘r pilcs of stories 5 at; 7 D. m. when Mrs. Winifred glms tn strnd on a Nichols of Aylesford, N. S. and Mr. re ntiwong the charred Cowan Galbraith of Halifax were ;<»_< t'-o_v stu-voym the united in marriage. The bride wore a Qnicn Jacks 11-111 defiantly a. street length dress of dove grey the Cffllle with navy blue accessories and -11. Hui-zlrcds t.1'1‘\11l_v 11-011. It. 013K435 sto A shim-ratio 7 '11...§1&E.1"1Y1l ‘l ‘llll-J, $i§7.9~i<7,()i)0 i0!‘ 11-11 11-1111 $514,541,000 in 11-‘11511111 \VlNNil‘i-‘.G. Man. Jim!" 15--Sat- v urcwih of ill crops as the 11-1- is report- flfl gcntu-nlly- in 1w 11-11 provinces men who man the NTCITOLS- GALBRAlTl-l- A quiet: core-so of pink rflsebuds, and was attended by her daughter Laura. of ivc of Charlottetown being a. eon of Personals Miss Julia Millar of Bele River, left yesterday morning for Ottawa, » where she will be Cmploygd 1n the Civil Service Commission. Taximen Dome of All Grades In Amy Unit (By WILLIAM STEWART) (Canadian Press Staff Wrlterkw SOMEWHERE 1N ENGLAND, June lt)—lUP)—-Clllliidi3.'S armored soldsers, the tough tankmen who \v1ll carry the fiflht to the Nazis. were in all kinds oi professions and trades before they climbed into tanks. some of the grimy, black-berated Three Rivers \\'Ltl1 \\ilf‘1lL zt-t-t-ragliip well over six Regiments tanks before the war ' '1 . in 1 -ig'1t. Moisture condi- m‘ w; u i‘ for me most p“; school teacher and store-clerk. 1 .~mnll art-as only re- portnng 111321-111 il€(‘(i cf rain, accord- ing to ihc ivorkly-crop report of the n ulturc, Canad- G rasshoppers were in the quiet occupations of Some served in other armies. Be- sides Catiadlans from all parts of the Dominion. the regiment. has men from the United States. a. Nor- wegian and a Yugoslav. Tpr. R. Gladnik of New York, a scout car driver. served in the Spanish Civil War and speak: eev- eral languages. Sgt. N. Chrlstoffer- son who jomed the unit in ‘Three unit's transport sergeant, he care I11 Manitoba good growing weather he had "smml 1'59"“ "NW5" with udctitmtr- 1110ist11rc 1111s promot- cd very rapid growth. Grn. shoppers arc thrt-ntt-niut; in 1111 urea between Carmnn nnrl Lake Winnipeg. but, in ‘1-11-11- of ilt‘ilV_\' groyvth little damage lr. anticipated. Smnc very heavy fltlllfi have frillcn 111 territory be- tivt-rn Virden and Dauphin. Moisture conditions; remain satia- factory 1n southcrn Saskatchewan t0 10in the U. S. army l-filln Whth with a lnirlv general rain on the this W“ bmke m" but m“ C,,.,.-O,.n, danmge 1s reponm came a Canadian tankman. He has loss. It-ntur-rd by high winds. In crntml Saskatchewan the moisture- satiation ls only fair and immediate rains would be very wel- r-unc, Scim- 11-11-11 ivorm and cutworm (1.1 tnuge is 1-1-po1't4-d. Warmer weat- ’ ‘y improved ZYOWW zkatk-hr-ivan and the before enlistinoielphea mvaedwhllt: i urathr-r vtith 1 111 1111- inmi-wlluft- 11111111‘. 1'1 ' 111:1 ' for enlisting an in a unit that would hit the Nazis hard. Tpr. F. Manhcl, the Yugoslav, enlisted in Montreal. Other Americana ’ Tpr. E. J. Woods of Detroit, Mich. eerved with the United States army in the first Great War. He tried 1V be- . E. C. Snapple. Chicago, was 1n the United states arm seven years, served in Siberia. t e Phil- ippines and Panama. Before olnlng the tanks he was a taxi-d ver in Chicago. Tpr. E. J. Lecouffe. Jacket River. N. 13.. was doing research in breed- ing fur-bearing animals. Shortly ambition and mink. Tpr. A. J. Glabny. Invernees. N. 8,, was a school teacher. Sgt. O. Dumontler was at home in Turners Falls. Maw. the day war was de- clared. six days later he joined up in Montreal. Wav was a commercial Gotro was a newspaper reporter in pal!‘ shop ln Wcstport, N. S. 46-21. THE UNION COIVUWEBCIAL COLLEGE will close for the tolrg; ‘m1: CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDTATI (‘I I'VE FOUND A WAY TO STOP CONSTIPATION BEFORE IT STARTS! Doesn't it make good sense to try day, drink plency of "h; “d n; to correct the cause of constipation? if you don't rec Aupu"; i. m; 0f course it: does! And xatmcc’: "better way". ut remember, Au.- ALL-BEAN hu fought thousnn’ how IRAN doom’: wag-k lib; h3g1; gm. to do it! If your trouble is the com- nrticnnlttnkeudmo. mon type that results from luck of Ask your grocer far ggugggfi “y. the right kind of "bulk" in the diet, instead of forcing yourself‘ to take unpleasant purgotives, why not try this delicious cereal? Eat it: every mun today. In two convenient men. Or gegit in indlviduli carving owl-Klan It: mum-nu. Mldoby Kellogg's in London, Clllldl. Traces Exploits of Polish Subs Thrilling Chase TORONTO. June 15—tCP)—'I'he odyesey of the Polish submarine Orzel whose short-lived career made world headlines in the early days 0f the present. war is told 1n the book "Orzclls Patrol” by Sub-Lt. Erzk Sopocko. former member of the crew of the submarine which sent the German liner Rio dc Janelro to the bottom of the Baltic. S0 cko traces the path of the Orze f1-om Sept. l, 1939. when she slipped anchor‘ and stole out. of the harbor of Gydnla. WllllC the first waves of the Luftwaffe were ravag- lne Poland. to the day a. Polish Ad- miralty communique announced her presumed loss. Numbered in the exploits which brought world fame to the Orzel was the feat of the young com- mending officer who charted a course from Esthonia. through the perilous northern seas to Britain after charts and navigation books had been coniiscatetl by I-Istliuniati officials. Unable to cotmntuiicttle with any home port, the Orml 11111. into the Esthonirtil port of '1‘.1lli11 for repairs the 12th day after the escape from Gdynia. International convention entitled the submarine to 24 hours in the neutral port, b11t Esthomnn officials announced their intention of lmmobilzzlng the submarine and interning her crew. Planned Escape An elaborate plan of escape was formulated and the Esthoninns’ disarmament of the ship cautiously impeded. Resortlng to various sub- terfuges, the crew kept the 01-2012-1 torpedoes intact. and escaped their hosts, but with a. damaged ship. no guns, charts 01- navigation books. Bllndiy they started 11 illLlY-Wifik prowl of the mi|1\--i111t-st.ed Baltic and North Seas. Following the fall 0f Poland. the Orzt-l curried on [r0111 an English base 11s part. of the U11- ited Nations’ fleet 1'11 a sector aii0t- ted to her by the Polish A(l.ll'ill‘flli_V. Even in the eerie settiniz of UWSC undcrivater adventures and the con- stant danger no amount of und statement. can disguise, Sonockos tribute to_ the Orzel and licr crew is told without mcloch-ama. “hint-ti man was convinced that. he stood guard over a portion of frcc Polish soil-that the ship was for the time being his onlv patrimoinz" he writes. "These words speak for themselves and explain certain principles of conduct which it. is not necessary to enlarge on new." April 7, 1940. a few miles off the still-free coast of Norway, the sub- marine achieved her first triumph with the sinking of the Rio oe Janelro The Nazi liner carried 401) German troops and. war nmterial. presumably being taken to Norway for the imminent. invasion. This sinking brought. 11 chase which carried the Oroel htmdrecis of milcs over the Baltic and North Seas before she eluded her nursuers. Under The Sea This true story of the hunter hunted--of hours of lylntz in wait hundreds of feet tmder the sea in the atmosphere of the scaled t-him: vi-hlch might at. any moment be- come 11t.on1b-is thrilling beyond the imagination of any 20th cont- ury Verne. The constant throb and crash of depth charges dropped by the patrolling Nazis thrcateticd al- ways to send tons of water ln on the crew. “There were moments when I face the end full of com-age and determinations." Sopocko wrote in his diary. “I can picture to my- ecif how the finish will come .. I ehorten the next period of waiting (between ciepth chm-ces- by fldfilfll! up the number of explosions that have been wasted trying to destroy us . The Orzel returned to its British base and Snpocko was transfcrrr-d to another ship and later “Tl-ir- Po- lish Admiralty in London issued the following communique: ‘Owing to - lack of information and brine lop; overdue. the Polish submarine Orzcl is presumed lost/J’ Milk Producers- Talk Strike TORONTO, June l4 — (CP) — Possibility of a. milk strike was dis- cussed as 1,000 Ontario milk produc- ers met here Saturday seeking ways and means to bring uliai they termed some measure of economic security to the milk prvduclnz busi- ness. It. was stated that inability of producers to set uuyihliltt W W“? the place of the fedeffil subsidy 0! 30 oentg per hundredwelght which was withdrawn May 1 was forclnfl them to sell to distributors at a Arguments in favor of and l- lnet. e. strike as a means of en- orclng producers’ demand; for o higher price for their product were heard from numerous speakers dur- ing 5 four-hour meeting before it. wu decided that distributors would be notified to increase the retatl price of milk sufficient to pay pro- ducers an increase of 40 cents per hundreduclght for fluid mhk amn- ng Jul 1 y . A1110, it. was decided to send a. delegation m Ottawa. to present the producers’ case to the federal gov- ernment, such a delegation to be instruct/ed to stay in the capital until a satisfactory solution was a- chieved. At the some time, a mo- tlon was approved which censured 1m all grains are Subury. Ont. Cpl. W. W. Colpitfs. the federal government for not. , s 11111.1 moisture Silk-sex. N. Bx. was a store clerk and smith-i 11' .\:1-; pain... N” damage Sat. G. B. Dakin ran a motor re- her of the wartime prices and trnde’ ., with the: Unitctl i1 rcpoi 11-11 fr-un any kuurttc. having a representative or a mem- board present at the meeting. Bristol And Vicinity i- 3M. Phulen McKennl. priest, left lain week tor Boston, and other part5 of the United States to spend his vacaton. Father McKenna, will spend some time with his bro- ther in Sommervllle, who Wu in- jured qulte eeriouel some time up lwhen he fell forty cot from a gtag- 11g. Miss Reta O'Brien, left luet week for Ottawa, to take a position with the civil service. Before leaving she ivas employed as teacher at 5t. Pat- rick's school near Peakes station. Fr. Sullivan, of the S. D. U. teaching stuff, sang mass at, both churches here on sunday lnthe absence of Pr. MCKGDITB. Miss Mary Ranahen, who ll em- ployed at the C. N. R. Hotel qpent the week-end with her parent-a, Mr. and Mrs. William Ranahm. Friends here of Miss Kathleen MacDonald, Tracadie, who ls on the imrsing staff at. Palconwood Hospit- 111, will regret to hear she fell while on slut-y 111st. week injuring her head. Farming in t-lii-z vicinity i5 about 1111 completed except for sOme late potatoes yet to be planted The croplng was much ahead of last ycnr, tn fact the earliest In many years. Word has been received from Lot-tie Hughes. South Boston, Mass. who spends the summers here, stat- ing she will not be here until late in the season owing to pressure of buslnes ln her place of employ- ment. June 12th will be 1 membered here as the hotest day waver known in June for many years. Our oldest resident. who has seen eighty sum- 1ners.say5 in all his memory such heat. “'11s never known, at one point the mercury reached 105 ln the shade. One man was overcome while working on the mo! 01' g house ln this vicinity and was aa- dsted to osafety. Pte. John 0. Peters has arrived n11 lcnvc and will be home for acme -illIl0. Pte. Peters is not. enjoying gOOd health. Mr. Frank Aiyward. who has been :1 student for several terms at S. D. U left last week for western Can- ada where he will be employed for the vacation period. , Miss Ethel Squires and her bro- thcr Lloyd were in the ctty last week on business. Mr. Rupert MacDonald who h“ been employed as taxi driver in UK‘ city for a. year after being turned down for the army has been recall. ed w report. Rupert 1111115 from here and was one of the first boys to en- ter the service, later betng d“- charged. Two more weeks and the children in the country school.- will be free fm- two months. For some the dom- will close behind them forever, while will follow up their studies at. Mr. Lem Katie employee m one or the drodges somewhere in Cgngdg. was home over the weekend, In the no f t are thewiollcvrsslxxlilg fifgupegfl 1o were out horseback riding iii-t- wcek, Misses 1 000 Elem and Mary modem 20.000-ton carriers. On March l8 in the south Pacific 20 Japanese warships were reported sunk or damaged. The Tulagi mid on May 4 accounted for 12. Ln the Coral Sea. otreidltifi and! 82115 morde d were repor 3 an image . ‘ ' 50911 more nn Midway fighting added at least Q3??? me‘ l‘ “mg y another score to the list. Many platinum Wedding 111151! This makes a grand total 0f It are encrusted with tiny r1111111o11ds, to enhance the beauty of thc 111R; 111101141 solitaire of the cr-z-WPI-W" rng. Hcntictmri- , and and ClarayRyan, Halli]; iiiiésttfirmimgf BYIPII. all f1-om here. The girls re. _p0rt. horseback riding quite a sport. in the capital but. it costs seventy. “Y” @1115 Der hour for horse und saddle. The above girls are all em- Piltlvct-s in the civil service of Can- gglutiind stationed at Ottawa at pre- s. . . . Slnnott. we; in m; Mr P a s my on Saturday on budneee. Hector Perry, Qf m; R_ c_ A . l". who was home on leave left, lut. gfrck on mum w his 11-11mm m. Jap Losses ‘May Run To. Eight Barriers (By Walter B. Clnuqen, Auocisted Press Staff Writer) PEARL HARBOR. June lk-JAP) --Probably eight Japanese aircraft carriers were sunk or so badly dum- aged in the Midway and Oornl Bel battles that they will be unlit for early action. communlquee Ind re- part5 of battle partlcipnnte ehow. This le more than half of the knovim carrier power c! Japan's navy. In most cases the deck: of the carriers were filled with llNfI-fl indicating their lose in plural rum well into the hundreds. Personnel loeeee to the Japanese in these battles were tremendous. While no official reports hove been made on personnel caeulltiel, un- official estimates from authoriti- tive sources, based on reports of oyc-wltne-sea. are that 5.000 Jap- anese were killed in the Coral Bel and 10.000 more loet their llvu in the Midway bottle. At tenet six of the carriers which American w-pedoes and bun-lb» blasted out of the war either per- Y mlnently or temporarily were among Japan's beet. least 67 ahlpe knocked out of Jap- anese fleets or badly crippled. WHAT Till GIDOM —--——-{——-— M‘ "° ‘sum Berry Growers Alum] CLOSED WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON This Store Will Close Each Wednesday After. noon Commencing June 17th W512i’ £~ MYLECD Sale 0E" Seconds Bleached Sheets With the present scarcity of this merchandise we were extremely fortunate in procuring this spe- cial lot of sheets and pillow cases, at these excep- tional values. If these sheets were perfects they would cost you up to $5.85 a pair-ail are slightly flnu-cd. About 500 sheets in the lot-ail we could get. Come early and make sure of yours. Hem-stitched and plain hemmed-quoted 1n finished sizes. Size about Each Size about Each 68 x 86 in. -- — -- —89c 72 x108 in. — —- -- 1.89 76x86in.————98c 81x96in.——--_- 1.29 76 x 96 —— —- -' —- $1.19 81 x 100 in. — — -- 1.311 72x95 in.——— 1.00 8lx100in.—---l.t1l 72x104in.—-—1.l9 81x100in.—-—— 1.69 72 X 104 in. — - — 1.39 90 x 104 in. — - - 1.69 Sub-Standard Pillow Cases Fine good quality hem-stitched pillow cases- very slightly flawed-if in perfects wiiulifiséll iii $1.00 per pair. sizes 40 x 33 in. 42 x 33 Hammad-stitched pillow cases, a serviceable and 44 x 33 m" weight worth to tific a "i, _ _ __ _ pair size 42 x 33 Q in. pair. - -- - 4r C 1 MGDRE £- I‘1'-’LEOD LE4 t}, ieen Si. Charlottetown ‘Iihe engagement rink hi‘ croft, and the other two were Tm’ "emmli Th“ ‘vmm wide, l1; worn bcncnt-h 1h.- ment ring, some fmgcr. 1'1. to beborne Ifoome are tile automobiles, g For P i c k e rs which he and his beat. mm ride to the church or home wedding, the G later, the wedding xece tlon. rt of the strawberry Cm" his nwther and to the bride's 500000 WHERE —AND WHY ? There may be many motives that might induce yaoalei: take prucriptionl to a certain drug ston- lhould be but one: - Where are the best. drugl and M05‘ accurate compounding? That is the linsle thing to consider. Prices shouts, be considered. Our price: are as low as can be anywhere. 1.4 Mnzso t 1s 1m 5-0- ____; arrangedTor with £1;."1131-1.fv-116 decorates the place IPPOHUM m’ communlquee on thgl Coral 15cm the ceremony. bu“ battle reported the 8 our ere . ,. “m; o, p," W; 0g commmgon is usually a diamond 50.111111. 0.1 were the Ryukaku and Thokalcu: g1 ttheyggidwny wtlonutgvotévf es ro were repor the Kl“ m. M”! clan’ huge so’, initials of the affianced. is . colored solitaire is tmmiiseitile. aide the ring may be enzuu-Pd n’ date of the engagement 11m 16 platinum or gold 11111111. 11w "i116 ring, also, generally nPPV-t" ‘if’ do? of the wedding 11111-1 tl1e 111..- a a514, outshone by plat-rum i“ Bevmcotrvm.’ {ittmewfllgg-‘Clfiil; um und by the married "Y 3"°“’°" ° e 51m- ggitilple when they leave the church my; lgpprggllaflitin firgofllgrergfuéicy. ,' ' l. r116 36%;: “that” grmehd mu” fir: within five days to save r. 1M an an t. 2r ‘ buttonhoies. He often sends nowg: ,,f°{§§, “2.‘.’£°‘1§.“.“..“l.‘;'.‘1" ‘E11.- s1. w berry crop unless the 111' mother and lcmetlmee buys the dustr eecures 1,000 pickers imm" flowers m the mm of honor und 111m. y, 111a an additional 1.500 b? k the bridesmaids-union these n-re the end of neg