(lovers Prince 80G. . A , -~ Reach Edward Island Like the Dew cliaiuolrrrrowlv. CANADA. Tl-llnzsminmsircil 22. 194s LUD IGS ssfflcielPwll la JONES) aoi/ERNMENT A i=ol nuns DEFICIT "TlilS YEAR ususrsssssseissyesi-ssslqsse-snsarssawmresisan afternoon by Ion. William lsghes, Pro- iotainsvssrussf provided. account the estimate is for a revenue of 8,000.80! On 505%.: $8,011.80. leaving nu estimated deficit au ordin- _7 "LE: e the Qessesal items Island Veterans w...» a...» h“ l" “n” Z.°.."?‘.‘.‘.‘.Z“fi..““s...;;.:a.§i . = ........... .2. ........... .. 110,000 ill "still" 5'"! s... Administration. Of Pro- 100m 21000 ass-in -(OP)1-‘- "m "m an o,aso Total Ordinary Revenue 02,408,808 \ Capital Revenue Fisherman's loans 030000 Youth Training-Dominion Oontri T. L. lihurch llot Excited liy Plan For World Security ineffective. The league of nations was a. myth a hum at had led the world into sno er war. Mr. Ciiurui said he th something would come o of the n Oaks proposals, but he felt that the time for the holdl of a conference wee not vet ripe- ullot (1nd. L- of world security II; premature because the great powers were not yet ready to consider disarmament. New time to consider secur- i’? d be after the restoration pesoeband stability when it would bepces letobringsboutaleh- d rsnesnent. Alllflil Mscfnnis (COIL-Vancou- ver East) said he could see no way of avoiding war unless Internet 0.60 art. White Sands I -l h; p3, Boyle, Charlo ietcwn. Floods Along Parts 0f St. Lawrence llivcr MONTREAL March 2l.—(CP)-— m flooding ‘at. Lawrence River receded from suburban St. Lambert slid was dropnins ill fpi-igueull, but resid- 4 prairie. a short distance up the river. re It waters were con I t0 9- Some so families have already been forced from their homes at Laprsiris. wheramcre than three feet of water covered the streets m£t.delnut's-lliifngsosgfe'braectlons of will still moved about in row- todsy- but the water level was ‘Apiie-up Victoria Bridge. eh TH». yesterday. was breaking up of its own accord y. t-liaturity liatss 0f 8th. ilictory Bonds OTTAWA, March 31 - (OP) - Hnsnce Minister Ilsley announced tonight that Canada's eighth vic- loan, opening April 33 with ,a minimum obicct ve of 01.300.000.- 000 will be offered in two maturities -one of is years and five months and the other cf four years arid six months. The lo 4am issue bea in- terest at t r cent, will mature it 100 00$. l. l , and Will Cll shorter issue,‘ be con rm. irfocs, all“! able before maturity. u-niiii-s Coming Events smiii "Loading at Iredericwn. iw 2- y“, stir “i” ‘sans: ' "K0500 — Loading h at Ai- law. ‘lbgsdsv. . mm MIL l '10“ H1 . III! e ‘ii iisifir. o. ma‘ ‘r152. aldon its; 0- Green N S~I~IL s '_'_/ " “$1 i‘..°8s.'°'u33§"n$ v??1‘-=§ii'.s"i""".an.=s““&‘ “our . ..._.... w]: lloluianéslfnlsturday, HT .BiNDlN (Continued on page 9. Col. d) Maritime Marine Workers Federation SAINT JOHN, up, Maren Leslie, Sydney, 11.8.. was elected resident lbsrinc Workers Feder- ay'a concluding session of a three-day convention held for the purpose of organizing the fed- oration. Other officer; elected were. vice- reeldent George Phalen. In - urg, N.s., secretary treasurer J B, Bell. Saint John: general cr- ganizer James Finlay, Halifax; executive committee members. Angus Maolieod. Saint John; Les- lie Rowe. Sydney: Iii-G. Clarke. outh, N.S.; William Fvnn, Mctezli-sn NS. Gerald Mc- Ieaec._ Halifax. ilrges Less Publicity Be Given Extremists OTTAWA, March 2i -- (CP - Senator Cyrille Vaillanccurt, ber- sl member from Quebec. today ur- ged in the Senate that extre Canada be given less publicity in newspapers. In moving the address in reply to the Speech from the Throne Senator Vaillancourt said that alt s and for victory t ere were extra “who are attempting to smash our Canad " a. These extremists, whether they came from east or west, were mal- efaclors and all men of goodwill shoutld co-operata to keep them e qu . Be appealed to ewspapsr pub- lishers to stop reporting the lies and calumnies read extremists. because these les an“ 82211111108 c in . When someone a tempted to sat one section of the country against the other, one religion against a- nothen- one race against er s certain section c the Canada gathered “i: these state- ments and spread em across the eo the reply to th a Throne lan (n-rtsvs loo pcech reflec fég“ 1'" ii’£.'s'l'nt‘.‘i“é';s‘ eo- ney before them the' we ‘fiisllihminif. ills? offal fiigmw "loyal cc-operation‘ lan at home. *1 Liberal cf iihc b ‘g6 m n iolnal relations were brought with- Twill“ meyufr’ ' hunk“ g; mm n, _. Igventione in tarznsocrte/tion and hills. 0X1 “if”, “a, ma“, ham, cmtflmmn 159w communications within the last 5&3 ‘m “W” w'"""° “m” hills’ idntiidfs"iis"ii’s'iiiv‘.i°ihi 55"“ "Pa: figures '"‘ 139mm“ W3‘ “m” h l; dofolnaticns tsholliigdll-e rauscmum n hum-mp "a _ _____ rouiz un er aws. .us as y: I gg,tkwori Lower on - Total Capital Revenue .... .. 0100.000 “gt m ‘an Wmmilnit; were M?‘ frqtglfitevgsaug SZUZUC Turn. n, $1M“! behalf of his party to support the world security resolution under de- bate Wilfrid IsaOrclx (Int-Quebec Montmorency) said that he would vote against tho. government's re- solution because he believed it his duty to prevent Canada from be ing dragged into another war and because he wished to protest a- gainst Russia's annexation of parts of Poland and the Balkans. Mr LaCroix, who bolted from the partv over the conscription issue last fall. said the war had een started in 1000 because Hit- ler wanted to annex part of Pol- and. Yet in 1000 United States agreed to let Russia do what Hitler wanted to do. Three at Yal Munich. The democracies had cani- tulated before Stalin just as they had caoituiated before Hitler. Maior WE. arr-is (L-Grev- Bruce) said members should eon- elder Canada's position in relation to the rest of the world realistic- ally. Canada was bound to the rest of the British Commonwealth by strong ties cf sentiment. There were many narts of t British Commonwealth which was essential, t Canadian security. to ly hands. Csnad. with the United and had largely causes of dispute and suspicion in its relation with that country. OTTAWA. March 2i — (OP) - Anprovai of Canada's participation in n“ 5m nsncieco world secur- ity conference by s israe meioritv became assured av in the 00 mons when Gordon Gravdon. Pro- aressive Conservative house leader. placard his party on record in sup- l‘ mAt the seine time he expressed diggistllf-‘lntiml with Prime Minis- on- Mmxwgie Kinfa nroncuia for eciection of the Canadian deline- wi" include opposition members, to the confer-enm- ‘He “med "an unprovoked sihlit" ‘Mr. 11m fiflhllQ out the v-nulhilitv of ‘ohv. Bracken. national Prowressive Conservative leader. goin! i0 B111 1n- .i '31,? Hugh-t (L-Parrv Found) lots? slid he W88 "- P lOI-i '10 I99 wvhv Mr. Bracken 0mm! so to the Madeira-a... '1.‘ Col. " i) Railway lien Save Important Bridge OANNtNG. N. S. March Ii — (W) —- Maintenance men h won a 15-day fght against flco nemin and ice Jams at threatened to the ion Atlantic Railway bri s near here, on the only rail l with the outside world for s. 1 section d east- meadow Railwaymsn lnsinta hour a day . ms. rap d fiinltin‘ 0f the brlfis ng ltflldtilfl 1.. I thl fldtfilfl. Britain and the t0 .' ( hslllguifleauceoftlie Tv... ‘Situetion Last Dy XIII! L. SIIDSON Associated Press War Analyst) utter rout and virtual au-lsihilation of two Gm-mau armies in ‘the Bhirls-Moselle-Saar box can be measured only when the next test comes on the Blaine Itself. Is Spreading A M06607 Al. iiiaocc. . n‘; The Canadian rmi WESTERN FRONT .- American drive into Ludwigshafeu; debacle of Saur-Palatinate may cost Hitler 100,000 lnen killed, wounded or cap- tured: Germans claim Montgo- mery's forces in northern sector ready to attack. EASTERN FRONT - Ruaslr-na push ipearhearl within sir miles southwest of Dauzir. forge M-rulle siege are around nlty, drive with- in two miles of cutting coastal road Gdynla. . AERIAL - ILAJI‘. Mcsoultos hit Berlin Wednesday nisht for Mill consecutive r-ivht- more than 1.000 Allied aircraft- hit variety of tar- gets in slavllsht. ACIFIC - Ilolln falls to Am- ericans nn Pauly Island in Phil- ippines a BURMA — British and Indian troops Increase nreaallre on 80.000 Japanese ssmeesed in neck-t be- tween Mandalay and Meiktila. ll. S. Revises Election Act HALIFAX, March a! - (C?) - Brcaden cf advance polling pro- visions to nclude all men and worn- en i_n the armed services, railway - an commercial travellers was requested today in the l islature when Pre- mier AS. Mao illan moved sec- ond reading of a bill to revise the Nova Scotia elections act. The Premier said he hoped short- rnake s. statement on voting seas. and t the bill would be amended in committee to make special provisions for them. He said overseas authorities have been consulted on the most tical means of voting by en overseas. The method under con- sideration is proxy voting. which somot ectlo culd be w hing new in Nova Scotia el . ly to regulations IgItNOVI. Sections over- start B 1,4111% ca} < ) a Front-line repel-rs reflect sas expectation um it will come at d, . . llflfll . -— e I mo“ 1 ) u“ to moment, probably in the north. Iield Marshal Moutgome y s ABC Anny t G hm "" m" m‘ ‘new: map of American. lei-nun and Canadian troops n» been poised thero no l" o; m. mm!‘ wmmmh for days on the west bani: awaiting Gen. Iiiselshowers signal to cross ' - Auk‘ I “m”. I 1e aa -_ m u ' * gulch, the “we ggggqba-nd over rm i:- heart ofhiudustrlsi eel-may. a“... M? 'i..i'.."“““°'* w“... '..":..."""..'-'...°*"-- 'r.l"""rr""sz. i214"- Pr" "i?" w M m“ M“ - - ue e ve rraoa asryw ere R “m? mmfiffgdfi§ human‘ "W"! 0f 90108110 to the Arnhem corner on the Nader Rhine must have e the security charter is rnwn up. 5°“ l" "1' 0' ’ ‘ " No road or fig w, champ 1n conggnud qe. rail huvuing many routes leading to the Ruhr from the east has on wor security. been e oo . He hevlenctee eolcin mlmsiesefeeemvlumlssssariveseasunlusstsms WA.M h2l—(CP)-- lumen! w ieioleinss snlnrlie pssu- m, m, “m,” “nu "mum n” L, “- u” m” m“ f: Health Ministel-“Ciaxtcn said to- “ p“ ofierm°lootbat isolated pockets are usopped up and the air-harried frsg- d” m“ "$00900 °t m” I'm-mo chem n meats racing for the sisrlvelllug escape gap between Karlaruhe and 3:23;,“ “wowggggga bglillnhllgcellyfi Previous expel-Iona had 11mm Ludwlgshafen are herded against a presumably brldgelesa river. July and m m, use w“ anyone m that security organisations were German armies have suffered greater loses in roan in this war bu they‘ never been so alapedhsndoshrieddedmaad utterly di to m as a Rhlne-Moselle- r x. es-man work seems ve at brokers down completdy as It dd ulst lu the retreat from the Volga and the Vistuis or the flight from France or Southern Italy. That is a factor in the situation that cannot yet be evaluated. If it reflects ss it seems to do a morale as well‘ as a military collapse in German army ranks in the west there is no telling where it will stop. Criticism Of Nazi Party In Germany Newsman Tells Of Chaos In Parts Of Germany; Whole. Counts-v Is Becoming Refugee Camp- (The writer of the following article. for 1'1 years Berlin cor- respondent cf the Swedish news- paper. the Stockholm-Tldlrigen, has just returned to Stockholm). . . 3! fllriltcrm-Iaederlund (Cflliyflsh 194% Iy)’fhe Assoc ress SIOOICHOLM, March 31 (AP) - A train from Bydgcazcz, bear local Nazi party leaders, reccrity arrived at a Berlin rail- way station while thousands of ti? capital's residents stood out- C. The smartly uniformed leaders, who were the first to leave in northwestern Pol- and, as the Red Army approach. ed. carried all their luggage and were met by a fleet of motor cars. their contrasted sharply with the misery of other see efug . The Berliners spoke their minds. The crowd grew so threatening the party leaders became nervous and ordered the guards to fire- into the air. The affair became so widely known that the leaders had to gay with their lives. They had rokeu the one condition under which Hitler allows his Nazi comrades liberties at the expense of the population. They had been found out. _ These Berlin people were no rabble. Their attitude represent.- ed the true feelings of the German relation and they had to be calm- Therefore Hitler ordered the execution cf the Bydgosscs party leaders as doser rs. Party offi- in Berlin. ' cd about the dent. were directed to say it was “merely shooting ractice." Vast ‘llefulec amp Germany has become a vast red ee cam/p, and the refines probes-n is one reason for the ' ,, which has developed be- tween the Nani party. the army and the ordinary civilian. I saw at first hand an example of this cleavage when I travelled on a refugee train from Scrau. at the Silesiari front, to Berlin. Our train was scheduled to at 10.30 A. M. The people of Sorau tried to storm aboard but the were fended off by armed pa ylinen and policemen who o a cordon around the sta- ticn. Three hours later Russian tanks reached BOTH-I'd outskirts and only then was the evacuation pennltted to begin. _,_.._._.___._._. / tovtbiZ/‘ifl. fliz/a/uszs/ _(C5l_ltinll9.d_°il.ll.l8_e_1._C0l.__6) ‘i “l mcn i atnry income group be "worse off" oug ax re- sulting from the payments. At a press conference in the par- liamentary press gallery, Mr. Clax- ton said that his advice to Can- adian parents was for them all to register for the family allowance payments, scheduled to begin about Jll y M 1n the cases of all but some 200,- familios in the high income groups there will be some benefit from the family allowances. In the cases of the higher income fam- ilies the allowance payments would drained back intc the treasury through income tax. Anyone could figure whether they would benefit from the family al- lowances. A man could work out his income tax for this year and then work it out again on the as- sumption that he had no children. The difference would be the ex- emdition he is allowed for his ch dren and thisamount could be com sred with the amount he would rece ve under the allowance pay- meir . The scale of family allowance payments is $5 poi- month r a ch id under six; S6 per month for a chilc betweenslx and. 10; S7 per h for a child between 10 and l3. and ti! per month for a child between 13 and l6. For the fifth child the allowance is reduced by $1 per month, for the sixth and sev- enth children by s2 per month, andi for the eighth and each additional child by $3 per month. The rate of exemption for children under the Income Tax Act had not been -changed. The exemption would ‘only be reduced bv the a- mount by which an individual be- nefited from farni allowances. This meant that no one would be "worse off" by reg plying Na ional registration of the ap- proximately 3,500,000 children un- der 16 years of age will get under way tomorrow. Mr. Claxtori said. Family allowance application forms now were in the hands of post of- fice officials and would be distri- buted in eight provinces. Registra- tion already has been completed in Prince Edward Island, which served as a testing ground for re- gistration procedure. llity 0f Peace In 10 PAGES idol tll child! Ill t. t r.:=:'........r"" "*- MAXIMS OI‘ A Lil-DRE MAN lentlea petal Saar Degrade Costs. Casualties American armored forces industrial city of Ludwlgshzif e_d or captured. inated effort of the war hurl River east of Berlin. and Canadian armies at the “at. any hour,” probably with chute divisions. An unidentified armored divis- ion of the 3rd Army fought its way into Ludwigshafen, whose popula- tion had been swelled from 100,000 to 150.000 in recent years because it was packed with war industries. Fleeing German troops blew up the imposing briQe which con- nccted Isildurlgeiladen with its twin industrial city of Mannheim just across the Rhine. The armored division which drove irito Ludwlgshafen after a spectacular '1 l-2-niiie plunge from the west threw a flanking column tot the Rhine a mile nrxth of the oi y. American heavy bombers knock- ed out 11 German alrfields east of the Rhine opposite Field Mar- ihalG Mon-tgolgtenrig; Atillied “rimnlfis. , 31111081.. . 08 as t e G man llgh Command expected iii Allies to attemipt to land para- chute troops lli the area and had "made necessary preparations." United States 1st Army troops pushed out more than three miles at the northern end of their Re- magen-Erpel bridgehead east of the Rhine and seized more than seven miles of the southern bank of the Sieg River, extending from the Rhine to the town of Nieder- pleis, 5 l-2 miles east of Bonn. German infantry led by tanks made three new counter-attacks against an American-held airfield near Eudezibac‘ at the northeast corner of the bridgehead, but all were decisively beaten off, Cattle Going To U. S- ' OTTAWA, March 21 — (CF) - An Agricultural Department spokes- man said today Canada was ex- porting no beef cattle to the United States because all surplus meats nrcduced wtfé being ~scnt to Bri- tain where they go into a common nool for the use of civilians and the armed services- The United States supplies her own forces dir- c y. rs Canada Suggested OTTAWA, March 21 -— (C?) - Creatlon of a "City of Peace" in Canada to bpcomc the homo of itie ne-w world security organiza- tion was Proposed ‘may in the commons by Arthur Slhght, Lib- eral member for Parry Sound con- stituency in Ontario. Mr. Slaght, speaking in tire de- bate on the San Francisco security conference, urged that the can. adian delegation extend an invita- leaat some pa t of headquarters n Canada. “Th t think," lnterjcctcd Gordon G don, Progressive Coriservaltlilc- house leader - "I am ad to liear it." Mr Slsgbt or could better be adopted sa ac- ceptfibic to all nations, greet and srna ' All-OHM‘ of a site for a new city ‘ Cit Of Reece" should . Be mentioned particularly the Ottawa valley, the Gatineau Hills, the Niagara district and the Rocky Mountain . Many White Flags Appear In Coblenz wrrli‘ us. THIRD ARMY, mien 21 — (AP) — White flags have peered 0n virtually evicry build- de flfdm f 3 1-2 h . ftfaytlaficd in ..°“i,..§§.~....t of aodlrriaig store and thr icncd an entire i ousloam uses.“ s ticn to the new organization, or at it, to establish is a definite possibility, I gl said. "What country has a better claim for that consideration Y be- the Canadian Govern- Cocks. llew Service For ilomc-lioming Men HALIFAX, March 2i — Mark- ing an innovation in the conveni- cnces afforded to soldiers return- llig from Canada, two casualties who returned aboard the hospital ship "Lady Nelson" on Monday were able to 5198K to their fam- ilies by long-distance telephone from Halifax Military Hospital. They were Cpl. G. A. Barkhouae, who called its aunt at Berwick. and Ptc. W. I. Green who was able io speak to his mother at St. Eleonora. P. E. l. This service is one of the out- lets for the newly-created Hos- pital Gifts Fund. set up st the suggestion of the District Officer Commanding. Brigadier D. A. White, D.S.0., and administered by a coln-mit of which the chairman is Lt-Ool. H, F. C. MC. District Chaplain, Protestant. The fund is built up out of the accumulated profits of and regimental institutes in the District and this placing of long- dlstarlce ‘phone facilities at.thc dimcsal of . urning soldiers is only one of its outlets. The idea behind the creation of the fund was that large undistributed can- th last. and that it is more desirabl: that the troops get as much bene- ffim u” gust-bank mum Bus- fit as possible while still serving. cf Ocglmz, apparently intro; -——<—— m... ma? mrm" ' Xogd Hslg- for» mlm ‘m! E866 ar ey "uh __ BOSTON, March ll - (AP ._. mg‘ __ A mg m?" 01mm“ an“ Ropresentativ George T. Langan an ‘damn! as h,“ u mo told the legislative committee on w“ under mm“, u, m’ constitutional law ay that he business district here today after “mum “p” PM‘ ° t w b‘ n" presented at the peace conference. . nigan, in answer to q tions by the committee. ,sai Iail. 80.00; other Provinces I U.S.A. N.‘ Subscription Delivered. $8.00. (By The Canadian Press) amid indications that the debacl of the Saar-Palatiriate would cost Hitler a total of 100,000 soldiers killed, wound- More than 7,000 Allied aircraft in the greatest co-ord- over Germany, while on the Eastern Front the Russians massed huge forces of nier. and armor all along the Oder As defeat piled upon defeat on the Germans along the Western Front, the enemy claimed that British, American were preparing to strike across the Rhine into the Ruhr The American bridgehead at Remagen was pushed northward another tlirecmiles toward the Ruhr, front dis- patches reporting only ligiii enemy resistance. No Canadian Beef f ‘ ...... a... ____ __. drove into the big German ;. en on the Rhine last night ' ed 12,000 tons of explosives northern end of the front the aid of reinforced. para- lfing Appears Pleased After Party Caucus orrrawa, March a1 - (c?) - Qniling broadly as he left a. two- ‘ hour Liberal party caucus here this .. afternoon. Prime Wr Man- Kenziermoclr ha _ all round vrith and said 0f the meeting that ‘ “‘ uld have co been more ei-ihecrieTiTng or satis- ut he did not go into details, fa tory. mere! saying that a wide range of s iecte was covered and ex- received from members romeo various tidings across Canada Replying to s reporters question, he sad the composition of the Canadian world security delegation had not been discussed. sinus 0F Ltafiiik c seen (o oldies METEOROLOGICAL SERVICE, TORONTO. March 21 - (CF) -. Minimum and maximum temper- aturea: Vancouver 3'7, 50; Edmon- r ton 3'5, 47; Regina 30. 64: Winnipeg ' :17. 63: Toronto 37. 48; Ot Saint John s2; cum 2'1, ~ tliiallfax 30. 47; Charlottetown 27, tawa 35, FORECASTS Lower St. Lawrence: Fresh winds- ‘ mostly cloudy and cool; occasional ‘ light rain or snow in west portion. Lake St. John: Gerieraib fair and cool. North Bay: Moderate winds; fair and moderately cold. , Gulf. and Bay Chaleur: Moderate to fresh winds; partly cloudy with much the same cmperature. Maritime West: Fresh to strong winds; cloudy with s. l ht to moderate rain or snow ~ c fly in south portion. Maritime last: Fresh winds; i mostly cloudy and cool with oe- i, ossional I h snow or part f rain chiefly in Nova Scotla. i,‘ ti . .30.‘... 2n..*’..‘Li..’“f.“‘.‘fd. “ “‘ i Sun sets is rises hill moon March . L44 PM DAILY All! SERVICE Charlottetown - Suuauserside- lleaotau Ina CIIIPIOISISOII ‘I. 7Q ...."'"s:..~.:i.=.:.*: r5. CI IJO PM» I.“ P."- IUNDA! IQVICI Inave Charlottetown IIJI. 5.45 I l. Arrive Charlottetown sse. sis r ‘A ’ cuan _ ~ * NEW (ILA (Daily Exeepa m i not consulted the Roman Catholic hierarchy about his prcpo al o Lea clllll ttew r.’ A. and’. Charleitestaw: wit: if: .1