um", Io dad Iss1. “pile-singu- our-sh:- III filli- hi. The Pe , -»-..__.- per .1» 1-1- we" ,- -...__ _.....___-_ ‘ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘Fr affairs. when the most powerful owe everything to the weakest. MAXIMS or A MERE MAN iii here comes sudden ehsnfh of i ETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1944 6 PAGES Subscription Unilever-i. H.011 Illl, $0.0M other Provinces I [LIA- N.“ NAZIS BACK WHERE INVASION BEGAN Offer Made Of Auxiliary 1T0 Car Ferry Boat Now Operating In New York Can Be Purchased For Borden- Tormentine Summer Service. 712;". Mr. Bracken 0n Visit To Halifax -.__.._ mu . March aa-(cm- guusuigAfi. the federal election t4 is the most futile thing John racken can think of. the Pionee- aive Conservative National Leader said tonight as he arrived 1h H111- lfex. Mr. Bracken. here on a three- day visit. also was silent on the question of when he would se f Commons. Mr. Bracken, ed by his wife. fir“: with Party officials. he so planned to get in some curling- ionergan May Be Called To Stand NEW YORK, March 26- (AP)- ifluyno IMICPIEBZ ' WHITE“ degree murder in ens bulogeorl slaying or his heiress vliic, rat- ricla Burton Lonergun, last ucv... may be called to the witncssstana for the first time when lus with rc- mnes tomorrow. LWBIG v. Broderick, volatile chief ueience attorney who has been trying to prevent introduction inw the mat record cu the serend- ants UHSIKIIOQ ccruession, indicat- lo today tna/t Lonergan nugm, be called no testify because cross-ex- amination by the btilte could be lurutea by a um: ccillt 0f appeals ruling. libs ruling. Broderick said. would pemut a person to testify as to the truth or falsity of a statement -ut- tributes to nun and would limit to that one 60,000 British Miners Return To Work ioday LONDON, March 26—Slxty thou- sand striking Yorkshire coal min- ers today ratified an agreement reached Saturday between the fuel mine owners and will return to work tomorrow. A wage agreement provided an age differential for skilled workers and fuel officials agreed no deductions would be made from the minimum VII/re of miners for coal taken to heat their own homes. warty-dive thousand miners still are away from pits in the Dcncaster Area. tournaments "Box Social and Variety Con- cert in Murray River Hall, ‘mes- dlY» March 28th. 3-’ "Garden Seeds. m!‘ beéguyla-rietlcs. York. ~21 All the latest Bend for free U!‘ V859‘? 93110. "lflldgig hogs It Bradalbane "Y T" ll‘. Alex MacDonald 3-25-2141. 6V- "W-flldins Hogs IOA‘ Davis andi r at Vernon T sday after- 11000. March 28th. “l? C. Nelson lvoarbumer; bunker 1y last year, ' i e Details cf an available auxiliary ferry for the Borden-Tonnentine service for the carrying of auto- mobiles and trucks during the open M B been received here by r. forwarded to Ottawa. The boat. it ls understood, is now opera“ in Now York and is ready for ser- vice at any time. lvfr. Rogers has been notified by the Department of Transport that the proposal is being investigated. If suitable, the ferry could run in addition to the Scotla while the present ferry is being overhauled in drydock. First word received by Mr. Rol- erp on the subject was in s letter dated March 6 from Mr. Saul Sperllng, attorney at law, New York City. Mr. Sperllng wrote: Offered For $95,000 "Some time ago I was advised that you were in need of a ferry to operate to Prince Edward Isl- and. If you are stlli interested. I am in a position to offer a ferry bout which can be placed into lm- ,medlate service. it is end loaded gland has a steel hull which was built in 190i; length 207 feet breadth 44 feet; over guard, 65 feet; depth l7 feet; draft, 12 feet; dis- placement, i060 feet, 501 net tons; wateimtube boilers installed , lflgs‘. caper! t‘y tons (can be increased); car capac- ity. lower deck, 20 cars, besides ac- commodations for passe ers. with slight alterations can old 40 cars: upper deck exclusively for passengers.’ "The asking price," Mr. Sperling wrote, "ls $95,000." Mr- Rogers discussed the mat- ter with Premier Jones, and at the letters bequest wrote for further information and also e. photograph of the boat. Mr. Sperllng replied, March l5. stating that the boat ls now op- erating in the City of New York. "You need have no concern about the strength of the vessel's deck, as I am advised that she presently accommodates ten trucks of the tonnage mentioned in your letter," he wrote. “I am further informed that it could besafely towedto P. E- Island without any diffi- culty. within the next day or so I shall forward to you a snapshot thereof." Col. Balaton Notified In the meantime Mr. Rogers com-- mlllliltfltuu with Hon. J.L. Ralston Minister of National Defense, at Ottawa. Cc}. Ralston replied on March l4 ate that he had im- mediately broug t the matter to the attention of his colleague Hon. J. E. Mlchaud, Minister of Trans- port, and asked that he et a rc- prt on the suitability of his boat without delay. 0n March 21 Mr. Rogers receiv- ed the following letter from Mr. C. P. Edwards, Deputy Minister of Transport Ottawa. “Dear Sir: I have your letter of the 10th instant referring to the matter of furnishing an auxiliary ferry to the existing service for the express purpose of carrying auto- ~ mobiles and trucks during the open season in Northumberland Strait. The letter from Mr. Paul Sperllng New York, containing particulars of a ferry is being investigated. and I will advha vou later in this respect for the information Premier Jones." Mr. Edwards added that the matter of a second ferry had been submitted by the designers of the nay Prince Eward Island car fer- "and is expected to ' 343472‘ be d red after the‘ construc- __ ' ' tfon ‘of the new ferry is under l way.‘ ' c“°i“d=»’°‘=ii"ii-=‘<’>‘- ..l€'a.".?2.'."..“é§€ii..?‘.§l‘°5.."’.l%" u: . . - , . - "mm" 3 a Th“ Mum“ gross of the negotiatio todate "loading hogs for Davie as ‘PM every Thursday afternoon a-Ubflny and inner-aid Every Fri- y forenocn until further notice. . O. Green. 2-7-tf. c T4108 River will resent a con- g "l flea View hal Monday ev- fowlxis. March 2'1. If not fine fol- me“! evenins- Also dance and 0f plea. 3.25 "Arrived today at Albany 5m. r “W- carload brcoder a w Mm ma‘, 1 an s ve "'1 1°" tnamocriiritlbflccl.‘ B-27-2l. “"108 hose for Davis and a?’ ‘Faraday March so as m1- ' '4 911N169. Summerside Kenslnglon tlll 3 p. and Bagnall, Hunter uwnmdav tlll noon. Arthur u . Brcadalbune mcay till British Poet-War Program Started IDNIJON March 26—(OP)--!n discussing British problems in his adlo address tonight. Prime Min- ister Churchill said a four-year lan of education, rovemenis and national insur- ance which he proposed a. year ago as e postwar program a y has been started without relaxing the war effort. "If this process continues and on m; enough I greater pert of my four-year p n may very well be perfected end lar- ge, opera on before we reach a general election and "fl- Blgned. H. s- MacEwen. a giv th o- a chance "to e Ema‘? ple say what flunk . he Mid. public hellth 1 y. Nowhere wtthln the fortr m» Allied invasion. R. D. Farquharson Of Local .0f C. Make Presentation ._Tn.iirchliishea..-...... l One hundmd and fifty mombersi of the Charlottetown Council of the Knights of Columbus attended the Communion Breakfast held yesterday in the Charlottetown Hotel in celebration of Fbunderb Week. Mr. R. A. MacDonald was chairman. The Communion Breakfast also marked the farewell of the Char- lottetown Council to Archbishop J. A. C’Sullivan. Grand Knight J. T. Crcteau reacl an address and the presentation of a parting gift was made by the Council Warden. D. E. Noonan. Archbishop O'5u1llvan respond- ed flitingly and told of the work of the Knights of Columbus ln furthering the cause of education in this province. State Deputy W. M. Flynn, Mr. Justice Arsenault and Hon. Dr. W.J.P. Macmillan. also spoke briefly. Previous to the Communion Breakfast the Knights of Colum- =<EB 021i»: Tito’s Men Capture Strategic Island LONDON, March 26 — (C?) — A Yugoslav Army of Liberation com- munique announced tonight that the Partisans of Marshal Tito (Joslp Broz) had attacked the Cler- mans 25 miles from the boundary By Klrke L. Simpson, Associated Press War Analyst The mad month of March is fading unld a flurry of Axis-Allied pre- psratory activities which leave no doubt that the war In Europe zooming to its crisis for Germany, or that the Pacific battle stage has been reset for new tests of Japanese slaying power. From all aides the foes of the besieged Axis mates are closing in dee- pite all the distance odds against them. Pinched between the, ' offensive in the out that new knows no seasonal halts, the fury of Al- lied sir attack from the wast. and the slow but unwavering Anglo-Amer- lcsn diversion pressure In Italy, Hitler is obviously preparing the inner walls of his shrivelllng European fortress, No surer sign of what Berlin knows to be impending in the west and from the east against that Inner defence ring 5H1] keeping the war out of Germany itself by sir, could be asked than Nazi occupation of Hun- Gr am Rogers, supervisor III‘ ‘of the P.E.I. Travel Bureau, and Europe outside the Reich except where it rests on German bsyonets. Gestapo 88111011580 an" Flfltnllfifln repres- sion is Nazism firmly planted. Just how strong it still ls in Germany lt- self coming events may soon disclose. A year and more of Nazi defeats and retreat have deeply undermined Genna home. helped lrvmondcrably in the softening- n military prestige even at up the European continent Wives Of servicemen Arrive In Canacla Some Men Included In Contingent; After Tour Of Duty Overseas. Flt-Lt. Charlottetown Home OTTAWA. March 26 - A new land and a new .lfe before them, British wives of Canadian sold- iiers and their children have BITIV-lkegping n as a suuvenln ed in the Dominion to make homes for husbands awaiting the Invasion drive from Britain or fighting in ‘Itslyeirn aortrrcases. however the - . Canadian husbands yireccded their wives here and these women rejoined the stalwarts they married overseas. Some of the children were as old as four and these lived up to the reputation of the well-behaved British children, no fuss o,- devil- try during the business of ihe cus- toms and in some cases aiding their mothers in looking after a young brother 01' sister. In the same group from overseas came a sprinkling of Canadian veterans from the Mediterranean campaign, category men from England, Canadian navy and R. C. A. F. personnel and a few mer- chant en. One of the soldiers wearing the 8th Army patch - the Crusaders cross - was a tall Scaforth High- lander, Pie. Ewe-rd Crmvs - Swords of Vancouver, who wore the Milit- ary Medal. Hi5 decoration, he said vaguely. was "for different things." This kiltcd soldier fought through Sicily and into Italy but there sick- ness plagued him and forced his trip home. The airmen included Flt. Lt. R. D. Farquhurson of Charlotte- town and Toronto, back ln Canada after a. tour of duty overseas. Bc- fore the war he worked 1o;- the Prince Edward Island government. Canada's new cillzens included: Mrs. Dorothy Morrison and Baby Roderick, going to Lake lilegantlc, Ont. to join her husband, Gnr. Roderick Morrison, R C. A.; Mrs. of Hungary and, with Allied aid, captured the strategic Adriatic Is- land of Hvar. The war bulletin, broadcast by the free Yugoslav Radio and recor- ded here, indicated that the cler- mans were moving troops out of Yugoslavia to reinforce their garr- isons i'n Hungary which the Nazis took over last week. Helen Swartmen and baby Char- les. olng to Port Arthur, Ont. ll-Ier usband, Pie. J. Swarimcn, is ,ln Sussex, N. 8.; Mrs. Mary Howe; and baby Marion, going to Dart imouth, N. 5.. to join her husband, ileudlng seamen Garfied Howe: iMrs. Ellzabc h Winfield and baby lBarry, going to Toronto to join her husband, Lt. T. A. Winfield. vasion uormon. Much-ZS - (or) - sky-filling masses of Allied air- craft swuohed their entire often. sivo from Germany today to oc- cupied territory wnere they smash- sd st several points along the Hench .- Netherlands "invasion Fighter planes. seeking combat. sw of arls and never_ saw a single D ms fighter o 333mm more than 2.400 tone of bombs were dropped on Hitler's coastal defences by the s armada which observers ,'l00 assorted ' and 750 of them heavy American bombers, ed med! Allied perateiv did e Germn prevent the British pl reaching their capital they sent WP nousfluldfnl in m: m- wiine fought iuisiaeeiiii "B... Supporting the general belie: that faded invasion day cannot be tar oft‘, A F‘ t enemy airfields within sight‘ Izlnvasion Day Probailrlgy Not Far Off Is Belief Allies Shift Entire Aerial Offensive To In- Coas which? R. C iii. attac l to them return, l3 of Brit the n A F. went beck again Saturday rugpt, sending out n Mosquito forceuagainst the capétars bat cl lid area, an a M11! ‘l U8 b0 em . _ portant French railway junction on the Belgian border, und against 10°" in southeastom France. Only one British plane was lost ____ H1350 C NADA _ _ iQQsQiXQLVYBzH Almost Every Canuck Bomber Cut Saturday By FRANK LOWE LONDQN. March ZC-(CP (Tabla-Hardly a Canadian bomb- er iit to take the uir was left be. hind in Britain Saturday night as the R. C. A. F. bomber group join- ed the R. A- F. in attacking rall- Wfly yards at Aulnoye. France, it was ‘announced today. All in», Canadian aircraft re- turned safely after delivering a blow that left large fires leaping skvwards and scattered the steel rails in the important yards like tcothplcks in a breeze. The raid was carried out with little opposi- ilou. Sat. Harry Vaughan of Halifax. N. S- making his maiden trip with the Goose squadron, reported an explosion, One of the few pilots reporting trouble Flt. Li. Ron Anderson oi MOHBi-Oh. NB. a member of the Ghost Squadron, told how on the homeward trip flak from coastal guns smashed holes in his aircraft. He said hc found a. piece of flak on the floor of the plane and is | Others on the raid included Flt- glztfimbggcugas. Frederécton. N. ~-_ ' ,._.~ - 912mm. bell. kwfnfikcoa, 2&8. It was the fig on- eraiicnal trip for Campbell. a bomb- aimer. Frankfurt Reports Nuisance Raiders LONDON. March M-JCB-The Gemion new radio station located at Frankfurt, which gives warnings on the approach of Allied planes, broadcast at 9 pm. tonight that llEFEAT 0F Jilrggivrnnrn THAN EXPECTED’ “Brakeman Killed In Accident At Borden Local Man Dies Almost Instantly From Injur- Struck By Train. Mr. James (Bus) R. Rattenbury. 26, Canadian National Railways yard brakemnn at Borden and a native of Charlottetown was ally injured yesterday morning. The accident occurred about 5.1a as he was employed with a train. crew switching cars at Borden. He wus run over accidentally by the train and died \vlthln a few min- utes. Later in the jury found that til? death was ac- cidental and cbso ved the train crew from all blame. The evidence indicated that Wil- frccl Burns of Freetown and Ar- thur w. Jay of Borden were pier-k- in: with the deceased as brake- men. They were switching cars from a train which had Just come up from the pier. Rattenburv was the rear end brakeman. The train, backing up on track three. had sioppzd to permit Rattenbury to open the switch to truck four. Other members of the train crew said he gave the go ahead signal and the train moved back. Burns, who was th¢ next braketnsn from the rear noticed that the train remained on track three and then he saw Ratienburyb body under the train. He immediately signalled a stop and called the R. C.M.P. and Dr. Schaplra. Police and medical aid arrived in about five minutes. The doctor said that the dccease was alive when he reached the scene but died with- in a few minutes- He said death kvns caused by shock due to lniur- e day a coroner's s. Acting coroner P.J. Mclnnls. who conducted the hearing, quee- iioned the tralnmen as to how the accident occurred. Neither of the Oilifil‘ two brakeman saw the acci- dent. It was surmised, however, that the deceased thought he had opened the switch and stood on track three to permit the train to pass. Instead it failed to take the switch and struck him. The men wurkng with Rattenbury testified that was quite normal yesterday morning. other witnesses included William Worthy, Charlottetown, engineer on the tmin. Percy Steele, Borden "nuisance raiders are u roacli western Germany."_ pp 1W Reinforced Enemy Tro Tank ‘Two Canadian Cfficers To Retire , OTTAWA, March 26 -- Muj Gcn G. R. ‘turner of Saint N. B. and May-Gen. C. R. . ipendlng retirement on medical grounds. it “'35 announced today by national detour-Q , quarters, Maj Gen. Turner, 54, has been on special duty in Britain during lhe lust low months. Maj -Gen. Stein, 47, was commander of a January, 1939 until he relinquished his command last fall. Bot-h permanent force officers Rescued Ai-ririefr- .-Reach Port In Ship AN EAST COAST CANADIAN PORT, March 26 - (CP) -—Three men adrift n. wcek in the Gulf of St Lawrence ire foes had walked eight miles towards the Cuifs north shore before they were rescued, they disclosed here Saturday when the Canadian Government lcebreakcr Sorel landed them here. The three — D. A. Duval of East Klldonan, Man. A. A. Ferguson of Seven Isiands, Quebec. and Leo Vlgnauit of Cap Whittle. Quebec — were forced down while flliving to Harrington Place, Que. e one. piloted by Duval, bring Vignauit to attend the funera_l__of_his_ys bier. _ s 2. Smooiiwsailinq For Ml your Bukinq When you use M Nazis In CassinovS/zow More Agressive Spirit lS.ein oi‘ Quebec City and Vancouq ops Have Staged Brief Sortie. By Lynn Helnzerling NAPLES. March 26 - ‘showlng a more offensive s lrlt [have staged a brief tank sort c, ‘mics disclosed today, as the 111g Dreams. znto the open in front of ihcm buck. 1 TOI-‘lflys communique ‘Wits less intense than dust 10 dnys when New ched there. brought _down a, numbe ,ded men under cover of ~CY°$8 UB8. Indian troo hill have been isolated supplied mostly this was the firs wounded. B evacuation lvely quiet, will ins v. harassing artillery fir; area 60 miles to the northwest. Japs In Another Suicide Offensive sand JBIMJIOSQ ‘Iorokina on last Thumd ills fer heavy fighting which Nlpponese dead and . and Nodrove on southeast coast of Mama without opposition on Friday, , (AP) — - Reinforced Nazi troops in Cassino,‘ it fighting J h ‘in the dead town became a. slug- 9 “qging match with neither side mak- A party of litter bearers redo-had Hflllsmans Hill just under the peak of Monastery Hill Saturday and of woun-. , Rgdlhad been injured. The plane itself on the or a week, parachute, and of The rest of the front was relat- 1 the Germans le-y- roads and on the Anzio beadahem h against the American perimeter at Bo Island ay in another suicide offensive but were thrown back sf- left 300 “abandoned on Victory Over All Axis ls Seen Certain Churchill Gives Review Of War Situation In Address. 36--iCP)— I IIONDON, March Prime Minister Churchill tonight expressed confidence of victory over all the Axis. over Germany despite admittedly slow Allied progress in Italy, and sooner than expected over the Japanese, who are “showing signs of great weak- ncss" In a 45-minute address to Brit- ain and the world, Mr. Churchill lauded the Russian advance of! more than B00 miles a yes-r as “the greatest cause of Hitler's undolng"| but paid great tribute. also. “the prodigious blows of British and American airpower" against Germany. The greatest danger the Allies have overcome, however, is the U- boat attacks, he declared. The initiative in the Far East as d to the Allies. Mr. Churchill said. The Jspanes; ere showing signs of great weakness. Attrition of, their shipping, especially their tankers and their air forces...ha.s brooms not merely evident but ob- v ous ' Surveying the Auglo-Amerl- i can blows against Germany. | the prime minister said the gigantic Royal Air Force now has been "definitely overtaken | and outnumbered‘ by the United States nlr force ln Britain alone and that either force alone is nearly as num- Glfllllllli much more powerful that? the entire German Luft- wa e. Of the British end American war effort he said: "it would be quite natural if our Soviet friends and Allies did not appreciate the complications and diff cultlea which attend all sea crossing-amphibi- ous is he word-operations on a large scale." The Ruslans are a land people. he noted and their tasks and thme of Britain and the United States. are different but in a sirongly-, worded tribuio to the Rumlans,‘ he dcclaredr- : “Since I spoke to you last, not only have the huh invaders been driven from land they had ravag- ed, but the guts of the Germany army have been largely torn out and general-| i 1 by Russian valor ship. _ The prime minister began his address in a slow measured tone -welghlng each word carefully Beginning with e review of thc African campaign, Mr. Churchill Airmen From l S’side Safe L . _ , w. both with was overseas w»miiéiitili“ihgefifiitrifidmi“eihf vice, wil. shortly proceed on lcuvcmans 5cm two tanks rumbling ca,‘ here‘ - that’ ' h nd_,SLlUllg'pC)InZ to lay a smoke scrcenjccsl down on the Strait of Canso l‘ .but hot Allied artillery fire drove MULGRAVE, N. S., March 26 --‘ (CPI - A plane from the-airport ia-t summerslde. P E l. was for- Ilce early today, but the four scr- iv semen it carried were picked up’. described. yillb lighting as stll heavy, buy, lti during thel Canadian division in Britain frcmitroops, following up a .,.,,z,§,‘§§§‘u‘1i°“ iAllled aerial barrage, launched their arctoffensive to drive the enemy frcmi the southwest edge of town. TheiCharle Germans still are firmly cntrgn- Ii l by shore residents in s small boat The plane landed in the darkness l0 miles south of here The fliers me clown at 1 30 A M after |circling the area for some time, ‘dropping flares. At dawn. they were spotted by Grant, keeper of the Eddy Point ght. Grant, his two sons and Ernest England obtained a fishing boat and made their way to the s ot through heavy ice to bring the f crs to land, None of the men in the plane was not damaged badiy. It remain- ed afloa; and was moving slowly toward the mouth of the Strait io- night, Cause of the forced lending fives not known here. Burma Fighting Expanding Into _"*‘ V I I .. ....... lllayor Campaign PACIFIC. March a4 [34 —(M<mday> — (AP) - Two-thou- NISW DELHI. March 06 --(A.'Pi — The battle Io,- Northern Burma o! a major ea Southern‘. Asia Command ann- of the Bufml. lies struggled to lunt three Jnp eae ape vpoln an n ar lied at ‘lmphal. main Allied base the plain of Manlpur. w River for a crossing into Buicovina. icaseianaimrseiie. c.5176‘; i’ expended into the strategic aspects in today as the cuneed a British Commando force had slashed within S2 miles of My- itwlne, main Japanese base north But stiff fighting was i regress in the Indian i le whege pure Al- n Sovietsflieach Prut River In Westward Push LONDON. March 25—(AP)—Tll Rod Amiv today reached the Pru River frontier of Rumania, whenc- Arlclf Hitler launched the south- ern wing of his i941 invasion, af- ter an epic 800-mlle march from Stlllhgrad across bleak Russia step es which became a graveyai‘ for undreds of thousands of Ger- man troops Premier - MBYSIIBI Stalin, an- nouncing one of the biggest milit- ary comebacks in history, ordered a. record ‘Zmsalvo salute from guns in Moscow to celebrate the first rcconqucst of u portion of “our state frontier" in the shadow oi the Balkan Carpathian gumm- ta s Exactly one week after crossing the Dniester River. the Russians swept 60 miles westward across Besszrnibla to roach the Prut on a. 53-mile from To the north other soviet units established n oil-mile invasion bridgehead on the upper Dniestcr a former Rumanian province; 1n pre-war Poland the Russians were within 35 miles of the 194.1 Bug River frontier bctuccn Germany‘ and Russia, svhllc fur to the south. cast. in wuthern Russia, the Ger- mans were threatened bv a. stead- ilv closing Soviet trap in ihe Nik- gav-Odeesa area along the Black a. The German garrison of Tarn- opol in ore-war Poland has been encircled by Russian troops. said a communique recorded lav The Soviet Monitor and broadrmst a!- ter Stalin's order of the day b Cale Sweeps | Canadian Corps Front In Italy WITH THE CANADIAN CORPS 1N ITALY, March 26-—lCP Cable‘ -'N°m1fl1 Patrols were carried out Saturday on the Canadian Corps front_a'lilclr was buffeted by a Ealcdrom the Adriatic Sea. No close contact with the. enemy was reported. Prices Offered For Boot Seeds Too Low KENTVILLE, N_S , Ztlriicli ZIG~ Efforts Of the agricultural l. um; board nt Ottawrt i0 negotiate con- tracts for 1945 field rcoi. seed pr;- uuotlon have been riciaved in i121: lviarltlmes ‘because cf producer.‘ dissatisfaction at the cffcrcd rices. This was indicated at .1 wcckenzi conference of seed men hcrc, The conierees were informed acrcug: allotments for seed could be met. but it was claimed urlccs offered were lower than those lzuaranieed by the oavernmcnt for the last two years. and in some cases below pre- war levels Those attending the confcrenze included J G Clark. district sup- ervisor. plant products division. Sackville, N B ‘I08 NAKED (My \S Rafnea. Uflconvoafaate l ‘High tide this afternoon at l b0 and tomorrow morning at 12.36 Sun sets this evening at ‘I20. Incl rises tomorrow morning at 640 First quarter moon March 31. 9.. am, Summerside tide l8 minutes inter than Charlottetown. DAILY AIR RERVICE Charlottetown - Summer ” Moncfon Leave Charlottetown 7.35 s. m. 12.00 noon. . p. m. Arrive Charlottetown I.l0 u. m. 5.45 p. In. 1.05 n. m. SUNDAY RIZRVICF. Leave Charlottetown l! noon. Arrive Charlottetown 5.45 p. In.