qwyra-ryaq stunt alluvial" loressrvallav IOIIOW --. 1:0 I. I. l. my“; .-‘ ill! ' in. announced that I-ieui- 91 .. osseley 011K 4 "' ger on the 5e35- expected to day. Names of . ywud Islanders on ammo‘ .. 1m were announced earlier- MJLK ATWSIDI — Since thgngiltfy milk dealers were unable to fili the order souBh l!" WW3 by Americariy Aorinyqggiglnonfa" all weekly mum ‘or use otnthe Army N805 W“ fififilafla. the Army men have IE preached the Summer-side dealers. The milk is to have a bac- teria. count 0f 110i? "W" ma" ‘o-wo to the cubic centimeter. - , Manon Clements and dlulh- my?! Maiden, Mass, airrived by p1“, terdsy to s few chya yum er our. . N l- MacLeod. Rocblord SW09! ___________. Freight Traffic Bordca-Tormantinc Thre hundred and thirty-five cars of ooal were orted to tlic Province by the car ferry dur- lsst ao gain of ‘I8 cars over oonding month of last year. . Fourteen less can of flour feed were bmukht in however. as compared to the quan tty imported in February o! 1046 en 1451mm came through Bor- den on their way to Island . d oars urnive the mainland through Borden via Tnrmcntine as comIred with M, 400, and 74 care, respectively for last month. Seven oars of autos. 95 of fert- ilizer, 1'1 o! lime. l3 of - ery. 4 of sugar. and 4 of salt were brought to the Province last month. On the other hand, 13 cars 0!. w fish. one of butter and ch cars ofmeat, i0 of ouln wood, an ei ht of hay and straw were e1:- School Improvement League Meeting ha)‘ e-' scglhel Iregulsr meeting of; the 0o mprovemen Leagu was held at the holm of Mrs. Moo-ton Dew on “Phursday evening with a. iarse number of members present. The president, Mrs. Gordon Mc- Donald regretfully announced the resignation of Mrs. WE. Bountie- th Bues repreoentative on the City Play- trround commission to fill the vac- he resignation of o Commission was hi hly ed. particularly the m1 8 to procure eq summer playgrounds an a suitable person to sot or. . » e possibilities and advantages of visual education were and it was decided to Ral h McLean ~to address the lfilllue at s future mee . MINI! Nthdff: d ed to eniioy, g-bles ma‘) on r ard cerville, ' w f commissioned to imental farm for Iflivemmentdn that country, BIRTHS __________________________ CUDMOIII 3- Afflrean Bay on March 9 i916, to iilr. an Jamel dDkQ, l fin, Gerard. a ' fr‘°itt"a" u m ' A 05p . p . i a m- of‘? Q . a Mrs ' ‘ ' um‘ a magnum,‘ society-Ions- eeee. 11 d. Photostats Point to i in British . , Air. Ascncva andsswe dish Ayiny Staff * Jcrszrwzfi (w Ii ykeipresa ‘hfllliorelglzhrviee a» lee m Jtmisfiny“ nu fi“ ‘"3’. Hen-x ‘miuoounsa ayt Karla arid ccuylfi by NliA eorv-' i . Inc. Al t4 l.» M "W-‘ftit’; RWQTIIIIIGH Honcho.‘ foreign . d1 i ti Presentations and firgrsomozngunxe: ‘indications flint the MAP representative in Wash- . whom "Hatter" o as his M information on silwaft Production in the . inistry o ‘tttlh 53.5%“ "‘° ‘Phat-fit Production in the British Buchar- l Home here in 1N- , w ‘his oflioe then must have been a ‘leak o! first-rate importance. Report W. filed on January ~31 by agent quotes the ra- " tonian lilinister in Umdon as au- thority f at “British On relay Irom s Shark, quotes th ese Air Attache in Washington as authority for the report that “the Americans are to trans- fer the 30th B. O. from India to the Philippines." - v SWQIOI IIAII IMIIJCATII ‘lbs photoatafs also Ihungiy im- glioate the Swedish ersl taff,‘ from which o grestIieal of im rtant information on Allied tary matters seems to have leaked out. In February 1046, the Allied High Command was making its final reparations for the decisive nuan‘ Bo sndnorttiem Gummy. Berlin naturally was anxious to find out who was going to lead this drive. '.‘l‘he answer lr iven in a code message from lm that states: . “According to documents of Feb- ruary i046 at the General Staff of the host-country the com osi- tlon of the First Canadian my in u follows: Commander-in- Ohief, Lt. Gen. G Army rersr; Canadian Command, Lt. Gen. Sim- Iliflllgl; Pirelltfll'%lsh AlgnysComa man Gen opans - econ o adian m (mm lvlsion), -General Volkes; Third Can- “ Major-Genera] Keller." - Anothe re ort, again citing or source country's Gen- eral Staff" reveals the com si- tion of the‘ T18. First Army om- mand as, follows: Gerow (Chief, of the Amiga Common _ Colltns, rton, Priekatt, Lauer, Leonhard Robertson, lynan, fiarker, Allen, Oiver. a ( tor's Nbte: A check with the sr Department shows the Nazi spy rin somewhat inaccur- ate i.n i?‘ anéssis of the comgsl- on e .1"iret Army. n- slsqxilauer, Parker, Allen, Reub- ner Collins snd- Robertson were in ‘that command. - So was Leonard, ~vvhom the Nazis identified as iiiiilmw” “rm” “t? ‘t’ it»? . y-' o . n g ou sTInfan ; Prlekatt m the ‘lit lnfan , inth- Anny: Watson in the Mthdnfantry, Ninth Army. Oliver was with the Fifth Armored Diyision, Second British Army. Lynan was in the Pacific. The War De trnent has no re- cord of a neral Malble , the closest being a General aloney with the 16th Army.) 4 A third report, still on the same authority, gives the names of all the commanders the Third Army and s fourth re ort based on the some source, lsti whose of the Seventh Arm . I Herr X, incident y tried a few tricks of his own to nd out who in the Swedish General Staff is res nsihle for those leaks, but wit out luck. This precious source of information was carefully pro- tected by the Nazi agents. Besides ~the leak st the Swedish e the Ohariofietdlh . tte-" i f“? i "Schaefer, the representative of .he know about these goings-on? It . LIMITED S TAUR GEON All: .9151: V CES Fredricion Airporipfiedridon, Now Brunswick as‘ Distributors for the“; _‘ Maritime Provinces f, l h of the ‘ wh ‘a charged one s ed u, ‘Mmfififlmfifimyugtuhl-i the egclérlng oomrtry" :7! To}? out the extent of Nail spy activities Illlllilry Secrefb a local sp (um Identified so one war. Airplane kings repreaeniayntive of the German alr- ls landing and starting- as?“ lines in Stockholm) files a day- B or» rt on the “secret” cou- er o between Sweden and Great Britain maintained General Staff, the Nazi spies in missed only one plane during the Stockholm counted heavily on ln- pyeriod. formation received from London SED PLANE TRAFFIC by sea and by air. There was, of course, no regular traffic between the two countries during the war, everything about this ‘secret but there was the “illegal” shlp- courier traffic" between swede“ pin" maintained by the Norwe- and England, but they used it in gi. . reslstanc movement and the the same manner as the "under- "courier traf c" between Stock- ground shipping” between Norway holm and Britain. and Britain. 'I'helr own courier In both cases, the hlazia -werc rode many of- the planes. _ » supposed to know nothing, but Here is another example of the actually the made extensive use uncanny accuracy of the informs- .of these ‘fl efsl". means of com- tionpvallable to the Nazi spies: m municatlons or their own pur- February, "Pandur" reported to poses. .'I'his was done hy occasion- Berlin that the re resentative of ally slipping" in _s Nazi spy-usu- Swedish Air Lines n the German ally a Quis ing-among the heroic capital, Helge Klintborn, had been Norwegian strlots who continu- instructed by his company to re- ously brave the hazards of the main on the s t even in the fsea and German bullets to keep event of a Sov at the communications open between Berlin. As it was Klintborn stay. the Norse underground and their ed in Berlin throughout the ion government in Britain. and bloody‘ siege—l>ractically nfi The Nazis also had a reliable other Swedes had been evacuated informant at the Bromma Air- -snd eventually returned to m. Port outside Stockholm. He was homeland via Moscow. ster identified as a man named Did the British Secret Service ‘Phe Germans not only i Britain he: fought wen to maintain rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr German commercial airline, Luft- probably did, Yet if permitted the hansa. Schaefer daily reported the traffic to continue apparently in arrivals and departures, as well order better to control rmsn as the characteristics of each espionage in Britain. plane "secretly" travelling to or Field Marshal Montgomery siz- from Britain. ed u the situation when he charg- t ghe “Rodi? Bureau", zfiaéistmit- ed ttat Byveden was the “clearing e a com ee repor o ra- coun ry" or llied milita sec- fl.‘ to Ber in each month. Schaefer refs. A ry iii FLEET lliuebeard Trial to their wound: brivllgflas. a ‘h mm u m, “gm Opens Today in '9 ""'"‘°“" "‘ “"" a Perle ilourtrocl ,.4 l l 0am Decide MT-l-i-“w- leathers.’ , A _ .,,,,.,,kf_m,,,,.,,,,,,guw‘ ' ibtatus or mu n» fierce-me ~ n: ‘are’ offence ' w- ‘. Ir i?“ 3o - c -i- 1* ha: ... ~ mi be n‘! , only-Alf Rose has not plea an outside _ g a ~ _ _ / ‘ II I f8 I - h U ' ""11"" a. us... . lh .- Li“ii.“i2'“.‘2"i.i"i“;,' a cogmittee of the House f»)? e11‘;- after electfol.‘ Dr. .1 d_ o AIRCRAFT TORT ERIE, \ 2ANADA'$ FIRST PUST-WAR 7éwww6 7&4” ‘The Fleet "Conuck" is new being shown and demonstrated of Stur- geon Air Services, Frsdricion Airport; ‘Service and overhaul facilities are available on the Heel "Conuclc" oi Sturgeon Air Services. ONTARIO " Rani a drive to south cont LIMITED- ‘ n is ll ' Iran, world's fourth largest oil producer. Russia IIIh oil. Then on important fields in northern-Iran, where >7? Iran government claims Reds support revolt ii Aurbsi- ' I41 [on Russian inroads here may threaten British influ- _ once in southern iron, site of huge Angie-Persian oil _- ids. Russia also demands free transit through Dsr-_ doneiioa and bases in the Dodeeoneoa ‘Island: Pol Red hand in violent demonstrations by no tiololilra demanding complete Irllisb withdrawal from Egypt British ,\vho guard Sue: Conn], feel Russia gains by any veal- . emng of their influence in Egypt v ,-. ffifian; liolii The monthly meeting .of the Indies Aid of the Prince Edward Island Hospital was held st the Cundall Home on Monday after- noon, March 11th with t e presi- ,Mrs. N. H. DeBlois presid- ing. Thera were twenty one mem- bers present. , Mrs, . Ii. Cotton for the Buy- ing Committee stated slip covers had been made for several chairs. stools, etc, and the rooms in the hospital now looked very bright and attractive. During the afternoon heme were turned on a great mar: 18th Ind: an met 55$ of the Ml‘, had ap- eommittele r meeting ourned tea was served by Bardie and lira. Stuart JOIQI. ""i.‘t"o"‘.1'°°.l:%= “"°°”' a on e gofimitim eiaht yuan chi? mum e playing for the ev: York Americans. mark has never been equalled. Stewart who retired from the game h 1940, previously ayad for Montreal Msroons and Expects l. S To Anilfllvn lritlsl Lesa wascnmmn, March (AP) -— Act Barkley (Dem.- .) 0X Banking ttee Commi ‘Saturday the Senate will approve he proposed 18.750.000.000 loan to . n tom reporters m repl to a esetlon, that there has bzen no ,~ Britain 1'81 official poll of the Senate but h! d no doubt the Senate - approve it. Menhsden is an im rtant f in the paint industry s53...» it is used in the manui d confines no _ poi ‘ ' Av- A...“ ._.__a-¢-_-s-~a.-~_...__..-r»=-