I i. I Nib‘! ‘» WHAT IHE DHHIS‘! will) W OMIAY CAD IIIADIJ Milli‘ "WM our or no mu no song's!» CREATE 0,1... TBIITIIBRIISII 19g Bbbui Gosmssslqlselvlos —dscn_isssrssnlopsn l mic the use 0t his name. deolared the Russians were making sure thatvManchmia would be indust- rially, weak while Soviet maritime pro es in the Pacilic have s. chance to bake the machinery and ‘mnld up strategic industries. _ The official added the Russians had learned from bitter expierience that they had to maintain a lsrfl army in Siberia to watch the Jap- in Manchurla and they to avoid this hereafter. Isl Chinese sources estim- ated it would take at least three years to restore Manchuria to somethi like the Industrial cep- acity It ed lmder the Japan- me. who built productive envoire there In 14 years Since Japan collapsed and the Russians moved in. th Chinese Russians to Pick lsnohuria ltlsan I! IEINCQ DAVIS churis. March ——- A high so. ml“ y ll lhsiobsndabemuse or world opin- ion and would pull out alter that i: industrial area. was Picked down to its steel ribs smart the sov- we 0111c sources let stripping has extended to great fiver dams and coal es. leav- a grave ‘lfuel silos-tags in sf the world's richest, 003.1 reglong, ‘R19 Official. who declined in per- G have watched trainloads o! vital machine tools in endless procession roll toward Siberia. and particularly the great Russian base oi Vladivo- The Lite and Fights ol DR. T.- T. $|'||E|.D$ — the Jarvis Street Pastor For 30 years, Pastor Shields has been attacking Prime Ministers, Premiers, the Catholic Church, McMaster Uni- versity, Labor Unions, and even the Baptist Church authorities. Once called the “Pope of Jarvis Street" by angry students, refused a place to speak in many of our cities, and publicly re- primanded hy Prime Minister King, he is continually in hot water. In the first of two articles, staff writer Ken- \ neth Johnstone oi‘ The Standard. tells something of the life and fights of this belligerent pastor. Other features this week: HUW SUUAIIST IS IRITMN? How does the average En ishrnsn feel toward the Labor Government How is Attlcefi pros- fle 10%? Stafl‘ Writer Gerald Cldi, reporting direct from England, gives you com: of the answers in The Standard this wee . "now so YOU sum" o. you sleeponyour sldeoron your back? Do you weer pQIarneIorInIQhtgoWnPStsnIey Hand- ' man's“, hygiuchinonlgaomeofths PW“! W!!! W NW IIIQP- In tlusheaathinptheydosndwsar. . ‘Till AIHCIIAII IIOCKIY GINIIALS AndyUlriimlportllditorofTh Stand- lflttabssyou sesnsssgoneol ,» tholmplflhlOfl svhatgosson ‘g “floslsevWI-squo. '15 Gsrnians Are Headache to Eric? fiovt av ALAN mouruolulinv rxusuu. csnrnu suinnun This column Is reserved lor nesn or local literal, but ad of a news; nature pa; be lmerse as iIvs cents a word, strictly oer- I able In adverse; CBASWII-L lor photographs. UONIIDIIATIO i a‘ N LIFE Ili- ros. aswnfiifi Gllts Call n Crockettb. _ 1-21-tl nowssn Momma m: kitted rooms: Z-B-Stt-tl. VARIETY CONCERT, (Itirlstisn Church Schoolroom. Monday and Tuesday. March‘ 11th and 12th:,’ 8'2,- Ths defies-ls arrlv ‘ lot oi pro- Ied 0000b?!» ch more than oca set. It has not t been decided whet to do with em. The Germans wanttobesorxttoflermanuorstay in Eire; and French - author- ities want them sent back tn g came from with their COMING TBIMZ Ready Posted damning Wall Pu r, Berry Brothers Pei-nts-Varnisies. ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES. — B, '1‘, Morrison A Co. have at pres- ent s stock or Toasters. irons and Baby Bottle Warmers All at reason- able es, 3-1Z-14-2i. EXPECTED DAILY s. of Laprairie Rad Brock, No, 1. '1lhe Rogers Hardware Company. Limited. _ 3-8-8- 1-1 . REGULAR MONTHLY DIEET- ING Knights o! Columbus to be this a esday evening at 8.15 is post on~ Id to Thursday evening. same t e. THE GUARDIAN IN HALIFAX. —Islanders and others In Halilss desirous of obtaining The Gtmrdhn may do 50 at Walker's White Spot. 11 Salter St. i!- whsro stolen Peat Projects car a la-yearbplan to deveiloo 1105f. produc O!) i’ Y" lll means — at s. cost of 3.810.000 pounds. ' _ Two electricity geruerat plan-is. which are to be establish on the bogs, will consume 280.000 tons ol peat and produce approximubey 210,000,000 units o! electricity a year. Eire has no coal mines of any importance and beiore the war im- ported 3,000,000 units of electricity a year. Eire has no coal mines of a-ny importance and before the war im- ported 2.000.000 tons of coal yearly from Britain. Government Setback Prime Minister de Valerfs political has sullered its first, setback since it came into power In 1962. In the recent "mln- ature general elwtlon." when Iivc ‘by-elections were held on the same day, the party lost its first by-elec- tlon in South County Mayo where the party's candidate was deieated by the Partner's Party nominee. Results oi the by-elections re- vealed the strength of the govern- ment party was substantially re duced. In the North West Dublin FRESH PORTLAND CEMENT- -Carlosd reecived today. Please order early Mr, Merchant, Mr, Con~ tractor. DeBlois Bros. M1512 T - - 1. HOLIDAY VISIT - Mrs. Mitch- ell MacNell and Mrs. Ella Mac- Laren returned to their homes in Trenton from a week's vacation spent with the latter’: relatives at Charlottetown and Peter's Road, P, E, I, They made the trio by plane and thoroughly enjoyed this way o! travelling. -New Glasgow News. 0N FIJRLOUGII - Sgt. Heath Llewellyn, Halifax, who spent a few days ln Trenton, N. 5., with his brother and sisier-in-lsw, Mr. and Mrs. James Llewellyn und family left by plane for hls bume constituency. where Mr. De Valeras fiillstgylljggonkh? .E‘,,,f,1,,,§‘;{3‘"§, 1:11: eldest son. 34-year-old Maj. Vivlon turloughuy De Valera was clecled. only 28 Der cent 0.! the electorate voted-lowest recorded poll in Eire lor 25 years. were read by Mrs. Bustln. The Treasurer reported $100. for the month oi February. The Christian CITY POLICE COURT — A~t the City ‘Police Court yesterday morn- three were each fined $10 and costs or 20 days. Another Inst two months. She also read a very line letter from the Presbyterlal Christian Stewardship Secretary, Mrs. J. F. Easton, Mrs, E. C. MacKsy report- Pd 60 vlslis, 9 to the Hospital and Sanatorlum. Short, interesting sketches on the life and work oi two of our missionaries, Miss Louise Callbcck and Miss Elma Inman were given by Mrs. L. Saunders and Mrs. G. Barbour. It was decided to adopt. Mics Beryl Morson as the missionary for prayer. A committee consisting of Mrs. T. E. MacLr-nnan, Mrs, R. H. Rog- ers and Mrs. B. E. Mutch was up- polnted to draft a letter to Mr. J. L. Douglas regarding the Canad- lan-Japanese ‘question. All regretted to hear that Mrs. J. Pick in the hospital and hope for her return near future. After singing, "Take Time lo be Holy," the President Introduced Mrs, (Dr.) A. D. Mac- Kcnzie who presented a synopsis oi a chapter from the book, ‘Ango- Now.‘ disorderly was lined $20 and costs or 3,0 days The accused on a charge oi breaking and entering was remanded for medical ax- amination. CALLED ROME BY SICKNESS- Mrs. Silas Gratto received a tele- gram last week from relatives In Montague, P.E.I., conveying the news that her mother, Mrs. Angus Matheson is quite ill at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Annie Jay of that village. Mrs. Grailo left. im- medlately for the Island, making the trip by the Borden-Tormen- iInc route, and will remain there for some time. Her many friends here hope that. her mother, Mrs. Mstheson, may soon recover. -New Glasgow News. MT. HERBERT Y.P.U. The re r weekly meeting of the Mount Herbert Y. P. was held at the Assembly Hall oi the Protest- ant. Orphanage ‘Tuesday, March 5. The devotional period was opened by singing “Jesus rhe Very Thought ol Thee". R/cv, E. R. MacVica-r led in prayer, The Scripture les- son was Exodus 20:147. read Allison Mutch. The hymn “Rise Up. 0 Men of God" closed the de- votionals. The torplc under dis- cussion "This Canada o! " Winston Wood. Christian Citizenship. Convener had cha c. The business period opened by t e reading of the minutes oi the pro vlous meeting. Roll call was ans- wered by 14 members. Collection amounted to 90c. Recreation period was much enjoyed. comprising of "quires" and s "sing-song". The meeting was ClOe€d by slngln the National Anthem. Gm, T. G. Mency. RICA. has re- turned to his unit at Halifax af- ter spending the work-end with his wile and lamllv citv WJILS. Meeting The afternoon Auxiliary uf the Woman's Missionary Soclet of Trinity United Church, Charlotte- MW". met in lhc East Parlour, Hearts Memorial Hall on Thursday, ,the 7th insL, with thirty-four mem- bars prescni. ard m the Every one present was thrilled by the vivid and stirring descrip- tion shc ave oi‘ the wonderful healing an spiritual’ work done by Dr, and Mrs. Strangway and Dr. Gilchrist in Africa. The results of Christian work and Influence will not soon uc fnr- gotten by her listeners. Meeting closed with the hymn "Breathe On- Mc Breath of God’ and the Mizpah Benediction. iliiizial List of Casualties ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE OFFICIAL CaAgaLllgLTY LIST Ova rseas Killed on Active §orvlcez Clark, Alfred John, F0, Cape Dauphin, N. S. Joyce, Robert Gray. B-L, Mac- Luod Trail, Calgary, Alia. Previously Missing 0n Active Service-Now Reported to Have Mrs, J. J. MacFudyc-n revr-runily Dgad whua 15-154mm- “1 w“; cgnrlucied the devotional oxor- J5me!‘ wmigm gen,“ WQ, c es, Vancouver B. C. Previously Missing On Aotlvo Service-Now For Official Pur- poses Presumed Dead: Pow, Leslie Gordon Drummond, F0, Moffai, P. 0., Sask. Seriously lll as n Result uf In- Jurioa Sustained on Active Ber- Meetlng opened with prayer by the President, Mrs. H. E. Mulch. All joined In singing "Josue Shall Reign," after which rayer was offered by Mrs. Marl-“n yen. Psalm twenty-seven was read responsive- . rs. R. H. Rogers lcrl in rrnyv-r, all uniting In repealing the Lord's aysr. This service closed hv singing, "More Love to"l‘hse." Mrs, R. E. Mulch then look Ihc chair um] the mnutcs of Ihc former meeting RHEUMATIC PA ()///1/.'/_\' /' (mini Mother Listens to Dealt ~ getting better‘. waulck. l! turns to lnllsr when sciatica, Mad Pianist Son lombsgo and neuralgia are treated with Norvllins. its penetrating - powers are most unusual-dd they sink to the painful areas whsrctho euro mm and muscles are locat- ed. limited! ‘say roller cones quickly-because certain kinds o! ‘pain doriotllvsvorylorig lilisrvb, Ills can be applied-Intuit olitlso hundreds or minor ills that com hiss may be rs- vice: Phllliéss, Kenneth Alexander. Parry ound, Ont. NADA Died from Natural C : Oockram, William Iiwart O. B. IL, Ad, Ottawa, 0m. 70'! ...t emoticon nawwm sun- g a! ronsrdu 1 SIOO%OILI. March‘ ll"- 2) --Vltsl war secrets o! the United iiil‘f.."..‘i.iiii..‘.'iit‘i'aii“firféli' . o . - d ds f n or be t - 25.1%’ ch51! fizasigwzin in Bugle)- w r. degezslglerlwststitlastles‘ on rurclslt produc on an exact specifications oi nevi weaponsuyet i? dthe ‘taperi- t stage s ernae w re- SL245». troop movements, ship- with his Nazi employers gave NEA Etoclnholm. NBA Executive Editor Boyd Lewis. right. checks the male oi start- ling documentary evidence given NBA Joesten, center, and Burton Benjamin. secretly snapped by him with a microcsmers at spy headquarters in 0'3‘ r l‘: l , Works. s: lM-f-llh . d t .. t , s..r:...a".::'..u...*r. ., .. a m: nsm-Nsrston-Crsen. ~ slum, in rel-Imam row"! vl, sd vessels in I len ports. ‘suluiglg: 08f!!!’ trons- (imoo t); t smaller wsr-‘ ulcers; 3 dssiloyers- . u‘ lsufllng ps: 2 cruisers. II lag: rhino- 2 cr ?i.‘“‘i“‘.“‘irsi'll'liifi’ s; n cgsft; l8 smlllfllflh! Service with editors Joachim A German working at odds . ARLA Ans - d more than a thousand photornplw K v m 59 3mm Stockholm operated flagrantly and climactic “‘ o! the Wei‘. like Darlsvsegcn 50 purported to house ping news, and long lists of corn- rnsnding officers in forthcoming operations. A daring and efficient s y head- quarters, operating with mpunity in the capital oi neutral Sweden, collected by radio and courier up- to-daie information on all aspects of the Allied war effort and daily transmitted its haul to Berlin by code teleprinter. These disclosures, which throw an entirely new light on the "sec- ret war" against the United Na- m an old omnmntmefit was given . t M, _ Q lions, have just been made to NEA i? 594's and 5 ma‘ remanded m‘ gtaexrybslltfistllgpogtfdle Hr .10 f0‘: the‘ Service h? ‘A ma“ w“ kmws 1 Monday the 16th. A drunk and what. he Is talking about-the chief this Innocent facade Nazi spies II with consummate cleverness in the New York's “House on 02nd Street". a beauty parlor. 2 destroyers. Ancona-io ship! 0! 39,000 gross ions; no transports; 7 landing crall; 0 small. warships; 3 cruisers; one destroyer. All this, and plenty morecf the sort, figures in stark photostatlc detail In the overwhelmln dossier or Nazi es loner In Worl We!‘ I! compiled fly z s men thrcush whose hen s passed these reports on their way to Berlin from the rour corners or the earth. We shall call him X lor the sake of con- venlence. By Nazi standards, Herr X nb- viously was a traitor. Perhaps‘ l1! was a counter-spy cleverly p itcd among those arrested and expell- ed. In addition to recordin for posterity the secrets of the azls’ greatest espionage center, na had performed, in the final phase of ihc war, sundry servlccs for the Allies‘ particularly for the Danish and lsorwegien underground. Now, in reward he was permitted stay in fiweden until arrange- ments could be made for his de- parture Ior an overseas countrv. Before he left Sweden, l.n Feb- ruary of this year, Herr X handed his hoard of mlcrofllrns over to an NBA representative for publica- tion In U. S. newspa 9 B. n “ s tlflbl-LL luncheon new is tin-Ire Ion ' IOMIK _ fllfiiflll g up ugelqs oeuen ooeuzivwil diam-dinner v-Jlss Hagen nhlr ornate nvgluar helm-tillers lllldlotsu ‘Irons unseen- Issnroin ~ Mutter- s. Here, In authentic first], ls°the story of super-secret Information other , apparently .wlth case, in he U ted States, Great Britain. the Soviet Union and elsewhere, and speedily relayed to Berlin via Sweden. Here Is the fascinating picture or real-lite spies at work, cunninlg, ruthless, forever suspic- ious o and doubls-crossln each other. Here are laid bare i e sor- did secrets o£ another "House; on 92nd Street," wholly unretouched l by Hollywood, Although the‘ material saved from destruction by the ingenious X covers orll I comparatively short period i rom mid-January to April 00, I046). it comprises a out a thousand original reports filed b Nazi agents all over the worl . Received and relayed by code I,e‘v=- rlnters, the messages are couched n a dry technical language, with . a bit- of slang, or s few profanities added here or there. t no Mlsspelllngs are fro uent, only ln the orclgn wor s used but also _In the German ther the code clerks were drawn from the less educated strata o! Nazi society, or they were working under such strain that they could pav no hlfll ‘If-I lll}! Qlfl T-klfi ' QUlCKlES Photocopy o! an actual spy report made by Hour X's uiic-oesmera. In report 035 W., "Hektor" (presumably stationed in the United Btatee), Iniorms Stockholm on March 2i. 1045, the exact specifications and aver- age monthly production oi’ the P-80 (Shooting Star). In 906 W.. the same 88ml? ropofls on the some date, data on the experimental jet plane XP-W made by Republic. He describes this plane u superior .I'I'.Mlrdtll—-(AP)—‘ mother; to the Shooting Star. code teleprlnier employed by the Nazis until the end of the war. In support or his testimony, the Informant-who must remain un- named lor the time being-has de- livered lq NEA a unique mass of documentary evidence - more than a thousand photocopies secretly snapped by him at spy headquart- ers by means of a microcamera. The evidence ls breath-taking In its scope and detail. One re- port, filed in March 1946, reveal- ed to the Germans the axsct speci- ficaliolls of the than top seq-e! _80 Jet plane, the Shooting Star: range-JIM) kilometers; top .Ipecd-- 960 kilometers per hour; ceillng— 47,000 f1; ilylng time-IOU to 105 minutes; producer-four Lockheed plants and one North American Aviation plsnt- equipped with two engines, made y General Electric: average monthly out ut, March- sy 1 to 00 panes, etc." One agent reports In January 1945 that "75 per cent of 8-29 are flown from the U. S. to the Far East vla Africa and India; the remainder-mostly planes of the 2i Bomber Command—-by way of the Paclilc." BRITISH PRODUCTION Another knows all about the production of Lnncsstsr planes In Great Britain. Main assembly works are at Woodlord, Csrlish. Newton Heath, Chadderton, Block- port, Wlthlngion AIrdrIe and Mei- ropolltsn Vlckers. Parts for the ‘U n Traction Co. with three lsnts at Alrdrle, Glas ow and Inbnagh; Frost. Steel o Bolton, Manches- ter; ‘rsokson A: IonWMoi-path; Team Valley Trading losers, Oates- head; Scottish Mac lee ., ma; RAI- Works nd no lunc- tlon: Ame fesdonr Insonds plane are made by Scottish Motor ' by the Allies ln the very nerve- center ol German espionage. More likely he was a renegade, who pic- Dered to "jump o . as the used to say In the Nazi Jargon, an made good use of a un:que opportunity to rove his dlssflectlon to the Naz regime at the proper time. HIS WORK CONFIDENTIAL Although X's loyalty was not questioned by his superiors, his work was of so confidential a nat- ure that a special supervisor was assigned to him. Every afternoon at three o'clock a controller would appear st the cede room to see that all copies oi telcprlnter mes- sages received and dispatched dur- Ing the day were properly destroy- attention to nlcetisa o! style. By Ken Reynolds .fi/””"" gtTlVii-Y 2° Smoxme \\\. ~.\\\‘ \\\\\\\\ ed. But X, himself thoreu hly Iri- e in all the tricks of t e ro es- alon, knows how to deal W h the situation. By means of a diminu- tive camera concealed In his clot Irlilg "he surrepalilogslty ohottogrsp h a iemessegs a pass rog his hands. Before the clock strllrz-s three, all the day's work has been recorded on microfilm which he easily smuggler out of the office and tucks aw In a private safe “I'm afraid, sir. that 1;. lites, tool for future once. XNOEAIIIITIID I On ay 8 within a few hours oi the first news of Germany's un- condl onsl su er vsrnmsnt broke matlc relations with hnson is not. only sneaking I smoke — but. reading the Guardian Want Al opportun- s g IT'S I-Isnsr no quits no arm. sqgrrtr. . avlslsszvrssn