MORE CANA DIANS LAND 11v GREA T BRITAIN MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN i21- God ran cut himself “l! from G0!!- ncver forgets man but man ,./// 7 The Peoples Paper Covers Prince Edward’ Island Like the Dew "wit" uaudu c. Founded I861. Swedes % Gardiner tlarns Farmers lll Tough Year ctiltiiral Will Be Difficult. imt.\'li~‘l.~l=.‘, Susie. April 2557(0- pi-llou J (i. Gardiner. Minister of Agririrlttirc. fold n service club 0 u-oulrl be “one of’ vears in history for disocsliir of . We l\’.\l'lir"l agz-iinsl, increased acre- azrs nun the hope or higher pric- "lfr. Gardiner also declared that the Brivfich (‘nrcixnmcnt knew be- forrhaitd of the throat. to Denm and iinrl '1" iallcll any Giirmn. . . _' ' : and shinning to Britain crcrr hit o! Danish bacon a ailablc licforc the Germans marched. lic doubted whether the Nazis found .'\ piece of bacon or a hog for coitsiimptlon when they annexed llic ccuiiliflv. The (Ttnairliaii Government had first bclicr l that increased sup- tliiai of (‘xizi-idivn bacon would be called for i iirilriln after Den- mark nus or-r- tieti but found out later ill.”- l't‘.ll situation. he said. Countries cvrwctinu war had pre- pared for il and stored up enough food siosks in last them fo‘ tit least one 3 '\l‘ of war-fare. Britain ind befu mic one jump ahead on nurl had kept _ - rriulc opon so that food rmiirrd into the country. Abrizlii irnnirrilritc future for Canadian farmer's was generally ' illiT. who wanted to pus a frame of mind to best, he 2 2 3 -. saiti. to . the first year o! any that war was “totigii? and this time tougher than usual." llavlal, Land Successes By French Forces PARlS, April 25 —(CP Haves) ~Narai and iniid France ital-it: announced to the na- n ‘Na \'y Minister ELECTED METROPOLIT-AN SAULT E‘ ,5 QC srra, MARIE, “A r Ont. P! —Rt. Rcv J. G er , A "Wenonah meet: . i. hm “i. 0i the ' , O “2Y§yilll7l5llill) Anderson. i VU-llilfl‘ sill?!‘ 1909. has been act ncfitwlliiholitan. The last Metro in irus tlic inte Rt n"- l rents per word. a vi basilica Altar Society. iirllnuhlmfilze Safe Y. M. c. iAzis Allies .Will Not OccupL Areas Britain, France Re-affirm Pledge To Send Aid If Germans Invade Country Declares Sale Agri- go to S\V€d0li'S assistance it‘ Ger- Surpluses fiacuicwswonuuu» Two Cont; Assured By J. F. Sanderson Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON. April zs-toe CAB- LE)—-B1‘1L8.lll has given Swledeci assurances that. Allied troops will not attempt to occupy Luisa, iron ore rt cu the Gulf o! Bothnia. or t mines themselves in Kir- una, it was learned today. At the same time it was em- liaslzed iiore that. the Allies will man troops. now reported ma. 8111K at Baltic ports. invade the coun- try. That pledge has bEEn made several times in the past And it is understood was recently repeated. Although the Allies will not. seize Swedznis tron ore resources they are determined to block any attempt. o! Hitler to take tliem im- dei- his control because ct their essential bearing on his war ef- tort. Control of Narvtk. Norwegian ore CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRinAv, Aiiklifzo, 1940 AP PREiiENSlllN 0V ER SWEDEN High Command Says British B ombin g Open Towns. BERLIN. April 25 -(AP) -- Swcden moved tonight into the centre of German diplomatic at- tentlon. Authorized sources claimed that the largest Scandinavian State, and the only one still neutral, is under pressure from Great Britain and FTunce and expressed “ap- Drohenslon" because of this fact. These persons contended that Germany has no designs lm Sweden. Nevertheless: "We must be prepared for all eveiitualities; o! coursez" they add- Thus Sweden was put into Ger- man diplomatic 1)l‘l'5'_"!$‘t)ti\’0 while D,N.B.tlie German News Agency nnd the Hivh Command claimed Britain ivas bombing "cticn. un- defended towns o! no military im- port-ance.” and implying that ‘his =ort of thing will be repaid. “bomb for bomb" should it continue Th". onen towns which llic Ger- mans allezed ivorc bombed are a village in Sclilcsivig-Hrfslcin and a sea resort on the Island of Svlt. (These clinrzes ivere emphatic- lilly denied in London. where it was recalled that German bombs port on the Atlantic inside the Arctic Circle, ls considered essential to any military operation for con- trol of the Swedish iron ore belt. . British. _ Norwegian forces a.l- ready ha e .encircled the Ger- msii gtirrisllii and it is considered only a matter or time before this strategic northern base falls into Allied hands. Russian Attitude The attitude of Russia. toward any German attempt to invade SWCClCII or ea.ptl:‘l'c a strategc base in the Gulf of Botdiiita, such as the Aaland Islands. is a matter of conjecture here but there l: grow- ing bclloi‘ the Soviet would take no cticn. Stalin might be nnarycd at Ger- had alt-code killed and injured civilians in the Orkneysi. German bombers, bond in Norway, mid allied warships. lrcnupcrh; lrifllli navy "mop! up“ Null fled’. vlillo plum! nvoglun airfield! Atlantic Ocean rush nnr 0 ‘Geneva Ethe’ Seizure Is Confirmed OTTAWA. April 25 _ ~tCPl -- Forielturc of the ship fGc-nr-iva i‘ Elliot." ivllh its cargo of liquor and icigarcilos. to the Crown for al tgrl infraction of the llerentic Laws iviis confirmed by Mr. Justice E. successes for Cesar ‘will. Premier Paul Rcynaiid n- figcxleiided a friendly hand to sou. bishop of Moosonce. was elected mo, oi‘ the Ecclesiastical - ~- or all“? oi Ontario in the Church ntzinnrl in Carmela today at i1 House of Bishops bishop oi °D6l', former archbishop rlazteziltlkwgl ‘cmuny’ Coming Events h" for Noll-cs In this‘ o olu m n mfcilk" Sridiiainikin, April 27th. ii-eer-a-zi-al. “m”? Avril 21th at 8.30 dclonk. L-495-4-20-3l. many coming closer lo lrs n:w brs- R_ AHWVFS n! mm Ewhnilllp]. Cum, P5 ceded by F-mmm F’:'“7"1“.' Lm‘ iof Canada in a judmilint handed iiariia and Latvia. piiiticrliirly down m~ _ Blink" 0Y1 YOITYWI‘ Fm"! 11 IQPTTOVY- The s n iras seized off Prince but 5'1 55 bilwled he" u“ Kim“ iEdivarcl island in Auairst, lllKT.1l!i£i llii l5 n0!» Wlllfil! l0 715K GIT-The!’ iin ltlzireli. 193B. the ‘\ iiiislcr of Nn- Sr-ondinavian war. tloiml Reveiiu" (Iirii ii, and car- Thcre is evidence the Soviets at igo forfeit to the Cronn On a reference in “l? court John M. Fridge of Belcoram, Nfld“ iclriimcd he was the oiviiez- and nnaster of the ship nnd that it. was British "cs-“l i"e"i.i=ic"efi at St. John's Ntld. He denied ‘the shit‘ was engaged in smuzgling and produced evidence in an cf- fort to show it urns never with- tn the three-mile limit. Simon Replies To Griticism LONDON. A rli 25 -_(CPW —-S'ir John Simon, c anccllor or the ex- ciicquer tonight rcpiicu to crit cisni rtConllniidd bifkpage ll, Col 3) Belgium Gov’t tluit BRUSSELS. April 25 -—(CP) —In a surprise move over a. domestic eo- htitltiuil quesLon lieigiunis tiiree- nartv coalition cabinet resigned late iii‘. considered possible, however. that King Leopold will ask Ebb Gib- vnet to remain in offi cc. The crisis was precipitated by U"! Liberal party, which protested a- mainst a, noposal to nppci t hlemlsii land Walcoii executive assistants to .'i ~ l ' 1 - . - ~r -- a - illbmnrincs seiqnknhuliifigiidr 3%; lfiufie’i§n§°iii§§i2ii§un‘Ziiiiteiiceetiiicriis lllliéltl ellllsluglllturhbcivt sriilliincgut lllllillt M“ Yllid a i50-ion U-botitz; while wguid separate the two po ulations elgners must think tlrs ls a very s patrol shim were and thus endanger nations unity. Curio“; country,” "urn naval units ln the Thke Liberals} mofitlvtmngigefgglé‘ Hie llllviltlttlt loose \\‘ll0otl'l%ld ‘iizggn ', 1 i "(1811105 S ' 1111111 1m DTRSE fill l ' l .’ 0 and, the High commmd §‘|’.‘..””.,;“§i'.¢'“§e ian artlcs. cooling) in taxes to show him iow t0 evening communique disclosed that Pleriots cab net. lbs second llnce do i; French [YQQHg nmfm a gun...“ the beginning ct the war was form- In 12 months the chancellor said. dclarhlncnt, ulilcn had re lit-cum. ed last Jan. 5 and brou ht. about a re nnd added £330.000.000 in He“ lmbusii in the v0.6.5 '1i4.,i’,._,.a.n8 coalition of the Cathol l. iiotclpsllii; taxes which was of“ mifh “all: on ti... poimm] ‘and dipmnmtlc and Liberal parties. Pero zrirt2i‘ilgll1ig.taw‘%ses DOSS e tin er l ii w. mcmbc Spurred by alarm over "fifth coi- umn" flfitlViiilfis in neutral states. the government grappled with the problem of a spring clenninlz. Sir John Anderson home secre- tary and minister for home security. c019 the House he wasconsiderlnz 5n ngent measures nga nst subver- slve elements inc riding the Com- munist pQItv nnd semi-Fascist or; ans and would intern even M. its f "desirable." ll. R. A. Blamed For Bombing DUBLIN. April 2s -(CP) -Prime International At A f Glance LONDON-War 0 Slice any: Stelnkjer retreat was minor wit - draws]; Allied forces pushed out o! Llllehammcr; Government 0P0"!!- ' tlon shouts for more money, planes ' and guns‘, Communists under STQCKHQLM .-.\llleo blocking German columns dlrvlng north to- ward Trondheim. PARIS-Frznch announce land Minster Eamon De Valera took per- nnd lea incomes. [9213] charge tonight or investigation c: the bombing. allegedly hv Hi6 outlawed 1r sh Republican army. n! WARM SPRINGS. 0a.. —llcose- volt. prophlmp n“; o! w“ between the Dublin Castle hcadquartcrsdo! German and Norvvpy , invokes the Eire lzovrriilllflnlfl EDWIN 9" tectlvc branch Five detectives were intured. M!" ncrloualv ,ln this morn nazs ast. caused bv detonation of either t! Neutral! y Ant. BERl-‘N —0 e r m a n diplomacy toeussed on Sweden. , 9i‘, April 27th G30 P gilstl llltfle bolilfb oiliiqbillitl-liiiltl-lilriilillt ~\‘l‘~-s in old or the Analysing, ROME-Farrell! leader says war U“; and god stained glass incnicrlal L-493-4-25-3t. will Ilim-fl- . windows-Jute the courtyard of the npm“ A old cawe. in the heart of the Ir fill s“ . .uin",e Sole St, James Ilnll. BRUSSELS-Cabinet realms over capital M, A The ' scene, Hereafter, I t! fllllmlnll;lilflm title , m‘ E a E " u the aftermath of an air raid. ally In olllcc. Few of Europe's remaining 22 war” threatened to engulf the continent with the oi others. Map spots woe action. in the 33rd ircek of conflict. and shows alignments of various neutrals with belligererits. 1N e W f o u n d- llarzders Arrive lWith Brothers l From Dominion. LONDON. April ‘altr-(CE-Cane‘ actions and Nowfounctlanders ar- rived iogioiher in Britain today t0 swell the number; of those from across the Atlantic already in ser- vice or in training here. The Catiadians were dxcnbcd only as o. "further contingent." Many of iiham were French-Can- adians and some were veterans oi the last wair. A number were Frenchmen who had migrated t0 Canada siziee the last ivar. One Canadian cameo roars of laughter by shouting in broad Laricaihire accent: "What tzme do Blackburn Rovers kick oft?" Here for his second war was driver Clarence Rock oi London, Ont.. who served {or more than three years with the Canadian infantry in the last war and has been in After 33 Weeks, All Europe Drectds 'Totol War’ l German: at Reich pl moves var; clone port on 9 Adriatic; lunch in Alba IVZZZFYTEEOf Last War Included l-up move Nut-held Trondheim; Iuilta nu ENE: Guaranteed by Allin g Alllcrl who. mo. luring more than mic mcly Grout lrilcin North Sea U. S. S. on "T reign Hora" agents of Gestapo; three atom reported to Soviet for aid against German invasion Black Sea interns l Oodcenuaaeae ls. @ " n! at. peace were sure they would remain that way long n. “lot ‘WTARTIIEF E l BE SAYS REPART t 12 PAGES if In gontirt iwiiuier-Lnniwrfé...‘ 11. fie Iii? ‘ The extract ' which have result in: ford bu dec‘ OP wish to seq World stamps FREE in 3?." Gas Prices Down In B. G. VICTORIA, April 25—tCP)—In a. surprise nwve today the Brier-oi Columlbla. Gvernmeii-t. announced that gasoline prices throughout. the province would be lowered, effect- ive tomorrow. Attomey-Geziera-l G, B. Wzsmer id it had been decided to put tho ice cut into effect. tcliowing esdsys ruling by the Suprtmfi Court of’ Canada that the (Joni and Petroleum Product; Control Board Act, under which the reduction was ordered lost August. was with- in the powers o! the British C01- utlnbln. Legislature. The order cut wholesale gasoline prices in the cents a gallon. Under the new price srtirp Van- couver motorists will be able to bu)’ standard gar oline at 24 cents a gaz- lon instead o! 2'1 cents; ethlyl gasoline at 26 cents including one seven~cents provincial tax. Some Vancouver service stations on their own initiative already are selling standard gasoline at 25 and 26 cents a gallon. Prices in the interior o! the pro- vince wlLbLsliglatly_ higher. _ STAMP COLLECTORS! NOTICE po uhrity of our FREE stamp offers in t e distribution of millions of interest- and colonial ohmpl during the put two seasons ed u! to keep llm "SAL-ADA" STAMP CLUB throughout the summer month: for the benefit of those who uiro useful collection: o: d ked | b“ panels from packctecnd Iran fi e or h. "n" u "SALAIIK TEA Quantities becoming career: Send now for lieu 407 Si. lauvrenco Blvd, Montreal European an other 2 TYPICAL OFFER Anterior! stomps of Scandinavian Countrha an! FREE In uehui for l 0| lhowln] tho tupot trademark from l-lb. huh 0a(@ I-Klb. or 145-:- hn bu! 5"")- province by three. ‘ulsioiirrn’ LONDON, April Z5—(AP)-'I‘he War Office tonight said reports that a British force in Norway had been cut to pieces and forced to ivitluiraw in disorder were dis- torirtl, The statement did not give the source 0f the report it denied. The statement snldt~ "Reports t0 the effect that a British force iii Norway has been lcut to_ DiGCPS and forced to with- tlrliiv in disorder is a distortion oi’ the fact. "The account presumably re- lates to the incident. already re- ferred to ln recent communlques. The facts are‘.- “An advance detachment o! a Jorge force pushed forward to- .\\jai'<ls Trondheim from the direc- ‘UOIl 0f NIXDlnOS. The Germans, moving reinforcements by vratci" in- side ’l‘roiidhetm fjord, tlireateiird to cut off the advance troops from their main body. They. there- fore. withdrew but were not foi- ‘lOWFd up by tlie enemy W110 are lnoiv repmtecl to be digging in at illit‘ he; 0i the fjord. “Our troop; suficreci some loss." The War Office in its clarifying and statement thus took cognizance of reports cabled to the United states that tne British force operating south of Namscs consisted of only two battalions totalling 1500 men and that this force had been dc- cimatcd. Plans Northwest Passage Route WINDSOR. Ont, April 25-40?) -_G. W. ivlcCoiiachie, president. o! Yukon southern Airway t, stud here today his company is negotiating with Rims-la for an airplane line from Canada to Vladivostok, Rus- st a. The aerial north-west passage W0llld fulfill a countries-old dream of man of a fast, snort route t0 the trndicig centres oi China, Jap- an and Russia. McCoiinchie said the line would bring Central Canadian points within QB hours of main Rimmed central. The line would carrypass- engers. trcight. and mail. Approval oi‘ three gnvornmentfl is necessary before the project can be started showing definite intermst iavtorl ly. lli- stud (‘filltltiTd-ll ‘Hansiiort De- partment ofiiciulv have not gran niiy indication of approving oi t-h proltrt. The conipaity will proat-h the tinilrd Sttitcs Govern- llllflli. aui-iioriucs later. Mr. MoConachle said Ewell. is in the pYOpOSiIl and preliminary negotia- tions have been procectliiig satis- 1. MAXIMB OIL MERE MAN To stand committed to the right enables us to stand at ease. Annual inhlcrlptlou Delivered 85.00 By IAAI—P.E.I- $6.001 clllfldl and 0.5. lfiml RETREAT HURRIEDLY NAZIS ruin“ iAbandoflrT Roros, Take New Stand As Allies Press British Break-Through At Storen —— Norwegian Commander Says Time For Withdraw Over. STOCRHOLM, April 26—(l"riday)—(AP)—'I‘he Ger- mans have abandoned Roros. which they sci1ed for n few hours yesierdzijv, and are digging in at Tolgzi, 15 miles to the south in the Ostcrdzilen Valley, Swedish newspaper correspondents reported early today. The Germain retreat was ascribed to the need for hasty fortification. ivhich the terrain at Roros does notfavci‘. ‘Another cause also appeared to lie a British zidvaince SUUl-ll in the Gudbrandsdalen Valley to the west, threatening" to outflzink the Germans’ extended positions. BRITISH BREAK THROUGH The correspondent of the Swedish newspaper Dtzacns Nylteler reported that the British have broken through at Storen, and are now in position there to lilock any (lcrnum advance from Roros, or up the Gudbrandstialen Valley to reinforce German-held 'l‘rondheim 0n the west coast. These British troops, after landing at Andalsnes, south of Trondheim, took a northern route to Storen. where they repulsed a German force from ’l‘i'ondheim, and M perhaps prevented their striking a more telling blow at a invasion of some neutrals, are active participation British force from Nzimsos to the north of Trondheim. The British then turned and united with some of the iNorivegiains retreating through ltoros, in the (lstcrdalen l Valley, 70 miles southeast of Trondheim. The Germans, striking swiftly from Oslo through i Rena up the Osterdalen Valley and through Liilehaimniei ‘up the Gudbrandsdalen Valley, yesterday reached Roma and ltlngcliu, 1S0 and 110 miles respectively north of the capital. ‘ They appeared headed on parallel routes for 'l‘rond- helm to prevent i1 Norwegian-Allied drive to encircle that strategic German base. But late yesterday the British were reported at Storen, 35 miles southeast of Trondheim, astride the Gudbrantis- daien and Oslerrlailcn Valley rail lines that converge there before entering 'l‘rondlielm. 1 . There was heavy fighting at Tolga last night, with. heavy artillery and air for- ccs participating, and Tolga was reported badly bombed. But whether the fighting took plaice as the Norweg- ians retreated to Roms or as they chased the Germans back to Tolga was not clear in advices filtering across the Swedish frontier. A stream of fugitives from the Roms district was crossing into Sircili-u curly iutlzii‘. inc-lily zimliliizuiccs pus~t~<l tllt: frontier‘ at one single border station. Tlicre were 40o fugitives at this one station, 3m oi tlicm sol- I tilt-rs will) \\‘t'l't‘ llllt‘l'llt‘il_ ll \\'.'l$ t-vni-iil, ll'l\\t\l‘l‘, tiizli tlic Nt>i‘\\'r;,;i:ii\> nun: lltzuiltiul for the liritsili aiil coining t0. tiieni from $ti\rt'ii, iU-r lllt‘_\' hail f mRONTO, 5pm 25-49?»- liecn cngzigtill in a. tiring. grucl~ Minimum and im-xliiiiim teniPPPfl" ling tlclai n51 llilillt‘: as tile licr- “m”: .__.:=\ N0 MATfER How 0FTE~ “inc tar-nu Foi-i-s. l‘1' NEVER HuRTs rfslzcw 29 man llllllltlifig ii-ilctl norlli- iggrvfcsgxver 45 ward- ! Edmonton 35 Late last night the Norwegian R081!“- 33 commander. General Ruszc, prais- ivinnlpfl 3° ed his troops for their spirit and Toronto courage mid the depressing witli- lOttawn. M ttfififiilfififiifi$i drniviil. and tin-n (l(‘f‘l‘.llY‘<l;»—— iMotitrcal 38 "But now tiiu time for Wlllll- ‘Quebec ‘Jl °““-X"ii‘?§a“?”"“““" i N an iiimi“: ‘mm iii ‘ roops are ri or ern a‘. ax Norway, in Tilontlelag (Trondheim icilinrlottewwn 34 district) and iero where we aircl FORECAST fignlt-tntizltn order {to} (‘IFllADOPEQ-‘Xtf. G8 i vi H H i in 2s. wits); a. _:--,1| “cionfilleni: iip to nigwf! n tm§A3l§w°v§§fiiuii=°°§-i»as. git-if"! The Germans, in their advance, icloudy and c001. apmrvritly were strong enough to 1 brush aside what opposition re- i QYNOYS“ lf-i; 1"“ '""" Liht. showers have occurred in soutiern Ontario. b"? ‘he "".“‘“h“_‘ has been generally fair and mild oi- cr the DTllVlilCP while in “ester: Canada it has been mostly "WW and cool. High tide this aiwrnoon at 1-1! and tomorrow mornmt’ 8i 3-351 (Continued 0n page ll. Col f!) _.__.___§___ War- 25 Year ' Ago ‘today nl 6.50 an: . l. t-ll: evenlrt! Sun so s i a ‘ 57. rises tomorrow morning "l moon April I! Last. quarter 3.49 am. ARR“. '26. \9l5x—Sl‘(‘l‘(‘t bairrce- Summwsidp W“, ‘a m1“‘\l[\§ m. uieii. sight-ll lll Aiiulon i‘l\\'t‘l’ll I .1 4 , iliily and the Allies iul‘ ltinnn cu- i" um“ mm on‘ mm TUE CAR FERRY ‘SAIIJNGS ic-ixirallon ln lln- war and iit‘i‘i.'\l‘i\- | lion by which llaily tltilll‘~l‘i‘ii lo the ifziet of lmitlsn. Atlvniic‘ m" may” Border, 945 A,M., 100 l‘ M Leaves Tormentlne 11.00 A M- Gernian Southwest Africa report- 5.06 l’. M (By The Canadian Press) Bot-ha‘. Sculli Alrlcziii troips in "-1