,_.. . i a , by cover; Prlaeo Island Like the Dew . cuAkLmYrarowN. CANADA. rnipay, JUNE 1, 194s iT TGNS_ QF GRO Rain Fire On iOsalta by about I50 fighters based on Iwu Jlnaa, poured M00 tons oi i,‘ q Osaka, Japan's second largest city, in a daylight raid to- “iiyn the second sayugiii inoe-lidlnry strike by tighter - blooded Muhgbreedayalteasnelbhourlnitersneqnslly an equivalent load oi ilrn bombs on Yokohama. the enemy's WING __ Osaka was lilt once before by B-w incendiaries. when 300 planes struck in the will’ morninl darkness. than 2.000 tons oi bombs on that raid destroyed! 8r- dfmaged 8.1 o c Syrian Dispute spurs Conference ll San Francisco D0 LIE-B‘. COBNIIJ. I gpbh-wa lood-ioliiins dispute. iiongfbgriieriag oi its member no-i pm gave new uggncy tonight to ty. located centrally on Jsp- n island of Bcnshu, has a population oi 3,252,340 and ranks am n8 the three most densely ed cities in Japan, with an average oi £5,000 persons per e. target ares was s sec- Shln Yoda River-probably m guest highly industrial- c . set up a world league settle just such argu- Sufficlent Navy comingElents Men For Pacific _.._. May 3i - (CP) — "Show — Murray Iinrbor Salt- mill The Bo al Canadian Navy, noting iicient personnel had vol- unteered to meet Canada's nav- al requirements in the Pacific, to- night issued a statement appealing personnel who haven't signified their intentions to iill out imme- diately aPaclilc service question- naire distributed to all ranks. The statement recalled the ser- vice was" sending a fleet oi top ships and 13.500 men with reser- ves to the Far Dost and added:- to date indicate that more ,meet requirements oi the Paciiic p“ .. __ r , "In stock, seed oats $2.b0_per ewt. McGuigan and Boyg Conc Hall. Frimy, June 1st. bunches "so: quicker returns m shin your host-to Hospital Danced Ierrm Saturday. June 2nd. i "Unloading Thursds hi’. car asphalt sliing es. N d C B i-ililvlill llang For Ski-Trail Murder MONTREAL, May 3l-Mr, Jug. tice Wilirid Lazure tonight sent-I enced Roland Chasse, 43, to h ng Sept. '1 ior the ski-trail murder- last February of nine-year A Court oi King Bench jury deliberated 30 min- utes before returning their verdict oi guilt. l "Bl. Charles Auidliary are hold-, e alt Holman; icing-- ck Marketing Board 03s at Murray Harbour Monday afternoon, June 4th. Brooks, representative. took Marketing Boa d diilll hogs at Elmira Monrlliy "Ihierald Hall tlo ‘o Idle Players. Dsnc ” %ii2§€."¥£’°’vi Eillliblne. Friday. Juiie 1st ___ after he had criminally assaulted Elxtm large number mm- shortly. Paying extra "iiflicprlces are at a new high ween. Take advantage now and ‘Wlililil your regular loader ior pick amuse Slsnec Davis s» town Thursday and Friday oi this= ck. Ii shipping. bring in your . Livestock Marketing Board. B-IO-l. spie, Clyde River, hogs ior busy iimnexs until iurt er notice.‘ eiiiclent service as- se arrange day gr‘ Z41: about ready ior market held over until tint oi th advantage. We do ut there's mo danger lis st Charlotte- ior any price in- in vital Maritime eosl _ In releasing the report the Le- bor Department said that because oi the reoommendntioasa the exe- Workers oi America (C.I.O.) extend their contract the‘ operators until June 16 livestock “up, The Commission. chairmanship oi Mr. J Carroll, said it was clear that none oi the companies involved had the the increases recom- oould be met eith- coal . l . added usua noun Con m!“ mum “nun liips Moving Troops Into Border llegion By JOIIN KIMCIIE Reuters Military Correspondent LONDON. May {ti-Signs of gowing military tension on the viet-Manchurian "frontier are increasing. ‘the Ja snese are moving large bodies o troops irom Southern and Western China into the Man- churian border region. This ac- counts, in part, for the ra id Chi- nese advances through he im- portant centre of Yungning (Nan- ning) and southwest. The Jlpa- nese army would not have aband- oned this town without determin- ed resistance ii they had not more important matters on hand. This movement has been pro- ceeding ior some weeks and the Japanese garrison in Msnchuris has been substantially increased above its normal 38 divisions. The anouncemen-t from Moscow that "the Soviet Siberian armies will move into camps ior summer maneuvers early in June,",has a somewhat demonstrative ring seen against the background oi these Japanese troop movements. The summer is the traditional cam- paigning season on this border; almost all the frontier incidents in the prewar years took place be- tween June and August. 'I‘iiis Japanese regrouplng is avg. dently aimed to reinforce the act- ive courti oi the Soviet Union which has en the main pillar of Japanese warfare since the col-l lapse oi Germany. They are try- ing hard to convince the Russians that it would not pay the Soviet Union to enter the lists against Japan. Britain's Zone Df Occupation B! ALLAN NICKLESON 1ST CANADIAN ARMY I-EEAD- QUARTER-B. May 3l—-(CP Cable) -Britain's zone of occupation in Germany will comprise the iour provinces in the northwest section -schleswig - Hiolstein, Hanover, Westphalia and the Rhine Prov- lnce-it was reported today. Four corps under Field Marshal Montgomery will comprise the ‘iorce and the Canadian Army oi Occupation-the sci-called 3rd Div- lon under Mal-Gen. Chris Vokes oi Kingston. Ont.-—wili iomi perr. mm; oi the Hanover District corps un- .slder British command. AWARDED O-BI. IONDON’, My 31 —- (CP Cable) Weeks alter the body or ygung‘ — Lt-Cpl. Baron Tweedsmuir. 33. Benson had been iound Dell‘ a» u“ 1L ski trail on Mount Royal, centre oi Montreal. former John Norman Stuart Buchan. a son oi the late Govern- or-Gertcral of Canada, was gazetted ggfloned more! téright as awarded the Order oi’ the sh lihnpue in recognition of gallant and distinguished service! with Canadian infantry in Italy. He- 1043 in. was slightly wounded in North Africa. Pay Increase‘ For Coal i Miners Recommended Boost For Maritime Miners Will Mean Either Increase In Coal Prices Or Federal Subsidy To Mines. The Canadian Press) A, May 8l~Pay increas- es, overtime psy and plan ior two weeks psy ior some 13,000 Maritime coal miners was recommended toda the report oi an Industrial is- utes‘ Commission appointed theta operator-minor diiieren- throatened s‘ strike. and power producers and the lat- ter expedient must end somewhere to n pease an already over-taxed peop e. "Nevertheless, your commission- ers see a real present necessity ior the recommendations made for in. creases. We think with the under- stsndln oi bo h parties as to the nations interest and the absolute "necessity ior s continuous and sus- tained su y oi co th these recommends" will, we feel sure, almost guarantee a con- ed production." “go other s cations as to how nut submitted. nisi ltchelifl It is expected the Miri- . later ill w decide on a course of action after a study oi the report. t to approval the . artlme Labor increases, overtime “:1 e with pay be rev g . . . Plan Welcome AX, May 31 — (C?) - from the R.C.A.F. Bomber Group now on their way, across the Atlantic, ‘are expected; to arrive at the nearby Dartmouth Airport about noon Saturday ii weather conditions are favorable. Plans are under way ior a re-l ception ior these planes and theiri crews oi the Goose Squadron. INTERNATIONAL AT A GLANCE Britain Army to halt l-‘rcnch-Sy ing; Churchill calls 0n, De Graulle to issue cease-lire order; no I-u-eneh reply received; first Canadian bom- w dron heads for Dominion.‘ quiet; Lebanon prepares ior PACIFIC —- Amer! inawa virtually pinch o i’ counter-attacks against Americans and Filipinos in Philippines and Australians in New Guinea termed “almost uniformly "unsuccessful " " CllINIAI-ECapture oi Inhan. South pan make further withdrawals on es- cape road to Shnn- Hills. Disclose Details 0f. Jap Balloon-Bombs By KATHLEEN REX VANCOUVER, May 31-(CP)-_—-‘ Lifting oi censorship rules reveal-l ed today hitherto undisclosed de- tails of the composition Japanese balloon-bombs which for th last iew months have been landing in Western Canada. The balloons, oi a five-ply tis- sue, ccntaifn $3.000 feet ee their markings it has been estab- lished they are oi Japanese origin d it is believed they are being manufactured in great numbers and at a low cost. Indeed it has that 50D oi them would cost no more than the prize oi a cheap, light airpla Released irom different spots in h the revolution oi the earth. 30,000 feet above its surface, and at approximately so mile; an hour. Fast aircraft have been station- ed st strategic points reach the balloons within a few conjectures have made as to the plans oi the Japa- nese ior these balloons. Borne said they believed the Japanese could send over in this manner. antl- personnel bombs or even sheets oi phosphorus to set flre to crops and JAP-SOVIET FTENSION ‘Canadian Heavies Say Goodbye To England First Wave Of Big Battle-Tried Lancaster's Takes Off For Canada. None oi us lives ls we desire. but as we can, MAXIMS HA MERE MAN Mi... 1o lgabl, 8AM: other Provinces h U.S.A. Ski. u Delivered. $5.00. QUIET Bur TENSE French M y Have Agreed To TIEIC By FRANK 012mm: DAMASCUS, May 31 (AP) -— This Syrian Capital was lying tense but at least momentarily quiet tonight un- tier a column of smoke rising from the shattered centre oi the town where all during the night Wednesday and through to 4 p.m. today the French had poured :1 barrage of mortar fire. The latest estimates of the dead and wounded were imeu heavy pflnbeg‘ gnu‘; ind given by the director general of public health, Dr. Ahmet goodbye to lilngland left this airfield ior home, The big toils-engined planes were- iiown by the same veterans every bomber trail over Europe. With them the Canadians took a tribute irom the R.A.F. Bomber Command’: head, Air Chief Marshal S Germany began, he told the de- _ parting illers they had won a reputation “equal to any and surpassed by none." At 10 am. (4 am. E.D.T.—5 a. m. A.D.T.) today. the assembled iliera were bade farewell by the station cozmnsnder. Group Capt. J .K. MacDonald oi Antlgonish. N. 8., who said merel : "okay chaps. Get in your aircra t and be ready tak oii " e . Ten minutes later the first of these l‘ “ vi-birllt I r‘ flashed down the runway, its en- gines drowning the strains of “Auld, Lang Sync" played by the Group's. band. earless Fox", a veteran .of agiigrliicifiionésl w“ a.2i’“°‘<’§é‘.. i‘ .. . pm... .. r8 e.‘ Blues" until lb aireradlt ed with insignia s‘ otlng the! number $1“ priceless vegan had 651 -'-‘wiis “airborne. As each huge bomber roared? snoothly away, hundreds oi alr- men and alrwomen edging the run- way waved wildly and the air- crews nded with the “thumbs up" , while alrgunnern dipped their guns in salute. The Last Take-Oil 1t was the last take-off. The big advent/rare was over and this time the bomb-boys were empty and the bombers were heading for Canada and home. Tod ‘s flight will be followed at interv by others until in a few weeks I60 bombers representing eight squadrons oi the group are home. Some squadrons are re- maining in England ior reassign- ment. The fliers are returning by easy stagw-Comwall, Eng. the Azores. Newfoundland and finally setting down in Nova Sootin. exgec N. .. Saturda or Sunday. _'Ihe flight leader Wing Cmdr. Wilsm Gall of Lachute, Que. oiiicir commanding the Goose Squadron. In addition to a crew oi seven. each almrew carried two ground crew men who will set up ‘I18 t i ii lds in Nova Sco- llgtiljrlmrs zirciealfirt vshlch will follow. Air Chiei Marshal Ban-ls, who flew irom headquarters ior the take-oil’, told the assembled fliers: "You leave here after all you”? done with a reputation which ‘is equal to snv and summed none. We in Bomber Command always regarded the Canadian group and Canadian crews as u-. mom me very best of th-e person- nel and our appreciation ol your chlevements is surpassed only bv n ‘irhst the Germans think oi YW- WIIITI. ENSTGN REPLACED HALIFAX. May 81 — (CP) - The white ensign which has flut- tered above B.M.CS. Kings ior the past iour years has been re- WOMENS INSTITUTE CONVENTION _____ ‘ceremony took VICTORIA. May Federated Women's Institutes oi Canada will hold their 14th bien- nial meeting here June 4-8 Cameron E. Dow oi Port D QE-lfsiléenthlgflllzeiwm I i anielsl l tinuous production and a uustaln- v placed by the standard oi the Uni- ;versity oi Kings College. The . -~ "i: _ _ University revert norme. M (o?) The status after serving as a naval officers training school. The H. M. C. B. King's pennant will re- main at King's in s place oi honor lin the chapel. . todfliv as the first wave oi battle-tried Lancastersi read by Mrs. D. J. Riley and un- lKudry, who said that during the brief truces his ambu- lances had picked up 400 dead and 500 wounded. h It was believed hundreds or possibly thousands more m“ m“ Mme comma“ afingiwere lying dead or wounded in the narrow streets of the gold section of town. It had been impossible to get to that area because of constant French fire there. “British and American nationals were removed irom the capital during a truce today. They were taken to a British military 2am]: on the Baghdad Road. The announcement by Prime Minister Churchill that British troops had been ordered to inter- vene in the strife was not heard by Damascus because the French cut of! electric current in the cen- tre oi the town ust as the radio started to broa cast the state-i merit. ! (By! The Canadian Press) L0 DON, June k-(Frldfly) —London morning newspapers ‘ e the French-controlled l fivsnt radio at Beyrouth to- l \ . day as saying that the French Government had instructed Gen. Humboldt. French com- mander-ln-chlei in Syria and . Lebanon, to cease firing. I I .311: 12.2.?" raiflaiilzis ‘Not Decided sources. _ . BRITISH ULTIMATUM LONDON, May 31 — (AP) — Britain today ordered her power- ful mid-eastern army to halt the explosive French-Syrian fighting in the Levant and, in effect, served an ultimatum on France to silence her guns or face the consequences. 1n a firmly-worded note Prime Minister Churchill notified Gen. De Gaulle that Gen. Sir Bernard Paget, British commander-in- chiei in the Middle East, had been ordered to “lntervene" to prevent further bloodshed and to protect Allied communication lines ior the Japanese war. I-Ie called upon the French leader “imrnedlatclf to order French troops Syria to cease ilre and ithdraw to their barracks "in order f0 a- void a collision between Bri- tish and French forces." “Once the tiring has ceased and order has been restored, we shall Move Welcomed .CAlR-O, May 31 — (Reuters) -— cicied to intervene in the Levant crisis was welcomed in Cairo to- night and it was thought that Prime Minister Churchill's decision will calm tempers. There ls a feeling in some quar- ters that British intervention came just in time as there was danger oi a general strike being called all over the Middle East French llave Announcement that Britain had tie-J Next Move " By RELMAN MORIN PARIS, May 31-(AP)—Surprls- ed at the stern tone of Prime Min-l ister Churchills note, Gen. dc Gaulle and his ministerial advis-l ors were reported tonight not yet to have reached a decision wheth» er to comply with Britain's dc-i mands that French troops cease 9:30 p.m. and went home ivithuut having issued a statement and none ivas expected tonight. An official French source said that, so iar as is known, the gov- ernment hnd not ordered llic troops withdrawn totheir barracks. and it was admitted that a clash between British and Fncnch ior- ces was ossible unless action was taken qu ckly. News oi the British demand was released to the French press alter a delay oi several hours. be prepared to begin tripartite dis- cusslons here in London." Mr. Churchill said. leaving the obvious.‘ implication that Britain's inter- vention would be extended beyond the shootlnfi period. A dispatc sharp note came as a stunning surprise to Gen. dc Gaulle, who quickl called an emergency meet- ing o key ministers to discuss the situation. The note reached Paris at the time a French- Foreign Ofiice spokesman was reiterating at a press conference that his country did not wish Anglo-American mediation in the Levant dispute. He said French reinforcements might be sent to Syria "ii the sit- uation becomes critical." rom Paris said the' One report was that Gen. de Gaullc might leave tomor- row lor Washington to discuss » the crisis personally with Prc- l l sident Truman. The trip pre- i vlously had been planned fol- lowing an Invitation irom Mr. Truman. It was considered improbable that France u-onld order its troops to ‘resist the strong British force in Syria, though the greatest bit- terness was being manifested to- night. f Observers said the only immed- intc response would be a staic- ordcr as arbitrary and a show of France could plncc licr case before (The United States, it was dis- :Fo6fi££é<i‘5a“i§§§e“o:.‘6o1._c> ' inspired." A 1512515 DISPE sARy YEAR REVIEl/KEQ“ Tuberculosis has irlllbd more Canadians and Americans during the last live years oi war than have the German armies, Miss Irma Tait, public health nurse. T.B. division. told the members oi the Charlottetown Free Dispensary last night at its annual meeting in the City Hall. or T. E. MscNutt presided at the meeting and after the min- utes of the previous meeting and the financial report had both been animously passed, the chairman called upon Miss Dorothy Goldie, visiting nurse, to read her report. This was followed by the reading oi a. report by Miss Irma Tait, Public Health Nurse. TB. division. Miss Tait stressed the import- once oi prevention as a more ei- iectlve way oi stamping out the disease than that oi cur-lg the (Conlirniugdwon page i-géiimiii" victims who have contracted it. In the work of prevention, case finding was the most important phase oi the policy, she said. One oi the greatest mcnaces to the lives oi people free from the dis- ease wns that of positive reactors to the tuberculin test who roamed irom glacc to place. Miss Tait cited t e case oi one girl who per- sistcd in working in restaurants and who had been the medium through which many people had contracted the disease. Miss Tait expressed the beliei that the new mobile X-ray unit would be the means of saving the lives oi hun- dreds oi people in this Province and of eventually stamping out the plague. Dr. W. J. P. MacMillan said the credit must go to the Free Dispen- 2_—:— l" Germans Complain (By The Associated Press) PARIS, May 3l—A delegation of '70 German oiiicera was allowed recently to complain to their Lud- wigshaien prison c command- er that they were obl ed to sleep in tents, dig their own latrines and do kitchen detail. The commander, LL-Col. S. IJ. Iverson of Grand Forks, N11, who had been wounded while leading a. battalion in the Saar, listened patiently to the spokesmen for 3.500 German officers as they as- German standards. that there was lssrted that food was not up to lllD mess hall, that no orderlies viere provided and that only pup tents were provided ior shelter. when the last colonel had re- cited his grievances, Col. Iverson turned over 36 army photographs which had been lving face down on his table. They pictured Ain- flghting in Syria. . l Gen. de Gaulle left his office at,‘ ment condemning Mr. Churchill's strength. Alter that, they said. the world and cite evidence- which the French claim they have --that the crisis was "artificially erlcan soldiers in German camps and scenes oi the Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps. The Germans illed out without another word. ‘wig-a Iuiwvav lane-Me. i flu: TELEPHONE COMPANY NEVER RUNS 0u1‘ or waorlc. Nuneeas, METFDROLOGICAL OFFICE Toronto, May 31 — Minimum anal maximum temperatures: Van: couver 52, 64; Edililiiiwli 43. vil- Regina 4.1, 71: Winnipeg 42. 6-; Toronto 4.2, 54; Ottawa 33. 49; Montreal as, as: Quebec 43: saint John 44', Moncton 44, 5D; Haliiail 44, 53; Charlottetown 46. 50. FORECASTS Lower St. Lawrence: Strong northwest winds; partly cloudy and quite cool; showers in extreme west portion. Lake St. John: Strong northwe winds; mostly cloudy and quit showers or snowflurries. Gulf and ‘Bay Chaleur: Stron northwest winds modera caslonal showers. with showers. Maritimes: Fresh to strong winds; cloudy and cool with light scattered showers. Ottawa and Upper St. Lawrence: Fresh northwest to north winds: partly cloudy and cool. and tonight at 4. 8.15 A. M te , tes later than Charlottetown SUNDAY SERVICE CIIARLOTTI-ZTOWN- NEW GLASGOW (Daily Except Sunday) (Daily. Including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY l-SEPT. l0 Wednesdays and Thursdays d May and June the II a. In. a o er traffic eiierin cool with a few light scattered gales; cloudy and cool with oc- Nortli Sliorc: Strong winds; cool High tide this ziéiwrnoon at 2.4-0 Sun scis this evening at 8.30 rises tomorrow morning at I l . Last quarter moon June 3rd, Summerside hide eigh en minu- Leave Charlottetown 12.15. 5.45 PM Arrive Charlottetown 5.20. 8.10 PM. Leave Charlottetown 1.10 4.00 EM. Arrive Charlottetown L8 . 5.20 PM. N. S.—P. E. I. FERRY SEBVTCI Leave Wood Islands 'l a. m. 11 Leave Caribou, I u. m" I p. m.. 5 p. m. (On authority oi the Oil Con- troller, on Mondays, Tundays, lllngs will be cancelled ls evidence that the not carry tbs