MAXIM! CIA MBREMAN Betwccil the IHIIII llll the neuuil. l lllflylliellleruy fend. \ Icnlu Guardian. landed III, caulettesewp (Incline. ‘Iwe Celia. S0 TTOR (levers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew body I CHARWFPETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, APRIL o, 1944 A 8 PAGES For Thy MAXIMS or A MERE MAN hill“! Milt uuil foolish worth- IN"! cu thy 00016. Iaerll Trade Board Discusses Replies From Federal Members Re Airport Yanks In Raid 0n Invasion Boast NXN, April 5 — (AP) —A- a rhil lent-range Am :13 ilew deep into the Berlin and of O and M areas eu-many destroyed several dozen planes a- 812311141 at enemy air fiflldsalynm e raids. renewing e air offensive after a three-day iuu, followed an R A 1". Moflillifo limb last night against Cologne and allure; (rbiectives Germany's R . of the aircraft is missing. Flak explosives dotted the skies over the Pes-De-Calais target area today but no enemy fighters were sighted and the big bombers he no occasion to call on their strong fighter escort Big Export Trade In Canadian Oats Looms WINNIPEG. M1111 0 - (W) -- The largest export trade in Cen- adian oats since the First War was in prospect today th “suited - States war c» adnvimls tion seeking eup- plles for feed-shortafgnareas. Reports m the W in Grain lbrcharlge indicated W‘. . . chase. might run as high le 22.- 000.000 bilsnels of oats, with die- tribuhon to be made from Min- n taanspor r £0" d"? altfsitlii centres in ‘United Btateaesrs. comma i-zvriirs Seed Book norw. McOuigan c: Boyle. 8-28-101. "Zion Annual Easter Cake Bale. gaturday. April 0th. Bolmecrs 2 . M. 4-0-8- Oorreliondence from Hon. Cyrus Macljdillan and Mr. J I. Douglas in The air ministry said none or '1‘,- n is and Duluth. M . ‘asaigflienents would be made direct ekéwn I hei 3L errriywaflmv of Parliament for Queens’, i“ “fififitwfihfié film" °’..“‘° 1% airoortt. was i-fiiigiiiaosoffl men u n mee last h cf the I goerdmgoft W. L. Higgins reed the i......*“°°'.$‘.°.‘i.l“ “stilt.” to both 0h IX. MIMI!!! I Mr- Douche ulsofnwrite-tfine 01W 000ml! at the earliest mom- aft“ “thltftifiithtfft ‘ti? Chfirlgottctewn gig-port elite. ° deral Xflpflfllfifidivlegue wfimwgé; nection With the following {elegy-gm sent tgdeach i}; tit-lem- by the Board e on arch 30: "Ar _ "We that express matter etc W“ from Prince Edward Island is now m0"!!! b air and that P‘- ' town ma must. move via Sum. =2 d “Wide “who mowers at our pir- DOrt are not capable oi handling irciraft 1 . Qmd thevrlléggged" We expect you to Mr. Douglas‘ Reply scum emanci- .- gglwgllg 19:111.? n dn 4a: 4th; 8900141! service " W. el- i-f runways not .333». discrimination against; Chg-jot“. n Secretar wired glows Q: followxsuon mm e should be immediately remov- Mr. nougl l acted ottawafhrwmugi. L’ ' M“? 431'}? fr}. m “i a or Mwh we» c3305; 33313555 Ignite}: aonteined in my Wire arc . “There is nothing further that I can sly. onlly to repeat that this was a specie service granted to take care of an emergency, “It WIS fiirtllilhfg that there we; i"! 8X11’! Dilne mat could be acc- urted for a few dalyfi while the gar sho mid: Iiiiunyistisi e ness firms of Prince Edward island would fllmreciate having the express lan. 09d anywhere on the Island that it flmld be sent to its destination by train. Bummerrside being the nearest l§i“§.f.‘.l.‘.“¥é‘€i€3 ‘$213?’ “l” ‘h?’ ve goods there. r n“ e "B11180 and Lean You D . Kinkom Hell, Blaster Manley night. 4-0-8-21. "Booking orders for Clover Seeds and Barb Wire. W. 1. Bow- man. 4-6-61. ,"Dingwel.l and “‘ Lloyd B. Cox, Consumers Co-operative. Morell. will be closed Good Friday. 4-4-31“ "Loading hogs at Fredericton till 11.30 and Coivilie 3 to l3 Pride l April ‘l. Leslie McDowell. 4-4- l- "Unloading at Breadalbarie. wheat, barley and oats. L. S- Beaman, Breadalbane. ~21 "Bee Marie Players in “Silas 5min e ilrom Turni Hike" at More iialhAprill ,8.B0l:4l_f2-l livg hogs ‘for Davis 8a (Continued on om e. 0617s)“ Sheiliao Woman Shot By husband EIJIIDIAC, N.B., April 0—-(AP)— Vicum of s shotgun in the hands of her husband. Mrs John Cor- miert a. resident of the Dorcheeter District blatantly late this afte War ‘Situation Last Night By Klrke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst A culminating Nari disaster la taking shape in southwestern Busch around Odell. Coupled with the probable fate of German and satellite feecec iaoleted iu the Crimea it could prove a more crushing defeat than Stalingrad. There are no authentic flgura on the number of Axis troops caught In either of the Iuade-in- Moscow traps. The best guess in Moscow and IAIIIIIOII i: that 000,000 have been herded into the Odessa pocket with their last direct. westward escape or supply route cut by Russian capture cticu, miles goefhsdeiuayajun upthe egunuy ruayetillbeiufhe Russian by-pused Crimea. Warsaw-Odessa. ill-cad. Half It ls doubtful that any substantial number can be rescued from either Russian noose, Those who escape, in any else. will leave behind them everything but weapons they can carry by hand. They will have little value until rested, reorganized and re-euulppcd even if their morale ls unbroken. Yet they arc all that is left o! at lelst three once powerful German armies that stood on the Volga and deep in the Caucasus last winter and have since known nothing but defeat and retreat. Russian ,.ture of Rudclnayu ‘ion did more than virtually snap shut the Odessa trip. It put the right flank of the 3rd Ukrainian army in u pdlltlfln‘ to drive weetwgrd to a ruinhn unny that hue in forged across at the Tiruspol crossing of fhc with the left wing of the 2nd Uk- thc Pr!!! info Rumanla. It is still uncertain whether Russian pin-us call for rs mopping-up campaign against arily to ‘ t Ukrainian annlea. Odessa. and the Crhnca e ' ‘ of ' or by-passing them tempor- by the " ’ 2nd and 3rd Rvceapture cf Odessa would be celebrated in Moscow with booming guns. But there are obvious good arguments for walling it oif and by- passing It to redouble the width and lm, Rumunll. ‘ of the Russian drive Into Five Airmen Die As Mail Plane Crashes One Of Victims Had Survived 10-Dav Ordeal In Dinghy And 11 Months In Prison. LONDON. April 6 — (CPI — (Wednesday! Prime Minis- ter Churchill has postponed a, decision on whether to relieve Anthony Eden of foreign office duties, the Dally Mail acid ic- isy, There had been wide- spread reports that, Eden's resig- nation would be announced this week-end. OIITAWA. April ii - (C P) — Illourteen steel tugs built in the of Central Bridge Company. tori. Ont, are to be launched during next week The tugs. built under contract for the British Min- istry of Irans rt, are to go-down ways two m- rec daily in what is believed to be a record for Canad- ian s-hivyflrds. IDNDON. April ii - (AP) — The Berlin lo reported Allied bombem over Rumaula today, with fierce air battle: raging ov- er Albania and Bulgaria as well. The broadcast aald the bombers were accompanied by except- ionally strung fighter format- ens. 01am. April s - (AP) - wrm" 8100K}! ‘J33’; if” “§‘_%¥T.§,‘.‘.‘--33“§." cuiniitiufiltiifi '3i.'i‘f£"°fi?“ $155 m etevkhggu omgegrfrmvghctgr __._ Mrs. f‘ were I ’ home ' ‘ “y n I‘ s m.” bein forced by the Germans tc ' ' ' ’ _' a . aas ‘s ,.;;°:t.t;*.*:..‘"s .'£..'t:t..".;i*::! "‘f-r‘-ififi"dw »‘+=- w M- r" "u. ti. is. "h. “ratio "W! Mifleilnl Bflrd- +541 gfimm u fljeg_ m: mfifiedmg. league: mission to Meadow was de- ' m 1mm; ch|]d_ signed merely ta calm the home eeloamnl ho" m. Bu“ a R.C.M.P. are investigating the 7mm “d 3°“ m‘ Fraser every Thur-eds; afternoon "hwmll- . ALLIED "EADQUAR-lqmg, It and were! Every "1- ‘—""""'— Naples, April s - (AP) -- u. s. day iorenooui until further no iee. M“, “my”. bu“; ,5“. C. C. Green. ~ 3- *1 ditcrranean pounded railway ularmrieuuest the Vern- amntio Club presents their play in Vernon River Hall, Easter Monday night. April " ted to srrivc next week- Thre curg 2 o.w. oats. re-oleaned and clia d: also on; car Victory seed ca , Book now. McGuigun 8r Boyle, 4-8- . "Our livestock loading agents l-re asked to order stock care for week of April 10. Use lenty bed- ding. Livestock Murkeiing Board Ikme fore- Ray- 4-0 ..';t“'".‘£‘.‘ ihhtthn l a . llly ‘atemocn end Tunis noon until train time. Help nor in charge. “Unlo 'maa '11s Bat da ear of Numiuflov y. ‘ ‘l’ u: ‘y ed Banner and Victory 0e a1- eo recleaned feed oats. J. L. - Iiachern. Mt. Albion ‘ a u "librpect to be unloading car choice bulk outs at Hunter giver Lemuel Creawcll. 4-5-01. *¢4 e+oe-- Tomorrow being (iced Filth!" the neat issucef the Guardian will be?! llaturilay, April l. eeeoe-eee-e-eeeoeee-ewne» ll National Baiwa Pacif Rail Wage llearing Expected Shortly OTTAWA. April b-(WF-Ag- plieation of 100.1130 Canadian rui - way workers for ware illoreml aimed at a levelling of Canadian United Btutee lines, reach a hearing before the Ne- tionel wsr Labor Board late this month, it was learned toda . ‘Ihe case, the lamest so er pre- sented to the Board, involves in- creases unofficially estimated to total g possible $100,000,000 a. ear -the equivalent of about onc- elf the total increases by "l9 national and regional war labor boards since the introduction of wartime wage control. In addition to the 100,000 workers ", ffectcd ‘r so to 76,000 would probably be involved in subsequent increases if thq main application was ,, 1t is care d that the evidence will take days to a week. Railways involved are: Canadian ya and Canadian lg Railway and their subsidi- aries, Algcma Central and Hudson Be , Dominion Atlantic. Inqui- mat and Nenaimo. Essex Term- inal, Northern Aloe-cu, Pacific Crest Intern, Quebec Central, Bg-dney and Imlidcurg, Tcmlscou- a . ‘relniskamlng Ed northen 0n- ‘lbronto " of hue in from amilton and terio. . Buffalo end Toronto terminals. yards at the ell field center of Plocsti, Rune-uh, today it was announced tonight. NEW YORK. April 5- (A P) — American women faced an unglrd- led futwe today es the corset in- dustry announced stocks of rubber for foundation practically exhausted. LONDON. AIM] I — (AP) — Germany's lest greet battleship -the Tlrplta - was blasted along ueerlyberfullleugth and left h; in Monday’; attack by loyal Navy planes. the Ad- miralty announced tculght. ST. JOHN'S Nfld“ April 0 -(CP Cable) -A surplus o! 045494.700 for the Newfoundland fbcel year ended March a! was announced oonitht by Finance Commissioner Wild a; he forecast, a 8168.000 surplus for the 1944-46 year. Revenues for the 1004-44 year were 08,552,400 —- an all time record- ageinet expenditures of $917,700 Man On Street Without ' Tires For Another Year CAIOARY. l 5—(CP)—'I.‘he "mun on the e " who has no special permit wil not be able to get tires for at leuet a year, James . Simpson of TOIOIHA‘), irmen of the rubber advisory said Mr M OI-nadl. OPPAWA. Atpril 5—(C-P)—F_1ve members of U19 Royal Canadian Air IPorce, including F0. Johnny shanahan, Ottawa. Wm 111K865 bombs over European hot spot! and survived a 10-day ordeal in a rubber dinghy and 11 months in a. Sahara internment camp, were killed and a cargo of service mull destroyed when a trflnfillflfi- 60m‘ mand aircraft crashed and bum- en at Prestwick. Scotland. it was announced here today by the R-C. A.F. Others in the big Flying Fkzrtres! were: F0. Norman C. Cllthfififti Ottawa, pilot; so. Hush 0- Mc- Fadden, Eastvlew. Ont.. navigfll‘ or: F0. Gordon T. Geult, Iberville Que, wireless operator. and CF1- Emm- 1. Lavergne, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont, engineer. Date of the crash was not given in nn announcement, which said cause of the accident was still un- determined. Loaded down with mail for eer- vicemen in the Medite ncun area from their relatives in Canada, the aircraft had just taken off when it banked sharply and spun m the ground. It; burst into flames and attempts to rescue the crew were fruitless. ' Flying the mail was e pretty dull chore for Shanahan, co-ipilot. after an exciting tour of operations with bomber command. His Well- inqtonmbomber crashed in the Mediterranean after fighting 0" two German fighters and clowning one of them. He was trapped in- d side ‘t when a crew mate fell un- c011 l aus across his seat. Johnny pulling his buddy with him, swam to a rubber dinghy- There were six or them and they had eight ounces of water and one chocolate bar. One man went crazy after five days and walked over- board. Another froze to death A third died of exhaustion and fourth died after they had been blown ashore in French Morocco on the 10th day. Bhanahan and his companion were interned in a Sahara camp by the Vich French, where they spent 11 mont until released y the Allied invasion of North Africa. Bhanahan lost oe pounds and did not wear shoes for five months. m MANY BEA FIGHTS IDNDON — (OP) - Mfli-IOII of a war factory, Mrs. L. B. Dun- eter wears the African star ribbon She served in ma merchant mar- ine, wes llnder fire at the evac- uation of Dunkerque, saw the Jervis Bay go into action and was there when the Ban - ctr-lo was hit. by German shells. H1550 CANA FLCI LI D EXLELS IN THE KITCHEN Threat To Allied Rail Line Grows By Charles A, Grumich NEW DELHI. April 5 —- (AP) Increasing their pressure along the entire 200 mile India invasion front, Japanese forces have seized a 15 mile stretch oi the Imphal- Kohlma. highway and are thrusting through the wild Nags Hills north of Kohlma within 80 miles o! Dirn- apur on the Brngal-Assom railway. lifeline into Upper Burma. Japanese units previously were resulted. to have cut the 60 mile l» l between Imphal, capital of Manipur State, and Kohima to the north. but, today's advices gave the first indi- cation they had firmly consolidut ed their hold on that supply link. More alarming than this develop- ment, however", was the apparent evidence that the invaders were con- centrating their main effort at the nortlhem extremity of the front, where they were probing at the Manipur road leading into the rail junction o! Dimapur. ~ Should the Japanese scvvl‘ t!!!“ line, upon which American and Chinese forces in Northern Burma are r -‘ ‘ for the bulk oi their supplies, they would have struck a blow far more damaging to the All- ies than the capture of Imphhl would represent. The railroad has been under operation of the U. S. Army Transportation Corps since ch 1. On the brighter side. Allied off- jclgls emphasized that the invading Japanese were engaged in e, terrific gamble that could quickly end in complete disaster". Within the next six weeke-‘before the monsoon cea- | son béilins - they must establish a weather - proof line of communuaat- ion back across impassable moun- tain trails to their bases in Burma. or face annihllahon. Clamp Pro-Invasion News Lid Closer LONDON, Alpril 6-(0?) —The postmaster-General announced day the closing of public telephone service between. Great. Britain and all parts of Ireland immediately in a drastic move to prevent leakage of military formation on the coming invasion of Europe, The order follows _the recent ban I l is Idler Crisis- In Britain LONDON, April il-Vrhursdayl- (CP)—-The War Cabinet early to- day drnfted an urgent order spec- ifying that incitement of labor unrest is a criminal offence, and told the labor ministry to take any other action necessary to end strikes of more than 110,000 work- 01's in the ivur-vital coal and ship- builcihg industries. There was no indication of wholesale arrests or of summon- ing troops to break strikes, but Scotland Yard, investigating pos- sible subversive elements behind the spreading "wildcat" strikes. raided Trotskvita, Communist oi- fices in London and elsewhere Wednesday, while the Trades Un- ion Congress, parent body of or- ganized British labor, warned that continuance of the work stoppages would lmperil Allied victory. London morning papers today frankly headlined their stories “labor crisis" Airman’s Body Found In Dinghy HALIFAX, April 5 — (C?) — A lone airmans body found floating in a rubber dingy on the Atlantic gave R..C.A.F. officials today the only clue to the fate of four fliers missing since Saturday night in a. flight from the air station at Dc- bert, N S and here mm announced tonight an R.C.A.F crash boat, one of several search- ing the sca for several days, had found the dinghy and the dead airmen bobbing on the sea. Neither his name ucr those of h three companions on the night flight were disclosed. WAR WORK TELLS LONDON — (GP) - twice as many pairs of spectacle, as beforc the war now are being worn in on travel between Lne same coun- tries on the ground that neutral to maintain contacts for informat- on. Eire might be used by the enemy] clan." lpercentagc of war workers over 40. Britian according to W. E. editor of the publication Harry, “Opti- One reason is the high LONDON. April 5 — (AP) —-Ru-' mania’; days as an effective fight- ing power appear ended under the onslaught of Russian armies and Allied bombers. Premier Ion Antcnescu, it is be- lieved here, is finding it impossible to take Rumania fonnally out of the war since German troops hold all key points but the people's will to light is broken and Rurnania now is in the same apathetic state as It- a . y. (A Blue Netvmrk broadcast from London quoted ‘Purkish dispatches ls saying Antcneseu would ask Moscow, Washington and London for an armistice.) Although Hitler's Balkan satell- ites are disintegrating under the burden of war, llied military chiefs preparing the western front have small hope that a Balkan collapse would be of any immediate serious injury to the German war machine. ‘rhc Germans have been using Ru- manlan troops as they did the lt- alians in the North African desert. leaving them behind to fight hope- less rcarguard actions and to ge captured. The Russians have advanced roughly 100 miles i'ecent._ly_igi_a__400 M t fur the establishment of lufiiiman ia ’s Fighting Days In War Appear Near End Not Likely Country Will Be Taken Formally Out Of-War. However. mile front. Even if they are able to continue their rapid pace, it would take them two months to reach the I" Plocsti oil fields . These fields are the richest 9001b‘ omic prize in southeastern Europe, and their loss would be g severe blow to Germany, which uses more than half oi Ploesths 5.500.000 ton yearly output. Military men, how- ever. say it would be some time be- fore this loss makes itself felt, gince Germany is known to have reserve oil stocks for several months’ sup- Dy. Social Credit To Set lip National Organization TORONTO. B0111 5—(CPi—The national social credit convention today passed a resolution providing a. nat- ticn e- in federal election contests. The resolution was given enthu- siastic approval on a voice vote which appeared to be almost un- . The action followed de- feat by a secret ballot at the mctrni session of an amendment moved , Quebec delegates which urged continued concentration on edtiwational rather than political activities . MOVED T0 CAFIIIY mow DELHI - (GP) - Plans for the removal of vital war plants from vulnerable areas to safe ones have been almost mploted When Japan entered the war. many‘ of India's war pl uction plan were located in places vul- nerable to air attack. Maritime Trade Board President Discusses .- Post- War Opportunities t l “Canada's place in the future, as in the jmst, lies in association with Great Britain and the British Commonwealth,“ declared Mr, T, C. MaeNabb, St. John, N.B., pres- ident of the Meritimg Board of Trade, in the course of an eloquent address at a dinner meeting of the Charlottetown Board of Trade Inst night. Mr, McNabb, who was accomp- flnled by J. D. hicKcuna, Saint. John, Cilflijlfiilll of thc Maritime Transportation Commission, said he did lat forget that this Island Province was historic ground. “we have established here the pflLLQfn of this Dominion. wilicil has been copied c‘..t:\vh.'2:'i- successfully m our Commonwealth and gives a, plan for a much wider use umongl the BQPIes of the world when the war done." 31113515511108 the impossibility of "standing alone" in the post war world, Mr. McNnb said the United States has its own problems now, and is unlikely to add to them by taking in nine or ten more states into their Union. It is problemat- ical if any interests or desire for union with Canada exists anywhere in America. "In the British Com- monwealth," he added, "we have done Our best, and in it we should lily. for our own good, for the good of Britain our Motherland politic- and icr the benefit of all man- a L H! “P8611 the Board of Trade to Elva leadership in making a sane and healthy Canada. ‘Ilia public should be educated to get out and vote in federal as well as mu- nicipal and provincial elections; they should be taught respect for public men and public office. At Present while the war is on every Support should be given the Gov- ernment. “We may not agree but we concur. when the war is over We may do vivhat we will but nmv it. is each for all to win". Mr. MacNabb emphasized the llllliorturiitles of the Board of Trade in speaking for Charlotte- town’; business interests, in joining with the Maritime Board and with the Canadian Chamber of Um merce in a united voice which must ‘ be heard throughout the "whole Dominion, He dealt with the val- ue of export trade and with the necessity of working harder and llmgcr than ever in the postwar yflflrs fe repair the destruction caused by the war. “Prince Edward Island“ he said. "will always be fortunate. It has all the food it wants and can send 7°" “Way. The world as a whole is but a day from starvation. so al- Wlys we here will have a job, Tm‘ wmlllexlties oi modem civilization obscure the basic fact that people work to eat and none survive that dont eat. WA will alwavg grgw food to eat and the world will sit on our doorstep. But we don't all want to farm always. and w; d0 not have tn Should Have Plant Here ‘, Needed "Here is where the Board of Trudi; comes in. Much of the war. exnlnslves fijnstnncebfrdetlrnitls ‘lycgirfillfl’ on sit; '1. Col. o: WiIlkie’s Hopes For Presidency Dashed By Primary‘. WASHINGTON, April 5—(CP--—| The hlsh hopes of Wendell Willkie- for nomination as Republican cam, didate for the presidency were cud-i ed by yesterday's ‘primary voting in Wisconsin, while malorlty re-i piliblican support. want to HOD-CORP, mlttal governor ‘Ihomag Dewey oi > New York. l If the result in ‘Wisconsin curricsf the significance most independent observers here attach to it, ihci presidential fight this vcar will be between Dewey and President Roosevelt. Yesterday's stage in the long and intricate procedure by which Unit- ed States Presidents are elected had these odd resulisz- _ 1. Not a single Winkle-pledged, candidate wng elected although lu- stum ed the state making ' specc cs in 13 days. 2 All the Democratic support went w President Roosevelt al- though he has not indicated u will- ingness to run for a fourth term. 3. All the Republican support went to candidates who had made no personal appeal. and the bulk of it Dewey who had tuld tho elec- Sfates that have this system, was to elect 24 delegates to the Repub- lican national convention in Chi- cago next June 28. and 2S delegates to the Democratic convention in Chicago July l0. pigeons arc Greece . other countries under Nazi domin- a Cl‘ Iubsexiptieu Delieverl. 00.00 Illl. 04.001 ether a vluru I O-l-A. 00.00 CES CAPTURE RAZDELNAYA J aps Increase Pressure In Ind Blooksiain Escape Route 0f 200,000 Nazis By TOM YARBROUGI-l LONDON. April 5-—iAP)-R£d infantry and mechanized troops aided by crack cavalry, capture the Ukraine rail junction of Raz- delnayn today, cutting the muin escapp route of an estimated 200.- 003 Germans still grouped around Odessa as a fast-swinging Sovieb crescent slashed farther gown m. wards that great Black Bea port. Tonight's Soviet communique added more than 130 other popu- lated places to in.» list of liberated Learns. including Yanovka and An- tonit-Kodiritselo. 33 and 24 mile! ilortli and northeast, respectively, oi Odessa. From the east the Russians drcvu to within 18 airline miles of Odes- sn with capture of Sta‘ ' ‘ Razdeirlnya, 40 west of Odessa. is am .<- Uic rall- unv through Tiraspol to Rumrinla‘ and by taking it the speeding Rus- sians forced the Germans to fall back cn Blacks-ea lanesoraoont- bination rail and fcrry route for escape from the Odessa. region. Flight by sea was unlikely, with the Soviet Black Sea fleet in con- trol of those waters. Willie the rail- ferry lines crosses the Wide Dniester river estuar close to the coast, under easy ire of the fleet in ad- dition tn any aerial force the Rus- sians might bring to bee: on such slow traffic. Islander Busy In No Man’s ‘Land WITH ‘THE CANADIAN A . RN!‘ IN ITALY. April 6-—A fighting pr.- trcl a dozen strong, sent out. b] the commanding officer of an 0m tarlo Regiment the other night, did B Heat job on a fortified enemy out post, wrecking it and killing its hnl doren or so occupants. Commended by Cpl. (now ser- geant) M. J Plckens, of Goodore ham. Ont... the men made a stealthy, approach on this case on the Ger- man side of No Mail's Land, only 1Q find it entirely surrounded by trench bristling with weapons. brief reconnaissance satisfied them that the place was occupied. Thi< patrol, which included Pie. S W. Carr, of Kensington, P. E.» I , had gone out with a Plat oath tank projector. and after blowing Jerry a few kisses. the patrol began to close in A; dust and nibble cleaned away a somewhat dazed head was gown poking through an upper vvindcw Tue heads dizzin- ess Was ended for all time by 3 cou< pie of rounds from a Tommy gun. Although the boys had worked quickly and smoothly. the patrol wn by this time really catching it; an Yng mixed up with a lot. of mor- rc Certain, at least. that (‘V- ial cry l-loinic- in the outpost had been accounted for. they withdrew PIGEONS All‘ WAR PRHPURIA- <0?» - Dropped by a parachute from Allied nir- craft thousands of South Afrlvflrl helping the Allies ic 111 in touch with partisans and keep Crete, Yugoslavia lion. Muir A tome! Bar's Sun’ it 8o NOISY {tie MbfilS HAVE 1o ‘item snouro (‘than _I High tide this morning at 10.4! 4. and tonight at 10.4 Sim sets this evening at 7, 3a 2,1, and rises tomorrow morning at 0.31 Full moon April B, 2m p.m. Silmmerslde tide l8 minutes let- tl-mn Charlottetown . DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown - Summcraldo - Muncton Leave Charlottetown 1.80 u. us. toglhe didoréothivanxtngt. m ‘m It” Mo“ ‘so m. mules. first toevote flirting in; 5m" Chlfhi-"rlifl l-ll b. m- IAS p. m. 705 p. m, SUNDAY SERVICE Leave l" letteiowu ll ueeu. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 p. l.