MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN r wccanonirlllocurdcbisiolfc byanstintclacrvicc- "uremic-P- omclu, In‘: BBQ "M41" Guardian. III lapanese Middle East Appears 1942 Second Front u Agitation mounting in Britain; Some not satisfied with Continental raids. QNDQN, March fi-(Ail-‘O- T51. griddle East appears to be Brzluufs second from for 1942- ...". r111 be g continental in- "smn scmgtime in the future, but h. [he peat battles of this yea!" up nmiu stroll til oi’ the embat- liir defences For Canada . Occ mli--'-°~'--“1‘1W- Plan increased" v Enemy captures Airfield in Tcungoo area mria, 2%” ~ The People's Paper p Covers Prince Edward Island Like the low CHARLOTTETOWN, CAN ADA, THUR Critical Situation De- veloping As De- fenders Of Burma Are Forced Back. NEW DELHI. March 5- Malch 25—(GP)—Ja an reached out for India by sea onlght, occu- ylng ihc Andaman Islands in the Read by Everybody MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN The outward conduct indicates tile scents of the heart. SDAY, MARCH 2s. 1942 War Situation Last Night (‘By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst) Raids by thc United States navy on Wake and Marcus islands are officially disclosed to have found both inadequately manned by the Japanese. That is perhaps the most significant aspect of those and similar previous raids in the Marshall and Gilbert Islands al- though they also represent a stats toward nullifying strategic and tactical advantages Japan guincd by her surprise attack in the Paci- fic last December. v operations O O O I The point that most impresses this observer is that Japan is too definitely feeling thc strain of war on distant fronts to he able to muster in the deep Pacific air or sen power adequate to guard out- lWIis of high strategic importance. Hcr air, nsvnl and shipping losses arc beginning to count. Aside from that, the raids on Wake and Marcus clcarly indicate w; mulls L; 1i ely to be required ay of Bengal, barely 500 miles that both have been wiped out as useful to Japan, perhaps for the in ills lvlzddle EISC, Bulma and OTT off the United Nations’ Céylflll-ili- duration of the war. Her front in the Pacific has been pushed back. ' {hp Allies’ maritime OOm- P‘ AlyAilMflmh G35 “"1071 0111911119- 51117913’ T911115 The hi)‘ And those or other Pacific islands might be wrcstcd from her soon to mm Mons) _ f- ans or racrcfilste air‘ dc- anesealso struck by land toward become ‘Inca “Vance bu“ o‘ “tack . own. hazards and dlifcultles of cnce of Canua a ough mark- the riches of cenrtlral Burma in _ _ ' ‘. _ _ equwnpn,’ tmunmg and gupply ed increased in the number of heavy fighting w lch partly out- Y "I m. m.- Alllcd force descending combat squadrons 3111] QQngfl-ug. flanked the Brush-Chinese posi- 61 9 FY1111"! DIIPIWIB 0f those American task force raids must o“ u“. hgnvily-gllilfdfld shores of lion of new alrdromeg were cue. tioll at Toungoqt f di bc extending the protection area for American-Australian communi- (~*.-,,...,..1.<-1<l western Europe. lined in me 1pm” pf common; The vernmen c Ill a an- cation sea lanes to the southward, busy with the flow of troops and 11mi- ucnclillions‘ wegelestrlcgctliix gday‘ byflPl-ime Minister Mae- Yrglgwmmilgf fiirgtltlfliaciéflaixhe warTglrearJwelitwar-d‘ to Gen. MacArthur. “'0 wee o enzc n . , - _ be n ' illiv of a continental in- u, “h; “f” "by f" u" ‘up lerrltory to go to the erlcmy, m u B opanese ave en dc nltely pushed buck in the north and h j s spring. TpfvllllIiiiCfl on which the 0on- flu_.:,,,.. am drawn wa<_ culled Mn: ("\\v.\'(‘l'.<.'lii0n5 with officers oi W, 1;,-_-,-.. fighting services, experts .7 uncwluilonal affairs and allied eiiliiaiiv observers Azliotion Mounting "on for a second front is Pillffic ccmmenl. indi- ~plo are more concern- ¢4 owl than any mrlllcry en- tcrnvfsc since the outbreak of the public meeting to express s. d». ~ im‘ :1. sccond front vrill be nadian factories and that S3l5.000.000 compared with bout $115,000,000 spcui in currrnt year. There qwafzll; ' Square lifaroh 29. view during today’; short m- Fryk Ohm <- lor of Lord BQRV- line of the House. arllronki. l1‘.\' inn Standard. has But. he added, "it can b; said esimnlrd tin‘. thousands will ai- that this pension will involve fond the drluoflsiratiou lo plead against the Ger- ; {cl-s rm- a sfccéndi front up- ycn v are n-ci ~a "s. ‘e W1 h C01)- incninl mlrls by the three ser- vices For to that on Btunevnl. (chow destroyed the radio sfaiion. "Iiloulrzp ihc . n .. . wélléuliigis t.licitm(gifer>flliiflfl= clmliterl ihllllc sucll rald=. in- vclunrr mr. 50a and land forces. are an idea! weapon to keen "l8 German. off ital-once frrm lh_e n-:~—~ . oi‘ combat I'l ing and fighter operations." mmlmdos Eight Canadians Cited for Bravery Bv J. r. snlvbnusou (Canadian Press Stuff Writer) (Continued on page 8. Col 0) Japs reinforce Slates, Henrik De Kuuffmann. est proportion" of combat air- craft needed during the coming year will be provided from Ca- the air and ground crews required for the air dcfencc establish- ment will be “readily available." ills estimate of the cost of air defence in the coming year was g. the are obvious reasons why prpcisc details of the ex- pansion of air defences cannot be made public. the Prime Min- ister sald in his lengthy war rc- marked increases In the number squadrons, for recon- anli-suhmarlnc, strik- WASHINGTON. March 25—(CP) -blx members of the Royal Can- adian Mounted Police and two Can- adian naval officers were cited hers today for courage and bravely by the Danish Minister to the United not. opposed Indian defence forces settlement on the islands also were removed the communique said. The position of the Andaman: had been defenseless since the Japanese occupied Malaya, Rari- gnon and the lower Burmese delta. Al: their nearest polnl. the 204 islands lie about 120 miles frcm ihe Burmese mainland, Cape Negrais. Their real significance, however, Lies in the fact that they affolrl excellent anchorages-Port Blair and others-and All‘ bases for com- blrled sea and alr attacks on Cal- cutta. Ceylon and the vital ship lanes in between. Actually it was part of s. giant sea-land plncers on India, at a time when Britain is endeavorlng to organize its military defence and to soothe lis troubled politics through the mission of $1” Stafford CYIpPS. The invaders’ land arm of the scissors was closing slowly today on the eastern road to Mandalay. A force cf l,000 Japanese, skirt- ing the Chinese outpost line de- fending Tcull-goc, scme 200 miles below Mandalay and even closer on c diagonal route from the Yen- allgyaung oil fields on the north- west. captured an all- field north of Tounlloo. Officially it was acknowledged that the situation was serious. Chinese fclpes were sent out early this morning to dis ozge the en- emy~ftom the air field, and a heavy ivwn Forces ....*‘.:.".:::r*;..z::i.:: ma: .__ Government ship Gerirud Rak. n‘ l “MSHINGTON. March 25-45?) —-'Ihe Japanese were believed to- day to be min-forcing fheir forces on the Island ocf Luzon preliminary to another drive to wipe out the American-Filipino resistance on the Bataan Peninsula. “Continued enemy ground activ- ity m Bataan indicates the arrival Canadla to the men. navy and E. A. Chute. edslle, W. A-. Schultz, T. boyer of the Mounted Police- wrecked off the coast of Nova scotia Fk-b. 7 in a gale. the minister left eight silver letter-openers at the n Legatlou to be forwarded They were lob-Comm. D. G. Jef- frey and Lleut. W. J- G. ‘(lJariLofAthc f; iiougpg-I Elliott M. Little. blrcctcr Ian MacArthur and Owen Seu- McArthur and Seaboyer are radio (Continued on page a, Col i) Regard Newspapers Essential Services OTTAWA March 25 - (C P) - of Nut- ional Selective Service,sald today that he a reed with labor minister Mztchell lat newspapers and news of Japanese reinforcements." a operators who maintained constant associations should be regarded as United States War Department communication with the ship with essmiifli 59114095 51111110111111! 5111111111 communique said. adding that morse lamps while the other pollcc- be @0110 i0 deprive lhflm 0i qllflliiied 1117199011 fliers were continuing men guarded the ihlp for several gggsllilgtio? emu" 111611‘ 911mm" ammerin bl f, d f _1- nights, before it bro e up. - lions g W‘ ' em“ p“ Lleut. Carr, a naval staff officer Mr- Mitchell. at a press confer- “ ghflbmme, N, s" gflgmpflgd g9 ence last night follcwlng ann- launcy. g naval ma; 9,9 mcue m9 ouncement of the national selective a crew my, me Se“ we“; m9 rough, service len by Prime Minister Mac- The Danish ship was on her way kenflie inB- slid newspapers should from New York lo Greenland when b9 100K811 011 11118011110913’ Bl Ill 698011- oaggh; 1n we gale, tlal service in Canada. _o— his for Notices in this column I eonta pcr word ==—_--__E "Tcliclcs-Sour ‘Thursday. L-IIIB-B-Ii-Bi. "Talkies-Montague. Scturdc - -1lg9-8- i-l. “Enteriainment Mt Stewart Pri- "W- 11-1168-3-24-31. 00c ‘m, $111 B: Mdanocnch Tlhrcadslbanc L-1230-8-I7-3i. "Lllfldins Boss eve M da (all livnsourls. us" d“ "n L-BOI-lfl-Blgl-‘g- xiiiviril-‘u. Wilts 1.2:‘ ma“ s": M . . "Mo. Emerald. L-m 4-20-21. "Willa hm at Coivillc until i mo. Fnloy March ma le lie iilobowell. _ L-lRl-l-Msil. “Tflklns hos: at hid liaslllllpmomm" Much By PRESTON cuovun Associated Press Staff Writer MEXANDR-LA, March-Bd-f-A!) --Wc feintcd and bluffcd. ‘W180i! in and out of smoke screens, find our mills-although it was some- times like shooting peas at l bl-fll -took time out for tea. in til! midst of bottle. and 8°! 0111' W11‘ voy safely to Malta after a naval nlcnt in which vslor tri- ovcr might u it saloon in tbs most rommi-w Brldllbi-HQ of fiction. 21, Arthur After it was all over the captain L-liiil- of ihc cruiser which I was Ibo added this statement to the bric rt rm Adliiiflli- "ligcroscnilrsl has roushi m d ibc mos: brilliant actions aslimi grcs superior for? cvcr lilt- 0Q brwsh - And so it was. As the battle b0- ssn 1 never thought I would I" out olive to tell cf it. of Brit- uN H "'_‘_" gig; oiiioii-‘weckfvltiliirsldixg. m" l’. Emlerald. A. O. and O. , 11- L-lfll-C-fld-fli. "Loadl ‘Wk 11B hogs at Charlottetown 1 ‘ W1 Friday. March 21m till “p.111. We require two csrloads and pny extra price for these week- "Oss. Livestock Marketing on] h‘ "um- ugm c , 5°11“ L-1203-8-25-2i_ l“ ° é" a l l. '-———- sailed hood-on inkan ovar- mfiiii"! Pills at Charlottetown yhqbplngly crful Italian h‘ "i square Friday; fiedcrlc- [lace in the tral Mediter- ‘ér Mmldfly: Brcadnlbanc Tues- r-ancan three lilacs drove it ‘m. I-lunoer River Wednesday l0 away mu the convoy and cl- iIl1il|N°w 9118mm 11 a.m.: North tlmacc dclivcrclcur swim no“; ‘in 9 P-m. I900 per pair for ihc cred if“: Id ‘éuerrllver 18 pounds. Knud Jor- "-- . L-XIBC. (Continued on page l, col l) Light British Ships Rout Italian Fleet Newsman tells of dramatic sea battle when convoy attacked. _ Hitler, King Boris ccnunullique which said the blow was struck two days ago, and was The small Anglo- hsd been withdrawn "some days previously." Much of the population and some of the convicts in the penal —-(CP Cable) _. mu today that mZed a riot Tuesday to cover the escape attempt» of eight number who were captured in the 17118011 mounds after being missing l2 hours. Bernard Sluuenwhite was sentenced today to four years u bl d i - 111 Penitentiary after conviction 0n maxilla genial: iii“ m w" m 011K189 0f stealing tires and Yesterday relatives st Morel] premises .wss convicted in Supreme cool-i. whirl! Pwific by progressive steps. Not only has the threat of Nip- pon’s closest bases to Hawaii been greatly relieved; but a pattern has been set. for a continuing stop-by-stcp, isiand-by-island advance west- ward to wvitiiin close air and submarine Qlrldng rangg o; m, yum, ncse coast and the bottleneck of Japan's China Sea, Wfll‘ cmmc Thai. is the schilles heel of her whole conquest concept. Red Ski Troops Reported In Staraya Russia Apparently just a raiding party; Savage Nazi counter-attack reported repulsed. News Briefs B! Eddy Gilmore Associated Press Staff Writer MOSCOW, March 25 -(AP) - Rflqi army ski troops were reports 101118111 to have penetrated the out. zkifttf cgfebtaraya Russo, the anchor (yn-AWAI M h 25 __ __ e seged Nazi 16th army, and Viscount Benneiiicfomler Cilggiilan Sh‘; stimdegs announced m“ ‘l ‘av’ Prime Mini-Elsi‘ now in London, said tagck wo- ai, 661mm‘ coumer‘at‘ in a cable received here that seven thauppor ed by Dimes “d tank‘ argue kitchens’ gm or the women mpulgegame general area. had been h Corlse ti . ' 241i. gill be ggdyilefogali-irieséliltfilgn Ngillvllei, dispatches l-ecapitulated April 1. . dead fisincngorélihgn mum m _“_"_'-"—_ The ski unit Whll’! b k NEW DELI". _ _ c r0 e (cry _ 5;. syfffifi." gfilpm Eli-Esta apparently was bearing proposals for greater m“ t g par y‘ n made a rapid independence of India, confer. 11min rekkgcross the i“ 0i Lake red separately today with the eral lldllfljillifidor tge cm’ w ‘we sev- Dresldent of uls mam. Nation- from , CM... 1 tum“ . 91mm“ Ii CMIIF/s Party and the lead- Tom ht.“ * n he cnys envlmns- er of the Moslcm League. two Bald “i, G56 regular cmmunique mnlor comical factions in on; culred on txlllnahkcifllilllter attack oc- lsrld of many diversities. e a i“ "mm 111B LONDON. March “E1119 Elven the area normwegg of bfiffifiillt‘.“i.é’é“i.;i.‘..féle'lfh°°“"" * losses to the enemy." w great t 28 -—('I‘hursday) The Daily Herald German prisoners of il-lelr _.___________ M E L B 0 U l! N I2, Australia. “"611 35-15?) —- The Jup- snese bombed Port. Mnrosby wcahlv and wsrlly from the rc. spectful altitude of 25.000 feel May. while Prime Minister Cur- tln told the Australian lions; cl Representatives that the turning Mint of the war might well be the general allied mcognltlon 0f Ailllrlllil’! high lmpofllnce, -—-_.___ "HALIFAX. March 25 - c?» __ of Halifax Seriously ill Ac. Joseph Calroll Murphy. RC A.11‘..'son of Mr. and Mrs. F. .1. Murphy, Morcll, ls roporied as be- ing dangerously lll in the official casualty list. issued frcm Ottawa. yesterday. It was learned he had entered the hospital Tuesday and breakimz and entering the received word that. ills condition of rubber companies. no was reported lo b.- lmprovln; fol- lowing the operation. Ac. Murphy, who is 22 years cf age, j0ined the Royal Canadian Air Force in Se iember. 1940. He is a clerk socoun n-t. and has been siotlorrd in Ontario since join- lng up. Before going to the Air Force, he stbendcd Si. Dunsislfs University for i/wo years and was well known m sporting circles .._________ OTTAWA. March H —iOP)_ lierulations applied in gcnml elections to prevent eastern rc- turns being made known in the wast before voting has finished will be applied in the Irslnpnw. N‘ plebiscite vote April 21. Jules Casionguay, chlcf electoral af- Secretary of night that the summer would make it plain that "the Nazi rulers of Gennuny have lost the war and have decreed their own ruin." In an address before a Greek in- deipcndcnce day dinner here, Berle a . selves know that ihcre one end. The German people know, as we know, been made by the Nazi government for the year 1943. they need to produce the war are no longer repaired. They know that the skilled workmen and Lord Addiso? Seeks probe of Annual Subscription Delivered, [L00 Representation Pacific Council Malayan events Prime Minist-eT-Mackenzie IDNDON, March four hours before culpy iile three days "for "name," the House of Lords w told today. The information was Ln a leotei- from an oelaeved dead. which was read the House by Lord Addison support of his demand for a Roy Commission to investigate the d fence o1 Singapore. The officer wrote that. he and the from were ordered to prepare a. plan for the occupation of slngora, 40 miles in- SW16 the Thailand-Malaya border, limi- when Japanese transports were the other officers at reported streaming loward town and still a day's voyage awa “permission had to be “Of course Wellington time for the Japanese to land division uninterrupted and their advance " He described the entire Malayan situation as a “disgraceful show, and said irainlng was handicapped respect for Mulzlyaiz rubber estates. One General rcp- rlnlanded him because two of hi5 by excessive trucks hit rubber trees. Says Germans. Know they. Face defeat NEW YORK. March 25 — (AP)— A. A. Berle. assistant United Slates predicted to- oi 1942 State. s . “We now have information from 1115i’ sources inside of Germany making 30- it clear that the Gcrnlnns thcnl- can be but that no provision has l. that the machines tools of ey know he young engineers who must do he production of tomorrow have been and are being sent, half train- ed. to the slaughter on the fightin fronts in Russia. i119 battalions which shattered wrecks. They know tlla no out do not clue back-save as a collection c! ‘They know, indeed. that the men ls Ema have zone to the Russian front re frequently not allowed to come ack to Gennany, lest the German people learn what has befallen." Berle traced the predicted col- lapse of the German war effort to the resistance of Greece in 1941 which, he said, “made possible the reinforcement of the iierranenn" and “delayed man attack on Soviet Russia for several weeks." eastern Med- the Ger- Enemy llaiders Cver Britain Third night DONDON, March 25-(0? Cable) - German raiders io- nlght attacked the southeast- ern English coast. for the third straight night. and also bomb- Iiold Conference ' "w- e" "=1"- Zfléi: ézkd.i‘.i’°lil.loilil db °"...‘..l°.‘.’.‘.“.", "tliicfitiiltll ...=.'e.~l~..v-s."..-.;.a:..:a: revs-ease“: s..a:.*:zz~.::.; mtvular“ a" “"1 =‘='~‘='-'-"'=-=‘°"-'--‘1i~° ‘=11 ‘i’! “was mp.» w hove m s mm Middle last, is l prisoncr of a. his m; brothers and three °';'},“,1"§',,.‘,{,‘,',';,"‘}f§,',°";h,,,,,h 1918x513 “mun” m u: m "r m mac‘ ‘when a terrific anti-aircraft harragc. lcr asfln 1m Phyllis his partners lnstcadloihcr ignite; effort to will more srmcd support for his spring campllfl l! Russia. What Hitler sshcd of Boris nat- urally Wis not lcvcalcd. but the Berlin correspondent of the Zurich wpplpef‘ Die ‘Iht slit l dil- gdtch entitled “Ge my. l. m furkey," dicating that the conversational pivot. The only lc hint ofIOer-man intentions s ven in Die Tats analy- sis of the Hitler-Boris conversa- tlorls was that "Berlin circles" said ‘Turkey was beifll IMMWG W Ril- lnore than a ycsr, drone of plsnca continued for a long time indicating that the Germans were in considerable strength. Coastal observers said tho ground firs was the fiercest in and the Home bombs were dropped in thc cousin! ares, hilt no casual- tica or damage was reported. Earlier, the ll. A. l‘. announ- ced, Briiish bombers and fight- ers attacked shipyards at Lc Trait on the Seine in northern fiance. hhniihcaslofieliavre near the mouth of the Seine. Two enemy fighters were de- atroyad in the attacks and dur- ing other sweeps over the Pas do Cllsis ' France, an sir ministry com- muniquc said. One B. flghtcr was loai_ arcs of northern A. I‘. Iii-Twenty- tbe Japanese landing at Singers in Thailand set off the invasion of Malaya, British forces were ready to oc- iown but had to wait permission from contained officer now obtained from home" to cross the frontier. or Marl- borough would have gone in." the officer wrote. "But for three days we awaited instructions-gust nice a lie also said that in the light of all circumstances, in consultation b68111 with British authorities, it had been decided that. Canada at this timo come more intensive... King says no token force Will be sent to Australia. ()'l"l‘.~\\\'1\, Illzlrch 2s')—(CP)—Cl‘eatiun 0i two tiS t0 al view in the House of Commons. e. free nations. ' Basic coastal defences are “either completed process of completion,” the Prime Minister of attack." In ills speech, Mr. King also revealed that Canada was “not pressing" the request at the moment. should not attempt to pend an expeditionary force to Anitraiia. ~ Mr. Kings speech came during M» i-i;‘i;li.°....°.? i.l‘.-‘“‘.‘.°°.i§§‘i.‘3é?£o.‘“§il{5 Frei ht tie u 1 ‘ g - ll lit Ferry has Been cleared’ yolemeltiary wnr appropriation blll for the current fiscal year which ends next Tuesday. Mr. King preceded his prepared DD6€Cll with comments on post- war reconstruction measures which ale before Parliament and said if. u-as “conceivable” that introduc- tion of such measures might lewd txople to think the government "—i had knowledge leading 1g u; M. lleve all early termination of. the war was possible. "I wisll emphatically to dispel ally p0SSlble> impression cf that kind." he sald. "At no time since the commencement 0f the war was the international situation for the free countries oi the world as it is at present. . . "Ii- W0u1d be little short oi’ a miracle glf the war terminated wlilllll what some would describe as a short time. . . "I have not any doubt that if this year goes by successfully, as I believe it will. with the increased power that will be brought to- gciher from the different United Nations, ultimately the free na- nons will triumph. June. s That freight was mwin to and fmm Prince Edwar Pamenger Agent, st Borden and At times ‘during Flebnlory ,, tlon across the Northumberland I l bfiuev” ‘hey Wm‘ B“ 1”’ Strait; on this side approximately ‘m’ i a‘ ‘gmmem i‘ mm“ b0 cars would be lined along tho "m" i‘ 5° "5 l" be 5 ""117 pier waiting to be moved to tho different world than we have ever known in the past and I believe evcn vastly different from the world as wc know ii at the lnoment_ "Thai. being the case I hops no impression will exist anywhere, either in this House or in this country. that the Government en- l€i'l.l1ll"~ other than the most ser- almcst continuously, cculd ious bus 0f inc very critical slt- on each irlp and at first the lmd- 11$», It cxlsis in the world to- ed ordinary box cars had to be day.‘ moved. However. n 5_\'5if‘f‘f‘l of Consuwalllve House Leader Han- transferring the frclshi from these “m, who followed Mr King 531d to the refrigerator curs was suc- lie lwpcrl file people 0i Canada 995511111!’ Wmkffi 0111' i/"WRTd i119 would llCLti the Prime Minister's 11115511‘ “i 131° 11111111111 , colds. A glance at the figures for freight. movement. balm-con ~hv NM AM," o; Perm Island and the malnlnnd for the first two months cf the CCfllDGllPCl with the you! “I am afraid that even right down to LlllS minute the people of Canada are not. awake to the perils cf the international situa- tiioll." lle said. "The Canadian people, irrespec- tive loci class, race or creed, must get llin any and every effort that it is possible to make to win (Ccmunued m page B‘ Co] 41 fine war." _________ p Mn l-lnllson proceeded to criti- cize operations of the National War services Act. He said it. now was out of date in respect to its regulations which, he contended contained loopholes by which per- sons could evade their respon- in Fcbrmlrv of lhe pTFEGlIl Jannarv 640 came in SPRlut. is Huaev u= You Dow-f Butuzvu slbllitles. V‘? L1‘? 0K : 0N hi: 4 Danger from ¢,.._.;...,..., l East as great OTPAWA. March i5 — (GP) — Prime Minister MccKenzie King told the House of Common: today the major strength of the Royal Canadian Navy ls in the Atlsnflc but that the naval defence 0i 1-110 Pacific ls not being neglected. Referring to the Atlantic posi- tion, Mr. King said:- “In strategic terms, the probabil- ity of attacks upon our Atlantic coast, and upon Newfoundland is as great as it ls upon om" Pacific coast. But for tile shield which Brltcin constitutes, the danger to Canada from Ens-rope would be far greater than the danger to Canada from the far east. "At-tacks by many suamurlnes have been made in cons n1 waters of Canada and the Unlbcd States. In many cases these at-‘ucks hove occurred within sight of the shores of this continent, There is no rea- son to believe that these attacks will not continue and ly be- High bide this morning at 5.30 and this afternoon at 4.40. Sun sep- ihls evening at 619 nnl rises tomorrow morning at 5.52. Pull moon April l, 7.32 n. m. Summerslde ildv 18 milulios later than Charlottetown. BURDEN - CAPE TORMENTINI SERVICE hcavc Bel-cm 8.15 AM. 1.00 PM. vc Capo Tormcntins 11.00 A.» It” PM. ll! liulll P. I’ l. 01.01" to other Provinces and U.l. Ital I_\_I_I_SICNS up! Islands In Bengal Bay Canada Seeking new army divisions as “a mobile reserve" for coastal defence, a “marked increase" in aerial forces for operations in Can- ada, and unlimited plans for naval expansion were announ- m ced today by Prime Minister Mackenzie King in a war re- Mr. King" warned there is no knowledge in possess-inn of the Government to indicate other than a long struggle but he expressed confidence in ultimate victory for the or in said, but “no y_ matter how complete our defences may be we can never be sure 0f preventing the enemy from attempting some form has! asked for representation on the Pacific council to be set up in Washington, but Local Potato Dealer Sees Prospect of Potato Shortage In freely Island at present was the assurance given by Mr. D. B. Bishop. Weight and Charlottetown, yesterday. In contrast to the traf- fic congestion last. month, the pier! ivmnentlne are free of any accumulation of curs. over 100 cars of freight. were held up at Tormentine awaiting transport-a.- mainland. lice conditions delayed the boat for hours 0n crossings xvlih the result that the ferry, working no catch "C! with the freight. At one time as many as 200 refrigerator cars were needed here ilrgently to move potatoes to markets in other parts of Canada and United States. Only ten cars could be taken over 3Q some period lust winter ls interest-inst. Cnrlnads of Height ccmins lnio the province your totalled 5R2 as CDfTHlaWd Willi 792 during the same reriod in i941: in compared V .._...... a-v "r" ' m“ "'1