.mxrus _ or a MERE MAN. muwmi . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARIDTTFTOWN. CANADA, TUESDAY, MARCH 1a, 194s ‘s? Read Everybody 10 PAGES they How many lay up riches which lgencica that never happen. Maxims OIL MERE MAN never ch10! to provide for ex- Mail, $4.00; other Provinces It (LS-A. $5.00. ‘ Delivered. $5.00. LLIED DRIVE EAST 0F RHINE lliiteers Entered l| lloncton Show DNCTON, N 3., March l2 -— lint 100 head of steers hayc been ntued in the fourth Maritime fat ec-le opening hem ' afternoon. Entries were tidied from all three Maritime . W.D Davies. (mews. l"! twice l‘ HIM WOIKMTB NEBDID gnqmsrcam- ‘s? mil O . I B the osricuitunal labor posi- .‘.“ ?°'€'l'““ 9'38“ 1"" ‘I.’ US S!!! Q Z . tbousandswdt baélfbahfea s""‘“""~a....-.=r.. m“ “our “Box Social and Dance a. Vern- . 81-11. a-orn 2nd. a-ra-ar. “ _._ > Jllerve Easter Manda . ll lastllciufi dance aridygugpizn Wllhwna I Nook ‘ Wmwdw "Wow w st. Patrick's Concert. l" ne Hall. March 15th. l (Ma-at dlmdlfls has every Thursday Dlvis 6e Fraser Ltd. rlyn . Paakea. 1- -tf ‘lama coal at and ednasday. "lilrdvn our.» All m late-n - best varlet ea. Bend fear free , "Wwue. Arthur veeey. d _ s-wr. . “a ursday, March : Jim following night. a-il-al "bum and aale of ling. Wedneada ‘ "mmvall-vorx Point w ' ‘ me Pm s“ t omen- vm. rug-v. Mzmi: 1m ti..- STRONGPOIN T FALLS American forces in the west and the Russians in the east, can be seen on this map. The Red Army ls almost on the doorstep of the Belch capital in the east, while on the Western l-‘ront the western Alilea are beginning tr. rip apart the principal ' areas of Germany. The relative positions of Allied armies. both the Brltlsh-Canatliau- I 3-18-21. i-Jbi d @5911 McNaughton Makes vileport Defence Minister Gives Information At Press Conference. OTTAWA. lid-arch l2 -— (OP) — Defence Minister McNaughton said hero today that whilo perhaps 20 per cent of the drB-ftces ordered overseas had stll not reported at embarkation ports dais. 01W long-tom reinforcement situation war, "highly satisfactory and this together with a reduction in oss- ualties over official estimates had resulted in increased leave quotas for long-service overseas veterans. The general came to a PINS confercnce in the o ’ ' oouncl at National Defence Headquarters. bearing large folders and charts containing information on rein- forcelementlhd dsggaiafifiés 371m‘ 7°“ mI-[teorlseflfilllcd to this material in gmwering questions, but said he was bound by security and "wk “I pfefllsg information in releasing ific tails spec de . no; quota; for the overseas V” n“ from terana II lll r000 a month to 1,000 for March and 2.000 for April. he announced Further increases will bo made If the situation w lliil ll addltionallhzfean 01mm N- i IV Qt Provided the present satlafac- wry rate of intake into the train- in‘ org-um was maintained it. In! hoped there would be no necessity to call on these men for further overseas They would be re- '.',h"'Ts. 291.‘ o‘ duty Educational W“ M h l2 -- (GP) _ A ptgglfigof eadrrlcatlonal reform nianhoba. 00119?“ ‘m u” t e “more of larcer school u, udmlnlstratgnk! med rzo 9P0 ' 9° §mmfi§°‘,“,,,'“p,-“..vlnola1 Legislature. w?" rt is the work of a l0- rnernbar legislative committee, un- d, we malrmnmhio of Hon. Ivan scam“, former Education Minia- m. M“; n01] hcad of the Health Wlfififiinsna. higher minimum in of uni a|na Fri . " b Oaseleyd." “slim sllgrlea for teachers as an inuned- Fear 3 Dead Wllen ls L§t SAINT JC-HN’. N.B . March 12- (CP) TWO men lost their lives and a third was believed dead after a tugboat sank in Courtenay Bay here this afternoon. Six men were rescued. The known dead: Does; Boud- roau, of Bcudrcau Village, West- morland County, N.B., and Blake third victim. Douglastown. NB . l0 have been trapped inside the small boat. » The tug, under charter to the Saint John Tuqbcat Company. was towing s. vesse from the drydock on Courtenay Bay when the ac- cident occurred near the entrance to the Courtenay Bay ohannnel. Other tugs picked up the survivors. Cause of the sinking was un- known tonight. The tug suddenly went down like a stone. la ll "it ttom of the boat had fallen out. Those at the scene said thdre had been no collision and the bolt had not strudr unit-lain!- Boudreau, cock on the tuq, died of shock and exposure after he was taken ashore The other two victims were firemen. A life preservcr we; thrown lo Creamer but he sank before he could reach it. Further efforts to recover the body of Taylor from the sunken wreck will be made to- marrow. Roy Ma—v_Re"flVel‘ From Bullet Wound mile to the Jellison He is a son of Maj. Harold M. L Reform Recommended In Man. | late necessity. and that the UNV- lnce should assume 50 per cent of one hoop; operation costs of edu- cation. The present salary for teachers is $7M. l?‘ The committee - l»! immediate increase to 01 and lame, when Dorninion- al llnnnog are drifted, a minimum of 1 o. Aafllonai provincial taxation. of a sales tax. will he required finance im- roved educational standards, hq IQQOTI. ' ' Death Yesterday 0f Archdeacon six soviet ilenry ll. llayrnond Armies Drive Towards Berlin northeast of Berlin. f Marshal G. H. Zhukows 1st White were thrusting toward the capital from brldgeheads west of the river. Announcement of the capture of Kuastrin after a. week of bit r street fighting was made by Prem- ier Stalin in an order of the day which was the first. Russian con- firmation of a smash toward Ber- With the fall of Kuestrin. which had a pre-war population of 22.- 000, Zhukows forces were array- ed along 1110 miles of the Oder's east bank from Crossen, 65 miles southeast of Berlin. to the Stettiner Huff. the lagoon into which the river empties north of the be- sleized port of Stettin. Meanwhile the Russians prea- secl their heavy attacks on Stet- tln Danzla and Gdynia. To Build Ships For Porpoise Hunting VEN. ARCIIDEACON RAYMOND News was received here of the death in Toronto yesterday of Venerable Archdeacon Henry Doug- las Raymond. 0.0.. pastor for twenty years of St. Paula Church. Charlottetown. and a prominent figure. during that time. in the religious life of the Province. Archdeacon Raymond came to St. Paul's in 1919, succeeding the Rev. P. W. Murphy. and remain- ed untll i930 when ill health com- pelled him to retire. During his 1on3 pastorate here he took a lead- ing part in such organizations as the Bible Society. the Children's Aid Society. and the Temperance Alliance. He was a man of high ‘(Continued on page ‘l, C3171? QUEBEC. March i2 -— (C) - Two ships for the hunting of por- poise on the banks of Magdalen Islands in the Gulf of 8t. Lawrence will shortly be built at nearby 8t. and of Orleans. Laurent, on the Isl it..wa.s learned tnda By KIRKE L. SIMPSON (Associated Press War Analyst) German reaction to the surprise breaching of the Rhine defence moat at Remagen has been on too restricted a. scale thus far to indicate enemy pious for ’ “ with the No ' ‘ ‘ “ ‘ nor even a concentration of depleted “ air power has been report- ed since the first American patrols reached the east bank. That might be due in part to the desire of encmy commanders to await clearer evidence than is yet available as to just how and in what direction Allied leadership would attempt to exploit what certainly was an u ‘ ’ success. For the first three days after the easi- bank lodgement was gained, the efforts of the United States lst Army appeared aimed more at widening the bridgehead than at deepening it. Pressure secured ‘ northward. up river, also. than southward al- though more favorable terrain for expanding the bridgehead lies downy river. In any event, enemy sensitivity to the extreme north flank of the line along the Rhine is obviously unrelaxed. It is in that area from Weael to E ‘ ‘ or Arnhem Berlin broadcasts now locale the missing] ports or field Illlplllfihcl- “ commentators say a tremendous Allied build-up for new llthlne crossings in the north is in progress, which may be true. It has always seemed probable that Gen. Eiscnhowe ‘s main effort to jump the river would fall in that sector. The flat. open ground of the Han- overian plain east of the lower Rhine offers better prospects of man- oeuvre warfare than the hilly. largely-wooded terrain back of the Coblenz-Colcgne stretch of the river. With the odds in numbers. mot- nrlzed equipment and particularly In air all in Allied favor, manoeuvres to come to grips with and destroy “ armies in the field must be a prime Eisenhower objective. It la likely, therefore, that the German command is unwilling to pull heavy forces out o! the line in the north to meet the Remagen bridge threat until convinced that the Allied success there has brought about a complete revision of previous plans. An even more dangerous situation could result from an Allied crossing of the Rhine in the north where no natural obstacles exist to help contain it than has yet de- veloped from ‘ icon seizure of the Remagen bridge. f German reports credit the lst Army with having put up to twzvl divisions east of the Rhine in the first three days. That would imply nl total of anywhere up to 40,000 men with auxiliary elements. It would take much greater forces both to obtain and consolidate a bridgehead, now substantially a doaan miiu wide and three to four miles deep and‘ also to furnish ample striking power for strategic exploitation of the ‘noxpootod . No commander would be willing ic risk an army of such lilo with only I single, vulnerable bridge behind it to ensure Ila communications. If enemy military commentators an to be taken at face value. how- ever. Gen. nhower, despite the Remagen crossing which chased the whole tactical and strategic picture on the Rhine overnidhl. has not yet abandoned his original plane for forcing the river in the north. Inspector-General For Western Canada fence Headquarters announced to- nlgni, The appointment ls effec- tive immediately. Gen, Turner leaves the post of special assistant to the deputy Minister oi Veterans‘ Affairs to take the inspector generagh . UITAWA. March 12 — (GP) -- MaL-Gen. Cu R. Turner. 5b. of lbur Falls, 11.3%., and Ottawa, has GIVES FIINER niasuars‘ o l British 2nd Army, unmcntioned for many days In Allied official re-‘B five days ago. Opening 0f House This Afternoon The second session of the forty- flffh General Assembly of the Province will be opened at 3 o'clock this afternoon by His Hon- our Lieutenant Governor B. W. LePage, who will deliver the cus- tomary Speech from the Throne. As in other war years, ceremonial display will be dispensed with. The Lieutenant Governor will be accompanied by his aides Lt.- Col. J. R. Paton. M.C.. ares corn. mandlant. and lat-Commander C. P. MacKenzie, officer commanding H. M. C. S. “Queen Charlotte," and private secretary Bruce Won- nacott. LL-Col. P. S. Fielding will be present. representing the officer commanding Military Dis- trict No. 6. Other officers invited include Col. G. E. Full, officer com- manding the 42nd (R) Brigade Group. Group-Capt. c.. n. Price, O. C. No. 2 Navigation School. H. C. A. F.. Charlottetown: Group- CBPL A- MW“. O.C.,No. 1 H; and N- -- RC- F» “ununersidc: 3791113431113- W. J. McFarlane. 0. C. No. l0 B. and G. School, R. C. A. 1i. Mt. Pleasant, Inspector An- 11913011. R.C.M.P., and Chief of Police A. Birtwistle. The disposition of seats in the House - 20 Liberal, l0 Coneerva. tlve -— remains unchanged from last session. One new member will be present in the person of Mr. Eugene Cullen. Sherwood, who was elected by acclamation last July to the seat in Third Queen's for. merly held by Hon. M. R. Mo. Gulgan. ._;_. iligh Price For Two CIdBooks TT-DNDON. March 12 —IReuters) no hundred pounds ($901M were paid at ‘Solhebyfs salesrooms today torua first edition Ellzgbefl] “auett Brovmlngs earliest book, The Battle Of Marathon," print- ed in 1820. A two-volume edition of Stvifiis ‘Gulliver's Travels," with colored illustrations by Rex Whistler, fetched c260. ' Says 1TIO_,000 Joli; Available In Canada WINNIPEG. March 12 - (C?) —- llnbor- Minister‘ Mitchell said in an interview here today there nre100,- 000 Jobs available m Canadian in- dustry at the present and this num- The Ruhr’s munitions basin, less lhe Rhine, so A front dispatch said one forcel drove eastward, ovcrrunnirlg Gin-l sterlialm and l-lurgurien nearly‘ four miles east of the Rhino, and‘ Dressed beyond to within three, miles of a super-military highway leading into the Ruhr. I Already one lateral highway’ feeding the German front had‘ been severed in this drive. soulluvard prong drove into Hocn- ningen, six miles south of Re-‘ magen and ll miles from WHEN?! the northernmost forces were‘ battling to subjugate l-lonnel’. Meanwhile enemy broadcasts . predicted that soon Field Mar- l shal Montgomery, commander of 1 the 21st Army Group. would lash | out across the Rhine north of Wesel ln a grand scale offens- ive to clamp a giant plncers on the Ruhr. German resistance on ihe Rhine's east bank oppos- ltc Wesel collapsed Saturday be- fore the onslaught of the lst | Canadian and United States ‘ an. Armies. i A news dimout settled over most] of the Western Front. where for. 150 miles along the Rhine Gen. Eisenhower holds the initiative and has armies in position m! cross at any number of points. One enemy account said the British 2nd Army was making "frantic preparations" for a cros- insz between the Netherlands bor- der and Emmerich. nine miles to the cast. This territory had been. cleared of Germans in the lsti ganadian Army's drive tc the ne. Riots Reported i In Munich Area I I STOCKHOLM. lilarch l'.l-—<AP) —-llic nmvspaper Aficnlidningen in .1 l<‘])O1'l. attributed 1o German, sources said today rlois brukr out. m Munich, birthplace of N:izl.<m.. last night in protest against the.’ continuance of the war. ‘ "Latest reports indicate the Bav- arian Capital is complcivly cut off‘ frcam the rest of the \\'Dl‘ld," l; rid-l The dispatch said street fighting, started Sunday evening during ex- encises markin Heroes‘ Day. g the German No Danger 0f Tea, Coffee Rationing TORONTL). MJWJll 1i! - ICPl-J Stocks of lea and collu- in Can- ado. are such ‘ that with normal consumption more l5 no dairger of l:er will be lncrcnstd when farmers now in winter jobs return to thci farm _Tilc Minister predicted that a tight manpower situation would ex- ist, 1a.1@_r_1i15_s11rhic,a9§ isomer-k Nagoya Still 12 Hours After Raid ‘ GUAM, March l3 - (Tuesday) —~ (APi-Fifteen fires still were burn- ing in Nagoya, chief aircraft pro- duction centre of Japan. 12 hours after an incendiary raid by more than 300 B- bombers. Reconnaissance photographs dis- closed toda the reatest single item in the off cial lst of flame-swept the Aichl Aircraft A total of des- cu ting of one of the main sub-assem- bly buildings. Returning crews reporfml that the turret area was live square miles. Fifteen uare miles in the centre of To yo was des- troyed la fires spread beyond the ld-aquro-mlle target urea. One 3-20 waa lost over Nago- ya, it waa announced hrrc. Two were lost. in the Tokyo raid. Mal-Gen. Curtis Lemar)", con- mander of the 91st Bomber Com- mand said that although damage to Nagoya "certainly ls not lllrnlisldrf- able" the strike was not as success- ful as the Tokyo mission 48 hours earlier. Mayor damale was done in fir-o areas centered about two miles south of N oya Castle but ihc flames eviden ly were controlled just as they started to merge, “T15 rationing oi llicsv hovel-aces being reintroduced for or loss‘. another. l2 months. FT \' Snundtrs, deputy cza-urlliunzor oi‘ manufac- tured gocds. PTlCCs Board. said 10-. Ablaze l King Will llead Canadian Croup At San Francisco By o. n. nucrmumv WILLJAMBBURG. Va. dial-ch l2 --iCPl~-Cnnada‘s delegation to lilo San Francisco conference on world security. opening April 25. will bc headed bv Prime Mlizistcr Mackenzie King. he said here today -. King, here for rest and re- laxation in lhls historic former capital oi Virginia. said he will not remain in San Francisco for the whole period of conference. Other members of the Canadian delegation: will be announced in Parliament. which opens next Mon- day. the Prime ivllnlstc; said. Ho said in Ottawa last week that mcmbrrs of upposltlmu parties will br- roprescntcd in the delegation Tho Prime Minister came hem sumlny morning after two days I15 a guest of President Roosevelt at the While House in Washinxton. yU-S- lst Army Scores Gains Up Io 2 Mi A PARIS, lllarch 12 - (AP) -- The United States lst Army jumped off early, today in the first big Allied assault east of and expanded its bridgehead to nearly five miles deep and 11 miles wide. Al. least two more towns were seized. hrinrziug to 21 the number captured on the east bank since the Americans charged across the Ludendorff Bridge from Remagen ured gains up to 2 1-2 milen _ than 25 miles north of the attackers, faced its gravest peril of the war, and the Germans said the 1st Army had thrown 40,000 men, including two tank and two infantry divisions, inio the push. Will Petition l For Change In City School Act Unanimous decision to petition the Provincial Government to change rho status of the School Board was reached at tile month- ly meeting last night of the Clio Council. The following resolution moved by Coun. P. G. Gay an seconded by Coon. L. A. Butler, was adopted in this matter: "Whereas the present School Act: in so far as it affccts ilie City of.‘ Charlottetown in the number oi! appointed members. is not satis- factory. “And whereas the Board o! School Trustees are now budgor- ing for the spending of $78,000 of the taxpayers’ money of this Cizy for nlalnlcnzrnce, "And whereas they are not 1-..- sponsiblc, to the said taxpayers directly or indirectly, . "And whereas apital expendit- ures can be ma e without refer- ence to any of the elected repre- sentatives of tile citizens, which, are the Olly Council. thus con_ strtutlng taxation without repro» senéattiion. I “n w iereas all o r 1 districts elect the ‘Chou n. Came who Sun loom HA5 no rm FoR MUSIC owwr Mruvclun Mi-ITEOROLOUICAL OFFICE, Toronto. Alulcll ii ~CPl Min- imum and maxuuum iclnpcraturcs: Dawson fl. :13; Vancouver, 39, ; Calgary W. 49. Proms 24, 49: Wm- nipcg 22. ~11; Toronm 33, 45; O1- iuwn 2i. Si; Nlonlz-rxil l6, 32; Que- brc l. Sami John L’; Moncion 1B, Halifax 9. 3'21 Charlottetown 6. Z2. l-"(Jill-1(‘.\S'i‘5 Lower Si. Lnwrcncr; Fresh \\lll(l.' snow at first in cast portion than clearing and a. little milder. Wetl- ncsriuy, inlr and comparatively mild. Lake Si. John: Fresh cloudy and a little milder snow at first. clearing later. Gull and North Shore: Winds in- creasing in strong with occasional snow and bcconllilg somewhat mild- kinds: wilh cr. Maritime Westz: Strong winds with sonw and rain. clearing to- wards nl ht. Wednesday, fair and comparnt vel mild. Maritime ast: Mllder with snow or part ruin with winds increasing to strung. High tide this morning at 11.30 and tonight at 11.14. Sun sets this evening at 7.03 and rises iomorrnw morning at 7.10. New moon March l3. 11.51 P. M. Summersldc tide eighteen minu- ies later than CllZiYlOHPlOWTi. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown — Surume Moncton Leavea Charlottetown 7.45 A-M-t 11.30 A.M.. 5.45 P-M. Arrives Charlottetown 12.55 P-Mn 5.80 M.. 8.48 EM. SUNDAY SERVICE Le ha i mt 12.15 5.1a rnna Ar-Iivveg (bmrrlottellllvrtr 5.20.’ 8-10 PM cnannorrsrowiv- nsw GLASGOW (Daily Except Sunday) l l t 1.10 1.00 H". Th?‘ ‘ciihiiédfl 2.3a’. m rM. "(Continued orllgllie 7901f‘):-