e s M} AGENT: Mn. John Pond, ll chum “ah SUMMEBSIDI and PRINCE 300N190“ m fyq-Subscriptio-la Ad. '55,, Bookstore, Water Street. pronto Bakes. Watt:- fittest. The Guar an w elirered to m h "fin-lei- Boy at 2c per day. or 10c per neehyfllmazh? I ‘we your order to the boy responsible for dellveflq n column is reserved for new: if local interest, but advertising ' d, ngwgy nature may be inserted Br l‘ g ecnts a word, strictly payable , h, idvancc. Gwfu" Dflllltolle. Water some; —WOB.M POWDER . ‘Taylor Dru: Co.. Kenslbzxtontfws C ITS. Cubes Kibblo. 7 '59:: clzgiscflPuppy Ififgé; 34134:?‘ mum [deli t0 Brace s. ' Milk C .' on. SALE-Near Flec- ' '13 acres cleared. APPLY “ w i u s n I?“ w- mm" §f§f3_§{'}¢_26.;9_ lCharlottetown to atten Order -IN CHARLOTTE“) Mr and Mrs w" BUY Herriml Neli- 3°95‘ Tax‘ mgmature' “s , - , f small .. ‘filivaétxgllsouttjrblgfore the fire- $5 arrived. No serious damage ns 4°“- '5' “ LIZABETII .- Til or MRS. a "5352 _ The death occurred a 0 trl Bcdeque on me (ipnkfllgenoramsl Euwbem -—SIMJVION S |ton. this is the -l.he Admission 20 cents. ., . Sh l aves to “M? 531232322, Bream: Jane. {#311115 a patient in the Win09 comm- Hospital suffering from m- Weqlms in other parts of the of ’I‘yne Valley. S. w.“ govlllcc. The funeral will be held "n Thursday 5fte"n°°n'"'s' =..sul\I‘\lElt'FiELD C. W. L. -’I‘ne merslde, _5, hwh nieetirlg of the St. Jeane! _m Be —-—- "Mqgvyglon of the Catholic - . n]. Dunville of - _ h ld on the 23rd fiswfiagllll: vIl-‘Eisltieicnl. Mrs- 1W- hMumm. in the chair. The “mg opened with the League w. by the Chaplain, Rev- nc Murray. Tile minutes of meeting were read and adopt- @,A letter of appeal from the fihidian War Services Fund Com- tee was read and it was un- wimcusly agreed to lllvc this cam- our full cooperation. A letter the convenor of Citizenship discussed and on motion. it WB-S lded that this sub-division sup- ithe effort beini! made w ha" Point has returned after visit his home at West. Point. —s. -—Mrs. J. F. Taylor weekend guests of Dr. and Mr . T. Colvlh. Summerside. -s. s er Bloomfield spent in Sumrnerside. —s. —Mrs. C. D. MacCallum has turned after visiting he Quebec City. —s. daughters . . h is by ———— $12” h§o°“lhescpel°pu in —Ml-=e Dolly Matthew. Plincipal grades 8. 9 or i0, standlns 1118M“ l" thissubject, in the seven schools viillin the parish. Letters were $180 iud Oil behalf oi the Sisters oi merside. — =s Blanche Lirlkletter ‘tile Study Clubs organized at mice illdto continue throuilhfllll m‘? ltllten scason. WBYS 8nd Means °f lilcnclnr various activities were ‘iisclssed and tentative plan-S W91’? liid ior future entertainments. in- illlfillllll a variety concert and a llltlery. The report oi the War Work llmlmittce was read by Mrs. Harry miles, and showed a credible a.- lloullt of work done for the il-Bhl- ilr forces: besides several quilt! Illicil vlvre made for the bomb- lktirls in England. ‘the members rill be fllnlished with sewing as lnlm as the new material is sent iron the Red Cross office. As the tat meeting is the annual meotinll lives decided to nonlinate the oi- llcen and executive from the floor. hearty vote of thanks in the plain. Rev. Father Murray, for iii interest and encouragement in work was moved by Mrs. l. B. Croken, seconded by Mrs. l. W. Croken and presented by the dent to which Father Murray lttllllly lvplied. The meeting clos- lli with praytcr. {REDIT UNION LTD" OF IIZhSINGTON-A meeting of the llcmbers of the Kensington Credit llllcn 1nd,, was held on Wednes- ll. March 10th. There were forty timbers present. The President. udnmes Saunders opened the "Winn and gave a brief address. ldeltkntlon was appointed to con- llltt business for the Credit Union live to the Field Day held a. L" lac. Miss Ellie Gillis reported k activities of the Clelrnont and “If! Annan Study Group. Mr. “If Rfllh-ifly reported for the In- Rivcr group. MI‘. P. N. IA- kcve a report oi Kensington gain and w. fimes gel- c or Marga no _ llnmelcrlty of the study groups "kebuelcn discussing the proposed h R scheme and are consider- mmlllls the Government to re- . m“ sublect and give the farm- ‘; wince to study the question h’ Bil/lull their opinions. w. u "llhler. Credit Union field- ‘ who was present was then cal- k to address the meeting. u... mhllllili?!‘ traced the co-oper- lmhiévcment from its beginning ‘mile. England in i844 to ed m” hm day. showing wilat can tcnsibly excluded Iceland. y,“ Y the Pi-‘Oplc to help ulem- United "c ll the need of 3nd L180 ydhcmfi 0f the Credit Union her every success. -S. eral of Rev. G. A. Sellar at Florenoeville. —s. Quarrie. at Wilmot Valley.— S. —-M-l8s Noreen Whalen, who the Civil Service Department; Ottawa-S. X, N. B. spent the weekend Sunlmelside, the guest of Mr. a Mrs. Vernon Matthew. Nazis Declare (Continued from page 1) war zone as follows:— meridian to a. point north, from there to a pol tude to the three-mile zone Greenland, then south alon three-mile pone to a point a glee. M minutes north and 80 wees west, from the south to point 58 degrees and 86 degrees west. from there 46 degrees north 30 degrees ‘Ihen east alo latitude to five there to the llrench coast at degrees 46 minutes wvst. blockade” of lowed to enter the original Ewllnz their monthly meetings the none Iceland. any United ‘mmtxlifl’ ness like manner. Stain ships now will be permitted I“ "ed come oi the pro- to to Iceland. “limit-inc the Credit Com- fifilgl explained how m meet “W: ems. The work of thn "M fy Committee was eg- y "if! Mr. Gauthier smas- Wdmwlly of a vigilant ru- w “be committee. He clos-d his “he $5011: address by exhm. “e ‘"05"! to co-operaie and “my, talémlfly how they can Mum“, ons in three freighlcrs sister kin Goddess woul Iceland their own Nani blockade extension. Illllgqtf ‘ He “no outunad o iii u on of buying clubs. - PIA!!! SERVICE! DESI’!!! ATNCK! hi1.‘ “llflyec in which all the " 0° pan. n posed —-— will: scheme m” lTsgu-eec IDNDON. March 2a -<op~ - ‘ “‘°"°ll made by m. Arthur Island of mm. held ser- "1 mar‘: the day of prayer and 5 Ht members study this viccsio ha?" further. A hearty vote oi p, f"! extended to My, Qpu- enemy dive-bombers, the B 0|’ his att nri rid i - 3 d ti Corporation ' rtcd alcnaddresseio bacteria be mall-lie wmhiufl: attacks did lit dl- J W. z. an .. lhould be loft with Mn. Pond, Y , L", Guardllu may be bourhst 6.112.113‘? 0| u‘. gouowm. "om h GINO‘. 87 Granville Street, Bummenide by for this service, l‘! Your route. es at 1-,, flung“ M“ a“ flSmnfi-§§é,-gll-1-il6-2i.l —RELIEVING n‘ ULEARY ._ B!" "' _____ Mr. J. M. Logan, accountant at ‘JWE ALARM - Summerside lgle Summer IUD Branch -of the . m... were called out early ank of Nova Scotla. is in Ouleary I “v1 nlomin; about. 5 o'clock i0 Irene“!!! the manager. lVfr. G. L. ffhop. n; m. William Eilisfif: Black who is ill at his home. —s. and MacFarlane b95919» Bedeillle Rink. Thursday, March 2'1, New Annan vs. Middle- fourth and perhaps last game of this series. Should g, New Annan win cup will be pre- sented at end of game. Skate after. he?" m . g e, we. L-401-3-26-2i, lifllllg-“ils Zgelviffivfogaliyennncer ———-————- in. and had lived in Bedequc Personals Roper married life. She was a —Mrs. Clark Casely o: Haynlltqn was a. recent visitor to Wlllnot Val- ley. —s. m her hip; a son Cedric in __.__ m“ and Later in Central —Friends will regret to lam-n of A150 several sons and the illness oi Mrs. Harry Williams —Mr. James MacDonald oi West Devon was a recent visitor to Sum- West and Mrs. T131811 Warren. Charlottetown were —-Miss Carissa Blanchard. teach- the weekend to her home in Summerside of Fanning scho 1 M l the weekend at I26!‘ hliargeeqlilli §lilrtlla and from the, convenor of has It l» i353’; i..=:s::::l..:" haul; cs: —Rev. George Ayers of Summer- side was a recent visitor to Jack- sonville. He had attended the fun- East u-W-tllsllaslmtjyimer ‘of Alberton a e t Holman he. n e Prnce County —Mirs. Bruce Carruthers, of How- Ian and her \"o sons, George and Calvin are Visiting Mrs. Clarrllth- "'8 dB-llehter. Mrs. Frances Mac- had been on the teaching staff of Bey- side School has taken e. position in —Mk. Howard McPhail of Gra d Elli-Ty Mamiclen Islands, now ca- tlaoned with the R. C. N. V. R. Hali- From a. point three degrees east 0n the Belgian coast 3nd on this d2 degrees th 6e- dc- 50 minutes north west. the 5th degree eglees west, from degrees 00 minutes urth and two When GCIIIIE/IH declared e “total taln last Aug. l7, the war zone as laid down includ- the Shetland Islands but 05-» States ships were not al- some small plunger ships and operate between New York and Reykjavik. Trade between the two startled when the German invasion of Denmark cut that country off from Iceland, her gdom. (Officials said the steamship leave New York for ‘raced y night despite the ‘intercession despite two attacks by ritlsh M 31hr WESTERNGN —SUPPLIES f buildl i m and llshlnlftcnu wiiirfétl’? i? s‘ 11-336-3-26-21. Borden wslBeutricu Murphy efOilu. lttcwwnisvisi inBorden igmaJohnNglfan. n” viaitinit in Halifax. Sunlmcrside on Saturday. Mrs. Ray Stull and Mrs. Jackie Cane and little daughter Barbara of Charlottetown were week end visi- tors to Borden. Mr Elmer Roberts who has been n cmllbyed in the Civil Service at 0t- —QUALITY beef and cream are oilcake. Bran and how at Bruce's L-aas-a-zc-zl, ing I-I. i-e- III at in ml 08 nt degrees north and l0 degrees wet l 1 ll then west on the 68th degree latsi- mo‘ L said m Co“ of e e to 47 laws is visiting his wife and little son Charles at Borden. P. E. I. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Doyle of Borden were visitors to Charlotte. town on Saturday. "" Mr. Julian Herring f Borden left a P. Igllaenre in ° m w ng_oi the Prince Edward 15%.} on Monday morning for a vi bin parents at Murray Harbour. li/irs. Harry Crossman of Borden visited her parents in Freetown over the week end. Miss Pauline Maolsaac who rec- ently underwent a serious mastoid operation in the Charlottetown Hos- over the week end but returned to Charlottetown on Monday for fur- iher treatment. Misses Doria and Barbara Herring also Edith Sharpe were visitors to Summel-side on Saturday. Miss Roberta I-Iowalt. teacher at y Pane school, spent the week end in Borden. guest of Miss Jean Macfsaac. Mr. Charles Buxion Love who has been stoker on H. M. C. S Stada- cona at Halifax has been transferred to Pictou. N. S.. where he will take a course in Diesel Engineering. Miss Pefiiry MacDonald of Char- lottetown was a week end visitor to Borden. guest oi Mrs. Louis Hackett. Mrs. Gordon MacWiiliams and daughter Rita were visitors to Bor- den 0n Mlmday. guests oi Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jay —A. Huge Money g (Continued from page 1) — in a- review oi the Canadian war ef- fort. said almost 44 per cent. of the national income was pledged to d.- lect and indirect support of the allied cause. He was apparently answering critical references to Canadas‘ war effort which cropped up during debate in Washington on the Lease-lend Bill. Canada's war contribution for the coming fiscal year in terms of monev woud be the equivalent of $36,000,- 000._000 ou-t oi a total United States national income of 880.000.000.000, said Mr. Kins. l In addition. Canada was in the war and contributing men. The 250.- 000 Canadians on active service. proportionately to the population cf Canada. is the equivalent to an Am- erican armv 0f 2,250,000. in relation to the population of the United States. In the enthusiasm with which Canadians greeted the assistance now offered by the United States.‘ Mr. King said, there was no occa- sion to disregard. the magnitude of the contribution tnc people of this country were making. PNever in the history of war." he mid "have 11,000,000 people given so freely or pledled so fully their treas- groehtlheir resources and their man- C.C.F. Move Fall! The war appropriations bill reach- ed the third-readinz stake after un unsuccessful attempt by M. J well. acting C.C.F. leader. to write into it an endorsarlon of the C.CJ.“.' prlnclpe of a compulsory, interest- frce loan. His anlendnlent to the bill was er Thomas Vien before Finance Min- ister Ilslev had a chance to com- ment on it. but not before John Bluckmore. New Democracy leader. expressed his opposition and ofier- ed a substitute amendment calling for obtaining money free of interest. from the Bank of Canada. amendment was automatically rul- ed out with Mr. Coldwellb. Mr. Coldwell contended a compul- sory loan was a means of securing equality of sacrifice. He said a cupi- tal levy might be in order after the war to repav part of the debt piled up. "We should ask wealth to place .itsel.i now at the disposal oi the na- tion without inteiest 5111111 without . we . Mr. Bllwkmore round the Cold- well plan even more objectionable than the government's present method of financial! by taxation and. borrowing. He described it u n. step towards Communism, regi- mentation. centralization and totali- ta anism and declared the solution of the problem la in ewide use oi the national cred t. l To a suggestion from G H. Cas- tleden (C.C.Ii'. Yorkton) that the rate of interest on overnment loam should be bellied. shoe Minister Ilsley said: "1 have no expectation it will be necessary to pay any higher rates of interest than we are paying at the present time. but I am not in a position to give any assurance." Conservative House Leader Hurl- son said the Rovernment should live parliament in the next session. a tabled statement on how the war appropriations were spent. should be done before the was asked to vote additional funds. Without debate the House passed an interim supply bill thrcliilh all three readings. It authorizes the expenditure oi one-sixth of the main estimates. 837325.307. Gilli-in Wit-h the opening oi the new fisca year, April i. t enables ltovernnlent business to carry on, pcndin ap- proval of the estimates a a w . STOCKINGS FROM SIAWIED From nlgland ocmes new: that e well-known dresemakefl creations exhibit a definite Middle-Ages in- fluence. Althwfll those time: were simllllly dark, we think they'll have togowlybncktottletlmeofihe cove man if they vnnt something late to their present riff: in Iii’ hid 31010011. __.___i__ _. amen in no. "J .Z_i~_1. MERSIDE G AND PRINCE COUNTY C Mrs. James Cameron of Borden is M1883 ‘Tessie Sexton Ind Elin 531391’ 55W- CB-mpbeil of Borden were visitors gl bltal visited her home in Borden‘ ruled out of order by Deputy Speak- in _i Willkic Takes (Continued from g I! labor leaders do nct measure up thc people will brush. you aside. Because if you don't save freedom for them —ae they have a right to ask-they are going to can upon a leadership with the power to give them what the want." record the past 20 years, said Mr. Will c. is riot a record of failure of the people. “It is a record of the failure of leadershi .and the test in the world ay-as I tcld the British cabinet during my visit to Eingland- l; whether leadership has the ca- pacity to measure ulp to these crit- ical times... . “Now this is a war of production, and it cannot be won by political leadership alone, This is a test as to whether the democratic enterprise system can out-produce the totali- tarian enslaved method of produc- tion. . . .we1l, I put it up to you 21cm. I put it up to the business men cf America to prove it. 1 think th STMlE SET (Continued from i l! zovernment in the Axis, as [Q9911- N ed to have twice schedulevcvl radio ad- dresses to the populace, but twice uncelled them as the outpouring of Boys from 10 to i8 refused to et- tend classes in three Belgrade pub. lic schools. gathering to sing Nation- alist songs in the schoolyards and delylnk their teachers to lelice them. Many were arrested. One of the largest demonstra. tions was in Kraljevo. Serbia, where the chief of the Radical Ill-Ply lives More than 8,000 men and women there gathered in the public square, heal-n an address by Bishop Nkoli. and then paraded through the streets, denouncing the “treacherous government." Police there made no attempt to interfere. Most intense feeling was shownin Bltolj §MOI185lIII capital of old Macedonia. where last November an Italian bombing plane killed l9 per- sons, having come over the border can. If I did not think they coul , ‘from the scene of the war with I could not believe in liberty. But I .Greece. call you to that duty and to that MagvlBltgl dttzmtltirlllstrgtorishout- task." a es re en r e rec army. But business and political leader- The Belgrade textile mills closed ship was not, enough, said Mr, W111. in mid-afternoon wllcll workers re- km “Labgr waders“; must may, Jlsigifgnffr lulfl; tqofllmlyled dellécn- me responsibility an idealism on S 828i 1b llC klOiifllllllCii . labor that will perm“, political In Hadji Popovic, Central Serbian city. 2.000 peasants, many brandish- glgzflrvritchforks. cried out. We vlant gmncclfatifi ‘Lgégigat: Prue-meg so as In Skoplje and Cetlrlje, two 5 m“ 9t e “r “Wwml 599m stronii Communist centres. thou-l like WY ."“muia°lm’°r5-' sands merely renewed with greater‘ M“ Winkle 551d he was cimvlnc" vigor the demonstrations of yester- ed m‘? "#215, will‘! "i" Slliice-Sfiflllly clay, invade Britain and called upon Carl- Iu Knjzevac, in Eastern Serbia, adians and Americans alike to meet old Comitaji songs were sung bv the _ challenge and give Britain thousands. who fended off the futile "ships and ships and ships, even efforts of police to keep them mov- though we have to make some suc- rlfioe to our cwn personal uses in the meantime." Al, the C-IIClUSlOII 0f his address leadership, business leadership and labor leadership to say ‘yes, yes, the R. A favorite song in all the demon- strations was the comltaji hymn be- Rinninlli “Stand 11D. You Free Fizhl- Mr. Willkie announced tint the gfitleotgr tgé>“5e§§f,,<3°me- we “u, "Wings For Brltam" Iiblnd would i . i . <. In Vrsac on the rcumanlan border,’ 520$]vaugggzzigifigigrlevvivajétpngg in the key Montenegrin city fqne 1n Torcgto lat n.‘ . . Th Podgorica. and on mllny another. g ‘ s '9'“, . e the stow was the same cheque, for purchase of a SpAflre. ' ' was donated by the Linen Trades A=scciatlon cf the United States. WORLD union OF (Continued from page l) C I-o lllillEiliEkMEN (Continued from naus- i1 operate the little mine had been working tirelessly to reach Petti- pas through the dark shaft clogged with debris. ‘Illcir progress was slow and laborious. They were buoyed by the hope that he might still live, as the men of Moose River rcfurcr‘ ‘~ yield up life while they waited underground for. dzlys ullli l.l..l from Steilarton drove a drill through to their gloomy cavern, They, too, had been buried alive through a collapsing shaft. the immense responsibility thatwill jointly rest upon them and that. in the words of Pascal ‘We will jointly combine justice and power. making what is lust, strong and what is strolls. lust?’ Will Win in Atlantic l Lord Halifax said he was conIl-z‘ dent of Britain's ability to win the, could be expected to put forth his greatest effort. "Our experience." he said. "shows that, vhllc in the coming months. TWO dfllfigcrlllfll ffllm Slellflf" these attacks (on British shipping), ton-John Simpson and George gnay cause n5 grave losses, our e-‘ Mcrltll. bot-ll of whom took pail fensive measures are soundgirovid-I in the Moose River rcscue—left ed. they can be developed with ade-| there today as soon as that mining quate strength and speed. l town had received a plea for help, “In thcllcxl few critical months, by way of the wireless, with the ' it WLl. as I_ see it. bc a race between, airplane the only means of coni--_;llc nlcuntlllg total of our Shlppllli‘ icatlon between thcsc islands l losses and the increase ln_ the cle-, 3%“ the mainland ln winter. licusivc weapons that ‘"11 reduce Ana-Jan; UYWC- ._,. ..,..» ,.. 3LT.»- them bclow the danger level. l of the Acadia‘ Coal‘ Company‘ and "I have 9° dmlbll Wm‘ We help, himself one of tgc llcl'_ol.~, l.. Mo...» l%‘i11tit-'"°&“\'}ilnb€h?:l§a%zFW‘ or om, River, started Simpson and Morrell a Angr ,.ef,‘,,,l.ing m Huiefs dreams‘ on their way. Tile call for nelp of world conquest of his schemes w. reached him at steliarton by way of Fred Porter of Liverpool, N. S, who had received word of the alc- cldent from the mine owners. At the time of the Moose River episode, Dwyer was minister of mines in Nova Scotia. fie wcni io the little community and took per- sonal charge of the l'(‘.*.Cllt* \\ul‘l(, descending into the caved-in mine dangerous operations (iOllllllfllC areat tracts of Africa. and Asia as well as Europe. Lord Halifax asked what this would mean to North America. “Across what have now become: the Straits of Dakar (the South At-; lantic between the west coast _ci Africa and South America). the ln-, vacler of Africa. if he could once as“ tablish undisputed mastery of Eu- rope. cou d swiftlypcunce upon vuurl Latin neighbors to the south. "The American continenLastand-I in: challenge to German dOIIIiIIB-f ticn, could be attacked before lthad; time to arm itself in self-defence. l "In any case, the doors of trade, in Europe. Asia and Africa. would‘ be closed to it except on terms la l down by Germany. "Would HillEl‘ attempt this last and greatest act of highway rob- bery? We cannot tell . . . . where national security is involved. it is His Dracgermen, Simpson and MOITCI], were at Cap". Tormelitinc, N. 13., tonight, waiting to cms= Northumberland Strait in the morn- g. Simpson and Morrell worked with the Draeger crows that spent weary days at Moose River tunncilinr through the collapsed mine \‘,'lll‘l‘f‘ Dr. D. E. Robertson and Alfred Scaddlnlz of Toronto were buried alive almost. five years ngn with nct enough to rest. upon a dispuild, Herman Magill. Robertson and balance of probability- Scadding were brought out alive, but Maizill died before the rescuers dug their way down to them. SMASII COUNTERFEIT RING NEW YORK, Mllrch 25 —(Ai’l— The arrest of four men in Ncw- urk, N. J. and the "smashing of a conspiracy to counterfeit £1000.- 000 worth of 25-cent government food stumps” was announced today by James J. Mnloney. supervising agent, of the United States treasury paptment Secret Service. OUT OUR WAY U. S. WOMAN PILOT APPLIES FOR POSITION WITH T. C. A. WINNIPEG, Man" March 24 -- Trrlns-Canada Air Ldncs has receiv- ed its first application from a. U. S. woman pilot. The lady is a resi- dent of upper New York State, a nurse by profession, holder of a private pilots license and the mother of two children. As TClA emloys only male British subjecs . and! furthermore, puts its prospec- By LR. l? it;- battle of the Atlantic, where Hitler “m, ‘Police break llp strikers all Steel plant EM, Pa" March 25 —- QAP) — A detachment oi 125 Penn- sylvania. State police. evllrlulni; night clubs and some_ riding horses, drove pickets and strike-sympathiz- ers from streets adjoining the Belli- lehem Steel Company Plant to- night on the heels of new violence. Lass than an hour before, nic- kets, thrown around the five-mile- lcng mills by the Congress of in- dustrial organizations‘ steel walk- ers organizing committee. had be- gun overturning cars parked in l-he vicinity. . Thirty-five or more were over- turned and damaged on a parking lot across the street from the com- pany oifioe building. A dozen walv rolled over an embankment on the approach to a bridge that spans the Lehigh River almost in the cell tie of the sprawling plant. Strike leaders claimed the auto mobiles were owned by those who reported for work today -—and wno remained in the plant tonight when the company provided food and sleeping facilities in an apparent move to withstand siege." At least four men were injured in earlier disturbances today. A city policeman received hospital treatsnent for gas burns suffered as pickets overturned a police car. The union said five pickets were temporarily blinded by tear gas. ll. S. applauds Soviets attitude Towards Turks By J. C. STARK Associated Pre s Staff Writer WASHINGTON. March 25.—(AP) -The United States applauded So- viet Russia's friendly attitude ward Turkey today. and at the same time wrote off Yugoslavia as a ucs-l slble British ally by freezing its as-‘ sets in the country. These developments quickly lowed Yugoslavian formal entry in- to the Axis alliance and Russia's‘ promise of “comprehensive neutral- ity” in the event. that Turkev were attacked or entered the war to de- fend its territory. Meanwhile, it was learned auth- orltativelv that months-long negoti- ns between the United States and Russia on trade and other ques- tions had taken a distinct turn for the better. Russia was said to have about $50,000,000 worth of orders pcndil-g ior lzocds in the United States and $50,000,000 more projected. Most of these purchases are dependent upon the granting of export licences. _ The formal applause of Russia's‘ reassuring attitude toward Turkcy Ciililé from Sumner Welles, Acting Secretary of State. He told his DYCSS conference that tile independence of a number of nations in recent. lllcntlis llnd been destroyed. at least temporarily. lscrau of mp9,.‘ the Evening smndnery certainty that Al. sucll a time. ll€ (ieclurccl. the, United States foulid satisfaction in tile fact that a great power like Soviet Russia had reaffirmed its in- tention of maintaining “comprehen- sive neutrality" ill event that a lneillhborinlz country were to suffer‘ would Held an attack. He also indicated that the United States had trlcd to keep Yugoslavia cut of the Axis. The ink ulas scarcely dry on Yu- goslavlas signature to the Berlin- Rome-Tokyo pact before the treas- ury issued an order making that country the 13th ulith frozen assets in the United States. Yulzoslavias assets here ulcre esti- mated at well over $50.000.000. N, FAITH w MAN'S nonusrv CONTINUES JUSTIFIED TORONTO, Ont, March 2i - Jnlln Burrell has faith in the hori- csiy of men and a recent exper- lcllce justifies that faith, he holds. An airman bound for Saskatoon ar- rived at the Union Station where Mr. Bun-ell is Canadian National Railways passengcr accnz. and found himself short just $2.00 0f the necessary fare. Mr. Bllrrrll ad- vanced a two spot, the ail-man went on his wny and immediately on arrival at Saskatoon forwarded $2 with a note of thanks to his benc- factor. tive pilots in ovtrnlls ior six nlmll‘ of ground duty prior to R1‘lll“'l fllfffl~ training, the application was de- clined witlfl - Williams UARDI HRONICLE lo-_ I01‘; iill the state. krlllflinil __ be given a, OUR BOARDING nous? cI/‘W’ Sweeiens your breath YOU'LL LOVE lrs "SPICY" CINNAMON FLAVOR . . . TRY l'|' u‘ CV-I l i ll. B. group seeks 3 fianallians Act ruling guides 0n ‘R. A. F._llSI For visiting anglers 0f casualties .. Q - n, . - alimqu-qll" " , __ b. , mannaroron, n.3, March 2s “éirffj, Civei, —(CP)_A {esolution urgmg that THU: the casualties included ill the as -0 ' e - . d lfle,ep‘f“?,fi“‘feg‘fgflfrg"éfflje‘$2?’ iiiioyalgAir Force's 63rd casualty caignaxly ealch Darwin noniégsldcnt rlfigsgs tonight which contalne f ermen n New runsw . ‘was. ' m n“ f Canadian passed today at a special meetllll!‘ caflfélfgfééngnlg mg“ ne,?;_01.k1n;_ New Brunswick Fish and Game Pro? Killed l“ acmmk" tcctive Association. Loates~ H‘ G‘ firgeam’ born m “The Association feels that from Prime Rupefl" sask" father lwes m the viewpoint of forest fire preven- vamxmver- _ lilzieiaiwsllssicllaialaizrsl;E nhliiidoit 8355i? 3%‘; ‘ifi illlpervisilolzl of some kind." stated‘ gl-jsgngfimd (w“°)'Epp1ng' ' e reso u on. '_ _ Another resolution adopted WEB Alflhgls. dKglllilfiglg-meglllgt that l the {ilglnovfiincial dGOtrfliélggib fftlgger)o‘i,“relscoth"ont_ ' dgrllnbgytlle st brglxafilvézracrfd also] "*1" G- H~ ““°“°m°°" G‘ w‘ t special attention be given to, warden. service along the interna- tional boundary." Axis may test ,llcaction before Next move B HAROLD FAIR G . dis. BC G§€:gl1f_at,2_erc)§.sall0._ flying-officer bom in Toronto. father lives i!‘ Klnlrston. Ont. ',Mis5ing, presumed killed on active servlce:— Norris. J. H.. leading aircraf born in London. Ens. father 11V M a1 e . Snlith, H. V.. lead-int: aircraftman, J. J. Smith (brother: Montreal. Died of wounds on active servicu-i Halilwell. R. F.. flight-lieutenants born in Victoria, B.C.. 111011191‘ 11V" ' En miiléflfiélfuvasglnacie uD 01 33 lime‘ in action; as presumed °1'_l>¢l1°".°4 killed in action; oormlssinresugkgtiklifia- . Canad an Press Staff Writer 5m“ tggelgg‘rlf,fgg (g8 ‘gdued on am" l LONDON. March 25.—(CP Cable), m}? , n wodndod on active s"- .-—Germany scored a diplomatic vlc- syflvFg-rle ‘aged or wfounds on active .torv today in adding Yugoslavia to; \_ ‘E9; _ We service ,‘ the list of her Balkan bloodless coin, henlawivb g2fed‘ed on ac ' quests. informed sources concecsd,‘ a ' but these sources speculated that the‘ wars “l” a at pillar; - 1110 on n ugcs avla ore ma n , {their next move. , l On the surface Hit‘cl"s exams arg smaller than in the Ruman an an Idulnarizln pacts. bllt it is pointed out; ' that anv concession t0 Germany; ""‘"*'~ the Nazis the thin edge of the. “vedga their face value. Ger-s 14.911 at , ‘mlmvs pledges of political inde- “FHGCIICC and promises not to send troops across Yugoslav terrfiol-v are - . ,,. - _ _ ‘lfllDQlTfiilt, but promises depend on Pr“islg.g§'uggg"rygégéfignkémé; Gel-mall rzcod faith previously sliowxr ed to Kmg‘ George o’. Gregg; ‘in a Onldllllslsleglellscalllng the trcatv nymessazc made puplihc today "cv- e resources , llrd predicted that Hitler shortly whtch the United stat?!’ Llmaking . "will be fannim! racial conflict with-, Eibvaggsli-fiyéo fforreetlpscelmcsrellgéllegnelé: .e pl~css.- . S » lulllcoslng his agents. and spreading-create a nobler world.” igenel-al confusion.” -,_ The message said Mr. Roosevelt ‘ It added thaut) a Iblliliilken guggslliivigj i5 sure Jlthalt tkhe} will to o! er i e esre ‘the sol ers o reece vl e re- nrizle-the right to march toGreecelwmdd by gucoesg," l through the Vardar Valley. I; was 1n response to one 1mm 553?- ".§°’é"’..i’.§l.”°”§3§ ‘SLJSEfE s H l'f Roosevelt's address of Mnrcll l5 in a l vVIAlCh the President pledge: tfkull to thin, Greece an o er nations fighting aggression. ea King George declare: in the name of the Greek army that "every cam- “Exa grated" 2.121‘ ?.".‘°‘I§l.‘".3l.‘..l’”bf gg which the United States devotes lb "immense resources.“ The King declared that Greek soldiers are "reiclved to ivln“ HALIFAX. Mllrch 25—(CPl-I>lan. Dr. F‘. R. Davis tod the Nova Scotia Legislature todav the staicment that Halifax is a “hcllihplc of infection" Cbyqvpy zrvqyl Mn<'(-1-1 23_(Cp)__ l5 "gmsslv exaggerated and “Mal”, Clcvclnrd Bil? us to k a film-game- (The New Yolk Tllllcs on Sunday‘ mane 19M m t published a special dispatch from . ' Boston saying a Harvard University; medical mission which studied epi- demics here rcc-cntly had found the city a ‘ihell-hole 0f infection") I d Dr. Davis. answering a question C______:______ from Opposition under l...W. Fhwsr v ' _ said he was alvniti-lig the arrival blllllsier said. here of Dr. A. I-LMlleller, head of the Hp dcclarcci Di‘. hillcilcr had been Harvard flrollp. before making a lie- lll touch with nfilr here by tele- tailed statelllclit “inasmuch as the lillnne since pllbllczltlnll cl tllc story report was based on a purported in- niccl to 21W." n siuicmcnii tc-rvlcw with some member of the " l cl‘ himself. tile Harvard nicllicnl group. ll_\£‘_\' ll ~ ' ZSllS of ance_to exp at nilinxs mean Raw: 2-1 I'M JUST OH ,WELI_ FTHEN CLEANING: THE WFQE O.l<. FER REFRIGERATOR TODAY --'I THOUGHT AND CABINETS I YOU WAS GETTIN‘ "' WHY .7 READY ‘TO GO OVER To SISTERS ‘sjldillllllllllglllllllllllillllllllllllgl " WHV MOTHEE5 as? GQAV V aZ§,Vill\.\\H"$ 3E W PAINLEGS f. % uhK-Kc\=l='!f=-~Mosr commoners, MRCODD/w BUT I FEAR OUR BALM PROJECT l6 SCUTTLED / ' ev A TECHNlCALlTY/w rr seems "ma-r an I "_ on: STATUTE Fonalos sate or REAL carer ' EiiCEPT As ALLOTMENT6M~ VASI? ...... THAT FREEIES AND REMOVEG CORNG 8V AN QUCTION, mo sou slum. as a Joules: palzmsnf-l-lm! - WON'T vou e-rlw FOR DINNER ?