' MAXIHI OIL 143R]: MAN ---_— IlIli-ll p0 RlliE on on" °,, sirens. The People's Paper "10"" ~&*" .,_____ ---._-._-. _ Covers Prince Edward Island Life the Dew MAXIMS. OIL MERE MAN The desires and is attend or nlnistra lord's laofllitold Ire better to God than to man. . INCH {IQ 0d ciiAluorrerowiv. CANADA. WEDNESDAY; MARCH 29, 1944 ll Della I. ll.“ anal-other I U-l-A- IIM OUNTS C? fglflllllillfi Worker lllired In Fall it lieorgetown m. Arthur W- by th RE-I. tel oho “w”? was lerlousiy ‘ed n from a bole at from when; was fie fasctured ankle and a neon. He we - u“ mmbulanoe yr details of the socidant wer bu“ gllppéd accidentally moped to the gro Bis condition ‘rm gs satisfactory leoommmenii ll|l ll 700,000 lost-liar llouses‘ UlTAWA. ll, in; construction of moo and 100.00 houses in each oith, first l0 post-war years was mile in a housing report tabled lithe Commons by Prime Minister Isclenzie King. The report was drawn up by a amt-s‘ Ad- u nll-oommlttee of tho J my Committee on flan. The advisory comm fllli tion. It liilly of thc Commons‘ oi reconstruction. The subcommittee phases of post-war iloinlcs at Queen's Wibwar decade- Ailout 600.000 of the houses would ieieouired in urban and non-farm of the as nf ‘ Hm: liiriilareas to cover half lioule construction backlog lib and to cover “ current. rrauircments between "1946 on i956.""the report said. ‘The immediate recommendation '0 50.000 units twhich may be expand- tito 100.000 units if circumstan- H. warranti be aimed at for the ction years o! the I that a minimum program lint iuii constru tut-war period.’ The report said that a minimum "hmi-flnii 0102mm. including slum 125.000 llflrance. would require j 1°“ “ed on ease 7. c0170 ‘ i. S. Farmer Kills fimily And Self ABERDEEN li-n Rigmlifi mid his four child iii Jew 0t arid killed hunself. Shel‘ The t . m“ Yfliledgiangcourited on th rous ds. The dead:- _Bernar<i Arends. 33. the father. nlene J Arends. about uxigtlxr. "m "W66- IIO l. Mbfihl/Iaizcéiail. ase 4. th. six weeks old. toiiuie strains alaiory Seed Oats to arrived. “W Miflilisan d: Boyle. a-aa-ioi. ‘milldins Wheatus-rfii osts st. to 1 s-ao-zt an» pdvis a afternoon until furtlfilarylosn‘. 2-133. l Thursday l- oriiiill M94108 h s It m“). ind h, ‘ EIM 5- 9- Green. M" More tile danoe. strung" M t b. oun Her rt @135 vgltlentioni Owing to m h“, "R conditions we wi "m. March 31. until dis _ bee? 0o knoll, lineman or Georgetown Effii$it§l° avgaéh teewrlhgill, H believed in P0!" “Erfglnall. whose home is at ‘i4 “thorn... Avenue. (Yimrlottetoiwn bout to hospital by N.D. Mao beyond the fact that w and und. last night wus des- March 30-(CP)—A recommendation that Canada. aim between n ittee on "rtnstl-ilclion, headed by Dr. F. ‘rill James, principal of McGill university was appointed by the biieral cabinet to study the var- recon- ‘ndepend- committee on housing Ind community planning. headed hyC. A. Curtis, professor of eco- University, Kingston. Ont.. estimated that at but 701,000 housing units will be required in Canada in the first m, . WASI-L. March 20- M“; — Apparently maddened bl‘ n! reclassified l-A in the (Trait. - _ycnr - old farmer took a "S" Shotgun today and killed ren and - ‘The Bernard >I7"“ . 30. reported yflseltemrwsl-"ra i1: Rink. April our “bloat and h, °ll at Mount Herbert Friday train ta mi a Livestcgk a‘ ‘ileum e-nflf lmdi _ hm, “B i108! for Devi and March 30 :4 fol- commons Local Airman After Big Raid ' Immediately after taking part in one of the heaviest attack; or the war on Berlin. three members of “Simon's Own" squadron-tho Iroquois squadron of the II.C.A.I'. Bomber Group-are photographer] In tho briefing room of their a tlon. somewhere in Northern England. At oen- l tre is Wing Commander W-F. "Bill" Newson, D.F.C.. of Victoria, 3.0.. who commends the squadron. 0n his left is Squadron Leader H. B. "I-lnnli" Dow of Toronto, formerly one of Canada's best-known swimmers, - who commands one of the squadron! flights. At Illhl. lg-squndrnn und- er Clarence "Iliggy" Higgins of Charlottetown. PILL, who commands the other flight. The squadron, flying Ifsiifncs, has taken part in many of the recent heavy attacks on the capital. (R.C.A.F. Photo). Bracken Catlin-es“ Youth Prggramme _Conservative Leader Emphasizes State Responsibility In Halifax Speech. r HALIFAX, March 28—(CP)— (Advancel-—A 10-point program of the State's responsibilities to youthi was laid down tonight by Progres- sive Conservative Leader John Bracken. , In an address prepared for de-i livery at a public meeting here, Mr. Bracken declared it was the responsibility of the State to see that; its youth were: t l. Well hem‘ llote Against Dhurohill 0ov’t ls Sensation i born-meaning in health. 8. Developed in character. 4. Informed in the useful wisdom of the ages. 5. Trained in a useful calling. 6- Taught the dignity of labor. '1. Required to work as well us am. 0. Shown the mental and spir- itual necessity of accomplishment. 9. Given opportunity to earn a London. March 2B-—(CP Cable) Prime Minister Churchill's gov- ernment tonight suffered the first defeat in its history-by a singly vote on a. clause on the new ed- ucation bill-but since the issue was not pressed as a vote of eon- fidencs in the government it dots not require resignation. Nevertheless the 1l'l - to - its 1r defeat the administration received when it souzht to relect an amend- ment by Mrs. Cazalet Keir, Con- ‘servative. for an equal pay scolc living. rm- men and women teachers 10. Expected to carry their own lcaused a sensation at Westminster". weight in the community. and a bill is one of the main featurts little more if they can. - of government reconstruction Diana binrt State's Responsibility ed meetings of the vote in t "How well has the State carried out. these responsibilities?" the partv leader asked. "I rim afraid with all too little credit t0 itself." Mr. Bracken's address, on "The States Responsibility in its Youth." was the first ho had de- livered with this problem as its main topic. He said there now was no excuo; for “perm the (Continfidflon page 5, __._______ threa it. was believed all make a ioint attempt him Invasion Dlook At "5 "mum T" 12" Serinans llave flew ‘Deadly Land Mine WASHINGTON. March I-(AP) -A new product of Teutonic in- genuity, a small but deadly land mine which cannot b, located by detection instruments, has appear- ed on tho Italian front to 111190!!! one more ‘Problem for the ground forces but i there. _ Lit-Col. Al red K. Du Moulin. back from observation duty, told of the mine in a re rt todaytoLt. Gen. Ileslc J. Mo air, commend- ing general of army ground forces. Known as the "wooden shoe mine." the anti-personnel devieo is made of plywood or plastic and called "thn worst curse" of all ' ns LO . March fl-(OP-Rau- tors) -- The hands of tho invasion clock have reached "five minutes S" Arthur Henderson. "Mb- cioi sccretnry to the war office. said today. “When l2 o'clock strikes the Al- lied smiles of liberation will move forward to what certainly will be tee told a Trsfolflr 511 a “salute the soldier" war campaign speech. State Rests Date In Lonergsn Trial NEW YORK. More N—(AP)— The State rested at .16 pm. to- day in the trial of Wayne Loner- gan. charged with first degree murder in the slaying of his heir- ess wlfe. Patricia. Defence Attorney Edward Brod- arlc‘; promptly moved that the in- dictment be dismissed on the ground th¢ State had failed to link iionergan definitely to the crime. Judge James rrett Wall- see some Ibo i The new mine. ports, "loch like an innocent bar of soap but has enough ‘INT in it to blow off a man's foot when stell- on.‘ ped "Our men can destroy it with Molotov cocktails (containers of gasoline which are ignited and cased onto or into the taraet ef- ter outflsnking it," Du Moullr. abut hgqil are so ltudded w ern at ere alwa s seems lbs bill- ht?“ be filother anbchind firm-gig; .. rlvfghf llowe Says More Steel. ls Released Munitions lvlinlstel- daiy in the Comm ie panzies will be 81,750 tons, an 211.1 per cent over used by th The Minis qulrles iLDOUT. possible increase in the output of maohl mlttee on houslnil 000 housing un ban and non-rural areas. that which will grant income tax ex- emption to tlans last year. IIET‘ BS ‘ Maritime Service - said to MACHINERY :OUTLO __._-| FAlTlM I War l stint... Last Nigh .y __i By Kirke L. Simpson, Asso By JAMES MoCOOK OITAWA. March $8 -— (CH- Howe suiu to- ons that steel re- imlplemtent com; year 1094-42» increase 0i the amount- ies in I939. tor was replying to in- ect Red Army attack from the east Driicstar. hemmed in from the no aseuw term l" me “w” eluding the trapped force e wmpan Dnlester must funnel back into Ode itlrm i3i9°1"5m7ln3 Sea port seems indicated. The speed with which t mun front on the Black Sea nery. He said that if more steel ovals required for the implements indus- try it. might be available, but he‘ knew iiotnlu-g of the labor sup 1y, situation for the isnplements t . Golding tLa-Huron-Perth), n a. war expenditures MfllIiltt/Eg which investigated ts’ manufacture. said icial concerned had pro- increasinfl dmelleabln sill iy and to the diversion effect of that Angl Peninsula. sub-c implemen every off mised co-operation in output. Ball bearings an castings were in short the committee felt cl n Producers to re- tn int ts of ° ms bsdy On castinflfl IDNDON. March $B—(AP)—The Germans, who are reinforcing their western front and warning their, people of imminent attack. made. an extensive and strong air raidi against southern England last] night which apparently was aimed, at Allied invasion ,. ‘ ~ The Germans’ evident purpose was to tind out how much sup- plies and personnel the Allies have concentrated in southern England for a possible invasion take-off and to do, as much damage as possible to the invasion set-up. It was one of the heaviest aerial attacks in two years outside Lon- don. The Germans announced that their target. was Bristol, one of England's prime ports and harb- ors. Britlsh authorities acknowl- edged only that considerable dam- age was done to a coast town. At least 11 German planes were shot down. British casualties in- cluded at. least nine persons kill- ed by defective anti-aircrait shells in South England and Wales. There has been plenty to pique German curiosity about southern England, where in recent months sizable segments of the civilian population have been evacuated to make room for the military. Only a. few days ago a 10-mile strip ex- tending all along the southern coast and half way up the East coast was designated as a military banned area. On Sunday a call went out for the auxiliary naval service of yachismen. All. these developments, coinci- dent with tactical-type bombing of railroad centres and air bases in France. combined to focus Ger- man attention on Prime Minister Churchill's words of Sunday that -"the our is approaching." land that there are to be "ieints 5 and rehearsals to deceive and baf- qilc the enemy.” commend a su production, v E E. Parley (P.C.-QuAppelle.)' said it would be "a solenoid thins if additional power machinery and repairs could be made available to whose machinery was practically wom out. Lt. - Col. Arthur Ross (P. C.- Sour-is) said more labor should bq made available to 11111119111911“ plantgeiif the necessary steel was prov . t o n oLthe, sitt . Prime milling llfoxenzls xlnnmlobied a report of an advisory sub-com- recommendirm the post-war construction oi‘ 606.- its in Canadian ur- Reve-nue Minister an order had be Canadians who served a force in the Aleu- in the same mim- exemptions are granted thosg in the services outside the western hemisphere. General discussion duriiiil the dav was on munitions deport/infill» estimates. Dnt. Rouse Defeats D. D, F. Amendment TORONTO. March 28-40?)- The Ontario Legislature b a vote of 50-27 late today defea ed a C. C. F. amendment to a. motion to go into committed of supply on the budget—an amendment expressing regret the government had not taken action to guarantee "plans for development of the natural re- sources of this province and the social ownership of monopolistic enterprises." T. D. A. To Extend with the Kisk Just how many German and satellite troops are still east of the rth by the Russian break-through to the eastern foothills of the Carpathian mountains. is a matter of gurss- i work. Moat military observers have out the number around 500.000 ex- - s in the Crimea. It is clear, however, that virtually land or sea. And with Nikoleav In Russian hands an Anny surge across the lower Bug for converging attack o he Russians are breaking up the whole Ger- _ flank Into dwindling segments serves to em- j pilasize the bogged-down Allied campaign in Italy, theiess, are ant to credit some considerable share o! flEnemy Bombers In Air Raid On So- England Attack Apparently Aimed A_t_Tangling Allied Prelnvasion Plans. elated Press War Analyst i l In contrast to the stalemated Allied campaign in Italy. Russian ‘ forces have dealt tottering German armies In the southeastern Ukraine another swift body blow with the capture of Nikoleav. The fall of the port city on the Bug Estuary exposes Odessa to dir- arld northeast. ‘ i i all Axis forces still east of tilt! its environs for escape by immediate Iced n that. Black 55B. 0|‘ I l i Historians, never- i the Russian victories I o-Arnericsn surge into the Italian v trong I Re-Eleoteii Read D Danaiiian E, P. ll. TORONTO, March 28 —- (OP)- Senator W. Rupert Davies of the Kingston Whig-Standard wus re- elected chairman of the Canadian section of the Empire Press Union at the annual meeting here tonight, M.E. Nichols. Vancouver Pro- vince. succeeded the late John W. Dafoe, Winnipeg Free Press. as honorary chairman. 0K? A Four Airfields tin North France illeavily Bomheil Nazis Fail To Give Bat- tle ln Air; 30 Planes Destroyed On Ground. LONDON. Marc-h 28 — iAPt Striking in a campaign of mount- ing lntenfilty against bases frcin which the Luftwaffe defends Eu- rope, 250 to 500 American heavy bcnlbers rained explosives and in- cclldiar-ies on four aiificldg in nor- thern France today. " ; striking alto,- a night R A. F‘. iMosquito foray without loss into eastern Germany. the heavily escor- l ted da-y raiders slapped at Chartres, .40 miles southwest of Paris; Chat- eaudun, 30 mi es farther southwest; tReirns, S0 milc< northeast. and Di- llon. 160 miles routlieast of Paris. The raiders destroyed 30 enemy lanes on the ground and lost two mbers and three fighters. “Unable to bring the Luftwaffe to battle," said the United States ‘twminunique announcing today‘. ‘ ‘ds. the American escort fighters flattacked enemy planes the ground, destroying 30. ' many bombers. and damaging more an a score" Thus in two days the 8th Air ‘Force has splintered 12 key enemy airdmmes and destroy- ed at least 72 Nazi craft on the ground at an expenditure of eight bombers and 13 fighters. Medium and light bombers o! Stephen Leaooek Dies In Hospital .___....._-_. i THE LATE STEPHEN LEACOCK TOR/ONTO, March 2.8 — (CF! — Stephen Lieacock, an eminent Mc- Gill University economist who gained international fame for his humorous writing rather than his professorship. died tonight at Tor- the R. A» F. tactical airforoe oper- onto General Hospital after an a-ted against military objectives in. illness of several weeks. He was ‘T4 northern France today, and Amer- yyears old. ican fighter-bombers also roared . u ear th ar a. C it- auperllmmted in Mayr 1936' “m5 ‘flirlesweszorted atlhe Britisficgirilafii with 12 other McGill professors who while me Americans had their um‘ had reaohcdthe age limit. Mr. ma- umbrella o; fight“; w!‘ spent 11°“ ‘*1 his w“ since Airmen who returned from Char- e“ i“ WY" "g1 1." 1938 he W"! tres—hit for tile third time this the Twleedslnmr Pm" w" his b°°kl month and second successive day-- "My Dw°°ve'y °f ‘he wesv- and Cllatcaudun expressed amaze- Stephell Beam“ Wmtt‘ mint’ merit at the lack of opposition in books. and a oimsiderob-e number the Paris area, which had been. were serious volumes on political wildly defended by the Luftwaffe conomy. biography and historyllast fall. ut it was the cheerful nonsense he| wrote in such boo-ks as "literary; A communique giving the final Laipses" and "Behind the Beyond" 42 German pianos were accounted. Reiis Retake Big Base And Dross jug R. LONDON. March 2&—(A.P)-’I'hc Red army toppled the former Sov- iet Black Sen fleet base of Niko- leav at. the mouth of the Bug today and crossed that river G0 miles uro- streum in a swift smash southward through the cnuinbling secondary defences of Odessa. Moscow an- nounced tonight. In Rumuniil other Soviet forces were assaulting the key rail citv of Iasi. the Berlin radio said. but Mos- cow did ilot confirm this report. If true. it would be the first Soviet invasion of Axis territory. In the southeastern part of pre- withln 40 miles of Czechs-Slovakia. with tile capture of Gyozdets. a district centre of the Stanislav re- gion only ll miles zoortheast. of Kolomca on the Czernouritz-Lwow railway: That, "represented a l0- iSolilier Aoquitteii 0n Three Dharges OTTAWA. March 28-40?)- Radio service for a new trans-Ca- nada Air Lines service in the Mar- itlmes is nearing completion with towers PTCBCILH at Copprn‘ Lake. be- tween Sydney N-B., and Halifax, and at Greenwood field between Halifax and Saint John, N.B., department officials v It. is expected that when ground facilities arc completed in May one plane a day travelling cast from Montreal will g0 by way of Saint John and Halifax to Sydney. An established intermediate field at 1"‘"""1‘-"- "F. will be used as a stopping point to serve Saint John. lviunitiozzs Minister Howe said yesteadav at a. meeting of the Commons railway committee that a site has been approved for a new ail-port at Saint John but it is not expected that it will be de- Yloped until after the war. Mean- time. Saint John will be flan Blissvllle. BUCKINGHAM. QUE- March 38 --tOP)—-Cpl. Willem Len of Mont- rca-l. member of the Veterans’ Guard of Canada ilvos today quitted by a court nlnrtiul oi ties of conduct prejudicial to good older and military discipline; fail- iniz to return German prisoners of war sit the required hour to the Thureo. Que. lumbcr camp which they were employed. and neglecting to see that they were under reasonable suiperv times. The court martial withheld findings on three charges faced by Lea-tnose o1 allowing prisoners to fratemize with civilians. being in- toldcated while in char e of pri- soners of war and perm ttlng pri- soncrs to eorlalsne intoxicating "ESQ. a char- served DELICIOUS ADA" TEA 8s COFFEE h s little must now go a long way, sausfseuol depends upon quality of flavour. lit, mile advance from Gorodcnka, captured Monday. Vaughan Says .lnorease In ‘Rail Traffic I C~| OTTAWA, Marcli_28 - (CP)-— Canadian Natjlorigiiuftailways Wef- ations so for in I sharp increases over breaking year of i943, ghan C. N. day in presen the linittec. ill‘ Before discussing the 1943 report . R. ZrOss revenues fol- 1944 now are $9.100,- 000 ovcl" the corresponding period of Mr. Vaughan said C. N |000.000. It was douwtful Net, revenues to tho end of pace woud maintained throughout the ye Committee discussion centred lar- gely on the railways financial p0- sition with Hon. R. B. Hanson (PC - York -— Sunbury) question- ing the president. Mr. Hanson prefaced his railway question; by commendation for the government owned railway. " is government could not have done what it has done without the tap-operation of both railway; and the O.N.R.. has had a major share and done a major part," Mr Hanson said. LONDON. March m - (C?) — Reutersi-The British Common- wealth was in full agreement with the United States request to Eire to aXDEl Axis diplomats. Prime Minister Churchill said today in a written reply to a House of Com- wnr Poland the Russians drove to . Mfllavc recorded record R. C. Vau- R president. said to- ting the 1M3 annual ision at all g-cport t.o the Commons railway com- ebruary were up ap roximately Si,- whether ar, Mr. Vaughan tally for Monday's operations sairl that he became famous. for. four by bunbel- gunners and Mr. Iieacock was noted as avsix United states bombgijs and lLl speaker, too. and had travelled ex- fighters had been lost. tenslvely on lect/ure tours. The Vichy radio warned A.R..i-‘- Stephen leucock was born in personnel to "remain iii constalzn Swanrnoor, I-lants, Eng, Dec 30.! state of alert in the western and i809 and came to Canada with his. southern danger zones of Franco parents when he was six. ‘due to the scale and frequency or Ml‘. Leococks wife died in 1925 the Anglo-American raids end till after they had been married 25 likelihood of even more intense years. They had onc son. Stephen enemy action in the immedlat; fu- Lushington_1.e_acock._born in 1915 ture." ' Nazis Show Uneasiness Over Flanks At Cassino Enemy Puzzled As To Where 5th Army Likely To Strike Now. By Lynn I-Ielnserllng lof platoon strength on the west ts-lde of the bcachhead were broken NAPLES, Marsh 28 - iA Pt -!up Sunday afternoon. Piltrolling Showing mounting uneasiness abvcontinued on the British 8th Army out their flanks in the 1s llolfmnt in eastern Italy arch. the Germans alter a ‘up The Aided heavy bculber fol-ca but ullsuccc=siui niluck in inc lillis.,'-\'as inactive, but lighter crniii north of iilc stronghold are iaylrigisvvariiicd out, in some 1.400 sortie: a steady artillery barrage on All-[against railway lines, bridges, air led positions to the soullr it “'3. ‘fields and other targets throughout iannuunccd today ‘Central Italy f The Nazis. obviously puzzled irs- "' ‘to wnerc the 5th Army might sirikci ldlall next in an effort to break tire It- ‘along tile road between the vili- Most rnienosiiirs 91o? M‘ 404E deadlock, attacked yesterday ages of Ciaro and ‘Derelle. rlome four uniles from Casslno. but. werg mrqwn lilacs by Allied artillery and infan- Xifl‘. An enemy patrol that worked ;iis wily around to a point northeast of Ciaro also was scattered. i, For the second day hundreds ofi Allied guns smashed steadily or. German styongpoints in thc south. lvvst- COITICy of Cassino and along highway 6 leading from the shat- tered town to Rune. Tiic lfieatest, weight of she is was thrown at. tho Hotels Continental and Des Rosesi .1nt0 the ruin; of ovliicll Nazi para-i ‘chute troops hove burrowed i An Allied ccmmuni ue said the two hotels were “considerably bat- tered’ and that a German supply dunilp was set afire. Six different patrol clashes were TBPQrted on the Anzio heachhead, mainly in the Clsocrna and Car. "WW He“. and it was disclosed t_hat_ three small German attacks _ .-i1~li|tt.ii|~| i- A High tide this aftemoon at 3M and tomorrow morning at 4.10. Sun sets this evening at 1.8 one rises. tomorrow rnorn at 0.40. first quarter moon arch Vi. 0.84 a.m. Japllnvasioil NEW DELHI, March N—(AP)-_ Efforts of British troops to clear Japanese invasion columns from the Tiddim-Irnphal road south of the communications centre of imphsl in India “continue lltis- factorlly." Admiral Lord Louis Mountbatten! headquarters riounced today. However. another Japanese force gushing into India through the emra hills was making determined attacks in the vicinity of Ukhrul. S2 miles northeast of Irnphsl. with hai-d Whiting in prowess DAILI All BBIVICI Charlottetown - saalaserslle - Meucton Leave Charlottetown ‘LS8 5, g 00 noon. . . m. n‘- rown LID l, g m. It. Arrive Charlotte l.“ p. m. 1.05 p. SUNDAY SIIVICI heave Charlottetown ll no‘, Ari-he Charlottetown 6.48 p. u. l