MAXIMS or A MERE MAN drive thee. m“, my business; let not that fl uoynln] (lunntii l . n. mael- ferrite Netherlands tonlgh meat action in Nazi sir Dutch ship!- sald an entire division bad arrived at Fur lluota Filled To ll. S. Until December WASHINGTON, March 5- lAPl-No more silver or black for furs can be imported from (lanolin until Dec, l or from other countries until Aprll l. cell today that Canada has exhausted its quota of 58.300 furs for the period ending Nov. 30. Other countries hi"! flllcd their March quota, but for the period April l-Nov. 30 a ‘Milo-fur share 0i their quota ls unfilled. Make Perilous 71-mile Mercy p Flight At Night BERLIN. N. I-I,. March 5—(AP) —ii ll-nllle "mercy flight" lii u. drlvlrlg sliouxiorm to tile side oi a tick ivomail in a lvlaule forest collage 2-1 lniles from the nearest hlsliwayivas completed SIICCCSSIUJY tocrr ivllli the return of Dr. Ed- Wll R. B. McGee to Berlin. Taking off in a storm‘ that mllpfli 20 inches of snow here, Dr. lyifcGee_ and Pilot John E. West f-ew blind for nearly an hour last lllxllt before landing on the ice of g ed Lake Parinachenee with f help of a compass, a flashlight and a few lanterns set out to mark tne "lllflWily." Dcmclrllalieiit was Mrs. Albert wh-f-"Whlul. wife of a caretaker, l o had become crlticalfy ill of liil fiternal l1‘.'l110l‘l‘l1fl§0. When Dr. ‘like nrvell at. midnight, the Roman was in such dehcnic con- -l1on the doctor could find no gll- -_ Two llnllrs elapsed before béfltiioik vfoduccd the first faint lngillllolltzh hospital treatment was “vTCfllNl. the continuing sioim axial an ncccni nniment 0i’ slcet i‘ inln force the doctor to re- man bile iviilioui her, deferring mo} uri rnis transfer until io- rovl ll the weather clears. PETA?) outcry March 5-—fCP)—'I'hrcc “mi *Q___,Cfil1hiv' youths chorus ma“ ~ ylllllhz a Canacl an Airwa-s "ogkllllllcll made a forced llfldlll: myhdfllll 14kt‘. near here, Feb. 1 . Ymaki- Quilts‘ in magistrates court "W and were remanded for sent- Pollce said evervthin glglilmgvvil token from tlie lane, an had b)!“ widespread seat: after it ten forced down in a blizflbrd. Coming Events ail “"- ° for Notices in this column ,___ I cents per word. "Zicll church cake sale .. . . . Easter samllfll. Milritime Elsclric, L492. lircomllflll rink tonlitht Bethune flilue 1 - . my“ gailgfkélornwall vs. Ltilygoe D- movable M;'rg\:l‘1n5\ live nous at alnany. a....,,.,,_7ufiul“r1dav March om at gum l noon. Signed G, C- "Reserve Tu . radar. March 10m. hmztfhllgg l}; sbaw and coragert, t. all. 90c a . 49-84-11. a "'-——— Wheauey River nail moi-sou ll§“‘§§-dl~éifi]%il 7th. variety con. ‘ll-uncle. y’ by ‘lif-loygndbia "loading ii u ll V0 Hogs ‘fliureda llififhplil; as follows: Kensingicifi l p_ M Summerslde i0 A. M. til m... nut ma, “at ,- i} BRITISH SEIZE FIVE ITALIAN Du tch Angry Over Nazi Bombing Of Unarmed Ships Germany Masses Troops In Border Area-Fears Of Drive Across Low Co_i_1_r_itries Revived. AltiSPERiDAM, March. b-(OP- Haves) -.F‘lesh German troop and tank units were reported massing facing the as an angered public demanded vigorous Govern- protest against attacks on defenceless Dispatches from frontier towns German armored Wesel, Westphalia. on the Rhine about 27 miles from the southern border of the Dutch Province of Gederland. Such s division usualy comprises Tile customs bureau announ. - between 400 and 4'15 tanks. 3,000 other war vehicles and 11,000 men. Numerous additional tank units were reported to have arrived at other points in this zone. Fear that the coming of spring will be marked by aGerman drive across the lowland countries and Nazi activities beyond the frontier have increased tension throughout the Dutch frontier regions during recent days. The bombing and machine-gunn- ing of at least eight Dutch ships lin two days by Nazi warplanes has provoked widespread anger. ‘iifiiésfciiiiiilf? To Charge Nazi Horrors PARIS, March 5 —~(AP) Polish government-in-exlle. in an advance resume of data. which is to to a “white book," tonight ac- cused the German conquerors of ex- ecuting schoolboys and men and women en masse as part of a de- liberate campai n to exterminate the native popu atlon of Poland. (The German ovcrnment pre- viously had deni POIIJI charges of mass executions in the occupied regions.) The official communique cited 1on2 list of sflecen atrocities an called them “worthy of the worst tyrants of antiquity." Says “Comph” Cut, Charm N bait COLLEGE PARK. Mil. March 5 —(AP)-Take it or leuvellt. lllrlfi -t.he young lady says this ‘oomph stuff is out. “Oliarm" is the word in best leap-year matrimonial circles, at- tractive Hester Beail Provensen told co-cds of the University 0! Maryland's novel class in coudiwi and etiquette tonight. "Men are simple crcntures—s_s I general rule," ib-e rvuuthful Pfvfefi‘ snr 0i ubllc speaking. drurnfliivi Sind ra lo technique said brlilhl- ly_ "Get that ‘you're woildclztul 19%;: in yum eye and let them “and 1mm to speak their names in a caressing way. That is. if yolrre interested in them. Practice . spcakiilg tlie names aloud until D-I elves them the idea the ‘re the only people in the worl "W11 V6 been thinking about lately. Mhlllwll E l] IN DISASTRCIIS ll I R R A I ll Red Warvlanes Bom_b Hospital — Hit Air Raid Shelter. _,_... EISHWKI, March s-(Ql-A Finnish communique said bonliht that, at least 50 persons were kill- ed and scores wounded ln a. small central Finnish town today in the most disastrous bombardment of the Russian-Finnish war. The communique did riot iden- tlfv the town. Earlier in the day Finnish planes bombed and machlnegullnco Red army forces crztwlin across the frozen Gulf oi Fl and ln their ltielmnt to encircle Vlipurl. Five direct hits were scored on a hospital during the Russian raid on the town and one bomb dron- pod on an air raid shelter. The raiders, cllvina out of the clouds to 1.400 or 1,700 feet, swept 0V9?’ in two flights 50 minutes a up .. Fifteen of the bombs struck in the vlcinit of s military hospital and one b explosive missile went directly down the stairway from the top of the four-storey biilld- ing to the bottom. Twenty-five persons. nearly all of them women, were killed when abonib ltthe topof Lheair raid shelter. Some Russian troops were drowned and several tanks sunk hi huge fissures of the ice of Vlipuri bum opened up when bombs and lu- lsry fired on the attackers caning west in an attempt to en- circle libe city. unofficial Finnish e rts laid. , zlfiténrnnisiliiuhigh command said was n progress among the rugired inlets at the mouth of the psi, and the Finnish rBritish And Nazis Clash PARIS, March b -—(OP Haves) — A clash between British and Ger- man troops, in which one uemian andtwo Britons were killed at Brit-ssh prisoners were taken was an- nounced tiomght in the first com- munique on western irolli. action to be issued by the British expelli- tlonary iorce headquarters in lei-once While a new iuli revalieu e.se- where along the rgnt German this morning attacked a B-i front line post a number of prisoners, tile communi- que said. The Britons recaptured the post and forced the enemy to with- draw. 1n addition to those killed, one Briton was wounded. The lull, apparently due to bad weather. was refletced in the brief communiques of the French coni- nland. Tonight's French communi- one reported p, "calm day on the whole." This morning's said “noth- ing to report." Routine overland patrol opera- tions werepcarried on. but no ap- preciable fighting was reported. Air operations were reduced but recon- nfllézflllffl planes ventured out on a number of flights over the lines. French fliers concentrated on secondary enemy positions behind the westwall. Royal Air Force planes aualn were sent out over IlO1‘lh\\ est Germany yesterday. while two or three Nazi planes appeared over eastern France. On the home front, 14 more com- munists were nnesbed ln the govern- mentls drive against subversive lic- - The rtivlties Charsed with incltinz soldiers to disobedience. distributing subversive pamphlets and reconstituting an ll- eizal organization the men will tried by a military tribunal. MAMaoPherson To Nominate REGINA. March 5-—(CP)—M. A. MncPherson. K. 0.. who has been active in the campaign of Honwlv. J Manion. the Conservative leiuier, is expected to be n candl- ciaie in Regina in the Dominion election March 26. Mr. lifacPlier- son was runner-up to Dr. Manion for tlie Conservative lendcrsilip in the 1938 convention. Alderman T. Cl. McNall. who was nominated as a Coiiscrviltive cttililitlnle, has withdrawn [0 ninke Way for the nomination of Mi. MacPlicrscn. Lieut. Governor For N. B. ls Appointed UITAWA. March 5—(CP)—W. G. Clark of Fretlelg-Luli. N. was appointed Lieu. Lilli Coler- nor of New Brunswick. Pizlnicr Mackenzie King niiiiounceci t0- you can say them in a Way 9118i night- He succeeds Hon. Murray Mac- Larch whose five-year icrin cx- pired last Feb 8. The new Liciilril- ant-Governor ms Lil)? o1 incmbcr of tlie last Parlinnlcilt for York- Suiibury, N. B. A prominent New Brunswick businessman. he is President of J. C'avk and Sons. a motor car and farm implement sales enterprise. For about 10 years. Ml‘. Clark was Mayor of Frederic-toil and in 1930 made a bid for a scat in the Pro- vincial Lea .’.tlll‘(? but was defeat- ed after cainpaiauins: against in- trcduction of liquor coiltrol in New Brunswick. n he successfully con- tested the federal ilrlinz of York- sunbury. Mr. Clark is a leader in the Baptist Church in Frrrlcrlc- ion and his hobby is farming AirTceMaflrs-hal Cordon Buried, Military Honors NTREAL. M h 5 —fCP) — All! 91cc marshal Jfulfiiidsay Gordon, D. F. C.. 47-year-old flier who was the first air officer ever appoint-Cd 1° command n Canadian m "ill-TY dis‘ trlct. was buried today with full mil- it'3r"lleh°lIli§§s'co=-t was sounded and three vollevs were fired over the grave of the mnn whose death Sun- dav after a. loniz illness ended l brilliant career. l Drank Evidence, ssmuomn. Pa. March 6- (Aas-Jurors who drank half o! the evidence in o case they were deliberating rzceived a rlbnfl) J11- dicial reprimand in court today- District Attorney 950789 cum‘ mlllfi i-eporied ‘the Jurors drank I case or beer when it was placed in the jury room yestzrday. Recalling the Jurors. Judge Howard H1181! scofded tlinn for "lack of citlzn- ship and scirc of pu'"l'c duty." Tim five lAOllllTi and seven men. who sat with h ads bow d as the judge swzre, had ncqu itcd the de- fendant. oi uninw ul transportation or ms beer and morn 00 per mil “fibula-ill fl till veil Vii ' hil- s we. putts o! the cost. against the state. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew effort, follows: prosecution of the war. England. couroged. WGI‘. cnnacorrrzrovvlvfciwaoa. WEDNESDAY, Martens‘, i940 rNational Government Program‘ With War Help Paramount Appeals To All A program for Canada's Notional Government, headed by lion. Dr. Monlon, leader of the Notional Conservative Party, who plans to unite all factions lll the Dominion for o vigorous war and peace Canadians l—Exertion of every effort by Conodu toward the successful 2—Fu|l mobilization of Canada's resources. 3—Productlon in Canada of ull wor materials possible. 4-—C|osesi possible co-operotion with Greul Britain. 5—lmmediote appointment of overseas minister to remain in 6—-Encourogemenl' of voluntary recruiting, which has been dis- 7—Fullest possible use of offers of service from veterans of lost 8-No political patronage or favoritism in appointments or wor COIIITGCIS. ond pensions. wor effort. 9—No profiteering or exploitation. ill-Stamping out extravagance ond waste. ll-Jusr ond honorable treatment for all dependents of enlisted men, ond foir treatment of enlisted men in pay, allowances l2-—-Clcsesl' co-operolion with Great Brltoln ond other ports of the Empire in air training schemes. * l3—Proper co-ordinotlon of oll wartime boards and commissions, ‘ now functioning without necessary ice-ordination. ‘IL-Immediate review of censorship ond other restrictive regula- tions, and steps to keep people of Ccnudu Fully informed of l5—lmmediole action, including appointment of minister of youth welfare, to meet problems of unemployment. l6-lmplementotlon of most recommendations of the Purvls- Moore commission on employment. Britain O -~-.ma- By J. F. Sanderson CIIIILJLHIA ITUbS btihi \Vl'li.L‘l' LUNAJUH, iviarcli 5— 1GP cable) -_-'lllc ui.i..bll govcriiiiietlt tuilk pru- lliiiiliuli step..- wday to streiignleil ils liiinilcllll and economic aeicnlls by iiillluiltlciilg a [$00,000,000 fol,- aL-ahbi-IUJIVUI ivai‘ loan and intensity- mi; its ilii.c lor ilhlluiiS. all" Joliii Simon, eliuilcellor of the Efeltilkqlllfl] tuck till: "only" by slir- ilrl c ill announcing this compara- tivclv siillill loan-enough lo pity lor oo clays ol ulir. But he llrgcu adop- tion oi a policy. step by step, which will make retieiniotioiis easier and kccu interest mics lower. A short time alicr Sir Johns an- iiolulccincil. lii‘ his piun to ii.l the lilinolii. lzoilurs w.tll fresh credit Sir Alltlreiv Roe Duncan, president of iilc boaircl of trade, outdiied n iClLlHL! to augment Brilalnls vilnl accumulations of foreign currencies by lilcrcssinlz export trade. Drive For Markets In this drive for markets particu- lar attention will be paid Uriltell States and Canada because 0f Britain's heavy war commit- nieiits iliere. and to South America wlicrc it ls hoped Germany: 10st tmlle will bc captured. Rneri Hudson. secretary for over- seas trade, (lciljcd in the Home Coilrlicils that Britain ivns attempt- lnrz to corner or dominate the mar- kcts of tlie world by totalitarian methods but emphasized that this S. Offers Arms To N on- Belligerents (By Edward E. Bomar. Associated Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, March 5-(AP) —The United States War Depart- ment offered today to sell. to Lat- in American and other non-belli- gerent nations, artillery, rifles and other surplus war material which cost originally several hundred million dollars. A list of such surplus weapons. described as "usable" though they date from the First Great. War. was disclosed following an an- almouncement that 90 long-range six-inch field pieces had already been sold to Brazil. The price was not made public. War- 25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) MARCH 6. 1916 -- Eleutherlofi Venlrelos. Greek Premier, resigned over country's neutrality policy. Afiies waned wound on the West- ern Front in the Aisne and (Riampogne sectors and in the Vosges Mountains pinned forw liii drive on ociniar. r -'.~"~'t~.~,;._..._§,.-.__-._r ._ . treng FYnancial Front Drive For Expo-ifs To Pay For War Purchaseils Intensified. to the - Moves lien“ ls a "new as you 20" xvar and it is necessary for Britain to litulinllila c iorclizn credits bv the sale Q1 lllr‘ izoods. Tile scllcnle. which will be nclnllli- isiercd bv a lii-until export council, cnvlsiuzcs reorunnizuiioli and ren- mcntation of the export ma h‘~*iy of Britain's \\’ll0.0 industrial . c. it will mean the people of Brltrfn ivill be forced to no without the cows l-llcv arc iisrd to. and often ivlllirizt izoods l1lC_\'l‘€(1llll'(‘._ loccause iilc drin- estic con ‘llmDllOll will be curtailed drastically. it may be necessary eventually to siibslrlinc exports but this is not contclilulzilcrl at nrcscnt. Tile export council is premrcrl to no nlnlcsi to any ‘ellutil to increase Brim ‘s ov- cr cos trade. including barter ar- riinszcmelits. To Ration Raw Materials The export council will ration rtilv materials anions manufacturers lii cooperation with ivarlc assurin- tlons and apportion finished tzrlorls to W0l'l(l markets where they will (lo the most 200d from the national viewpoint. 'I'lll‘Cr\ miiior Drolilcms face llir- elmort council: a. shorinirt‘. ltllllllllVll not ncuic. of raw mat-l 1‘il\l"-, lnridc- Iqunte shinninc some rc iillinig from I wart illc r-riritics. nllcl ilic overrid- in! necessity for COIISCTVlIlLY Brltziiiik~ sunnlv oi‘ forcism CllFl‘(‘ll"_V. ‘The lvllnlc scheme will be alllillnLstc-rcd with tlicse factors in mind. [Privy Council Rules Alberta Acts lllra llires LONDON. March B —(CP Cable) -ln a. udglncnt dl missing two lip- peals o the Alberta Government, the Judicial committee of the privy Council today ruled that, three acts. passed by the provincial lflglsllltivi.“ ascnlbly in 1937, mduclilg interest rates are ultra vlres of the legislat- ure The acts are the provincial gzurir- antced securities lute-rest act. the provlncAlly guaranteed securities proceeunlus act, and the provincial securities interest act. Their lordships said the acts deal with interest a subject reserved ex- clusively for the dominion rlla- meiit under section 91, itisli North Almcrica Act. (In Edmonton provincial treasur- er Solon Low announced that inter- est payments will be continued on provincial securities at 50 per cent of the old rate. Be said the govern- ment will roceed with lans for refunding e entire . lie debt "on terms consistent. with ‘he cs- ent interest mics" and dec a. the rlvy council decision will "enable e éokvlfaimentdtowneefek mg! obtain a man a rom e peo- ples" h. Hilbert of t8 policy-l, Eat to please thyself, but firm to please others. MAXI M6 OIL MERE MAN rllepburn Iletorts To Criticism From Ottawa Charges Censorship W i t h “Covering Up” Disturbance Al; Air Centre. ‘TORONTO. Much k-(OPF- Premier Hepburn otiarged today that Canadian censorship had "coverrd up" what he described as a "vzolent disturbance"nt the Royal Cttllntllan Air Force centre near Si, Thomas, Ont., where airmen in training had became "fen-up and disgusted with doing nothing but shining door knobs and polishing floors.‘ OTTAWA, March 5—(CP)- A Government spokesman to- night denied charges made by Premier llcpburn of Ontario that a news story concerning "violent disturbances” at the Royal Canadian Air Force cen- in: near St. Thomas. 0nt., had liccn suppressed by the censors. The rcss censors here confirmed he spokesmans statement. The statement read:- “The censors mover at any time suppressed any story such a. disturbance at St. Thomas and no such story ever ivas submitted to them. In- quiries were made at the main censorship office here and at tlie local censors elsewhere and no record was found that such n. mnilcr had enmc before the press censors." ‘The Prenllor. 011110151. M 50-16. by criticism by Dominion Govern- ment officials against Mr. HEP- binns bun on the ‘March oit Tone" film “Canada. at War," told news- pztpernlen he was exposing news of the "violent disturbance” on ms OWU responsibility as Premier 0i’ Ontario. He challenged Defence siliiiswr Rogers to deny the story and dared the censors to prevent 8 PAGES ‘marrow night for a meeting o-n his Annual Fascist llllanion Visits Maritimes This Week; Here Fri. OTTAWA. March 5 -—(CP) ._. Conservative lender Manlon visits the Mnrllllle Provinces this week lii ille course 01' his dominion elec- tion carlipulirn and, Conservative headquarters announced tonight, lie will 51W) at sherbrooke, Que. to- wu-y cztst from Ottawa. Dr. Manlon will open his muritlnoc speaking program Thursday at St. Joiiil, spcnklilu at Charlottetown the lclluwiuu llfll and at l-ialliax March 9. He Will speak at Quebec Nlarch lllléurch ll and at lvlolitreal Hon. Elirl Iiznvson, former nation- al revenue llllllsSiifii.‘ will speak at COICUUbLCl‘, l\’. S. Mitrcli l8, Lulit-ii- bulg. N. S.. March 1:), Cliutlllinl N. B.. ivizirch 20 and at Moncton the I0il0\\'11’l£z day. Demon Massey lor- mcr Coilserxal-ive member of Par- liament for ‘Toronto Greenwood has scheduled addresses in Cape Breton Island, N. S., lvlarch 14 and 16, mov- lilk on to Charlottetown for a lileet- iniz March l6. OIUJAWA, March 5 —-(CP) —Na.— tional Conservative party headquar- tcrs tonight announced additional broadcast addresses scheduled by its pilblicntlrn. Ml". llcpiilirn said that little less than n rlionl-h ago several hun- dred men from the air training centre established at the Ontario Government-owned st. Thomas Htv-lklill, hZKl leit their quarters uxiliolit pennisslnn and paraded llllflllffll the sv c. in protest n? int ivlint the FITTING!‘ described as “luck of training.’ Says ‘Doing Nothing" "These fellows. some of whom inn. grcrl _i bs to loin tlhe air force, were full-lip and (115-{111 ted wl-h d0- Illf!‘ ilctlllng but shilling door ltliobs and pOlSllllig floors," said Mr. H‘ burn. “It look the military fllllllOfl t-lire." clays to round tlicm all ulp and the (‘GPSOTB Wilm- cli 10ml iieurslyrnpruimcn that the story criild not be published." Mi". H"‘I*‘i}1ll‘ll also chars-rd that- Dcfcilce Aizlilstcr Rogers had gzvcn (Coiltlliiied on page ‘l, O01 U) Canadian Navy Praised CAPTAIN E. S. BRAND SAYS SEA POWER ALLIES‘ HOPE OTTAWA. Iiiarcll 5—- (CP)—-“$(‘l noivci- will hm‘ Lo bc the folllldflilml oil which our ultimate victory is limit." Clipt. n. s. Brand. director of naval intelligence ior Canada. said loiiiizlit. at a. dinner followliifi a boilsiiiel at the Rideau Curling Clllll licrc. Cliiii. Ill-rind, former second-in- cmnillailli of the l-nrpcrlocd aircraft ll. Ni. S. Cuiirnucous. Sold ll(l mrii of illc Royal Call- \'_\' “cl-n trained and worked cxzicilv .1: tlic 120ml‘ Nnvv and "l" \\'.1,\' illicit in wcll with ille Home F1 i-t. Cont. llritnrl was transferred t0 tlie (‘uiindiliii iiavv inst Jilly. The Rovnl Canadian Navy Will ships wcl oniz those which spent more than 80 days at sea. “Till-s ls n lot of steaming and means n K793}. deal of strain on those on board, lie said. International At A Glance (By The Canadian Press) LONDON-Britain seizes five lt- nlilin ships ln coal-blockade netz. announces 51.335.000.000 war loan, plans to develop trade in Canada, United States and South America. IlELSINKI—Flnnish lanes bomb Red Army forces cross n; Gulf of Finland ice to encircle Vlipuri: battle for ancient port reaches city's outskirts; 50 kll ed in Soviet raid on unidentified town. WITH THE BRITISH EXPEDI- TIONARY FORCE IN FRANCE- reports German canture of British pr soncrs In raid, British retake post temporarily lost to Nazis. PARIS-Polish Ihnlgre Govern- ment accuses Germans of execu- tlvvns en mrisse ln campaign to ex- terminate Poles. JERIISALERI-Siones flv In Jew- llllthllilll First B. E. F. communique of u-nr , Bvlblcriptinn Delivers! 85.00 fly llisll-IKYLI. 1l0il: (‘Qllldl llld ILS. ‘.00 SHIP -.___-_. i Coiiserililii. flflCl‘ Manloil ecilozi Cllnlplilall. All the acidresses vviil be broadcast over tlie national network of tlie Canadian Broad- casliir Corporation. Dr. [anion will speak March 7 at Saint John. N. B , om 1O to 10.36 p. m. A. S. '1‘. M. hlurdo hfacPhcrson runner-lip to Dr. lilnllioil for party leader lii tlie liilllflllfll convention here in 1948 ivii speak at. Regina, lgIllrllTll l2, from i130 to midnight A. liiltiilvi nu llCTHIllC B. C. Conservative Leader Scores Lack Of Strong‘ Action By lllackenzic King. TORONTO, ivlurcli L_ AIII-iLliIIIIl, K. C il".l(l<r_ _l)1 lilf‘ i; lll British Clilllllllll h: rd lll a ‘ -.~ prolific-list; . ll ilctuolk triiillrlltl liljii until tlie ltlTi/‘llli been (Emir: by tlie l. of Clllllilil illi“. ‘ it ll; n. strung, iittitrihssi\'c _, 'il1ll"il'. slieli lis Czlixlidzl needs lll- iilz- p: ill‘. 1ll-. l \ slvniv‘. . lrillli lii-u more liilln l-‘rllllc Limit".- ' lie Mild. "We of zictloil." ltxidcl" 0f lllc Di‘ .\ lliuii. lElt Collscrvl l\'(‘ party, iiroliiLscs act- ion: "Dr. ltlaizltvilis ivliole record l5 UN? l"“l’ii (ll fl llllillfilll, (‘IICY- gctic. fearless mllll, llll Dr. Man- ion calls on tlie {7L‘( ll‘ of Canada todrrv to silpptirt him. He: risks you to help liiili lift govcrliiliviit above party llllillls and llni-roillige at this tune. “Dr. biulilim pvt-guises protection for liifllrlllllll further dcv in<lil.-tr,v ‘Wlllllll Ciiiiluln. lie pro- poses n. (l(‘1)l1i'lll1P1ll of youth so that this llTllllfllll will be ever- iircscllt ill the plailiiiiig of affairs by tlie Doiiiiiiicil (lowriiiiitrilt. l-le ])1'0l11l$i"S Dominion jurisdiction ovcr unvmploviitcnl as a national l‘i‘.'<]l<)ll:-.l\ ' ‘i He. slflks lo I0l“.'\l a cabinet ll ilvclivc of party. llfld in this dirt-futon he has shown his good falili in ‘rears. gone lav. He brings his war service to ni him in ffflllfllQd soldiers‘ pmblclns." sLAsnYI-Yivrru uarcnar RICHMOND, Mich. Mnrcli 5- iAPi ~~A 5:‘ vclir-okl farm Wilt‘. W3.» lliinllv siislicil villi ii liiitcllct in a vllrkcii coon today Mrs. Iiotilo Cibrovzski (lied in Port liuroii izcncrnl hurniinl less ilizili lllra-i» hours nilvv llll‘ nltrick. Prosccillnr Illiiicnn Aicfilll of St. Clair Cllllllli’Fllilll(‘l'llll!<l)1ll1(|.\vf\l~ ter. (i1 would be chnriiixl with llrsl ticitrco murder. Pol-Ire sol.‘ Clbroivski ndmlltcd lsh demonstration against new British land III. _ _ killiniz hln wife during the quarrel i Press Adopts Milder, Tone In _l_)ispute‘ Britain Hopes To Resume Trade Talks With Italy Despite Coal Friction. LONDON, March §—-(CP)' -—_Brltain today seized five It- alian ships, at least two of them laden with German coal, in emphatic application of its llfill on exports from the Reich to Italy. The Italian ships were es- corted into the contraband con- .. trol base off Deal, southeastern England, while a search was under way for other coal bear- ing ships which slipped out of Rotterdam. Italy yesterday protested against the British enforce- ment of its blockade and warn- ed that s. severe strain on poli- tical and economic relations be- tween tl-le two countries might result. (Rome dispatches indicated w- d-ay, however. that the Italian press took on s Iniider tom. after its first bitter comments, and went so far as to suggest that a satis- factory agreement could be reached between Rome and Landon. The papers reported the stopping of the Italian ships without comment. Diplomatic circles said the Bri- tish Government is attempting to separate the question 0d German coal shlpmenis to Italy from tlie general subject o1’ trade nesrotla- 1.10115 bet-wt-en London and Rome. They said that London hus em- liasized that seizure of the col- iers was a. move directed iolelv against Germany. British diplomats said that as evidence of her good faith, Bri- tain had offered to supply Italy with whatever coal it might need (itirllig March to replace the coil- traband shipments frcnl llle R/elclh. Such supplies would have no bee:- lng on the success or failure oi! general trade negotiations between London and Rollie. they said. In was pointed out here that in submitting this prplposal to Italy, London has eliminated the pos- sibility on‘ an Italian charge that Great Britain is bringing presuro on Rome to force it to resinnn general trade ncQOtintiOiis under conditions favorable to the allies. i-r fAKes-i A CLEAR Deer ‘To MAKE A ‘Quanta Mgg/ TORONTO. March 5~—(CPlMifllI mum and lnnxlmilm umpvrzi nix-s: Dawson 7B 16 Victoria 42 n2 Edmonton lii Al) C-‘lllln-YT 3a 39 Rpeiila. lii :16 Willli peg 25 32 Toronto 32 35 Ottfnva 2G 31 Montreal 25 ‘ 34 Quebec 26 31 Saint John 26 41 Halifax 31 35 Charlottetown 2'7 39 FORECAST Maritime East: Strong east and soillheesi wlndl with occasional rain ol‘ port snow. Svnopds: The weather has bc~n mild in the prairie provvrv- with light snow and rain in Alberta anti Srvkntcllcsvnn. white in On- tnrio it ‘has ivicn a litilc colder in northern drstricts. but continue; unset-fled nnrl maid in the lower lnkc region. High tide this morning at 9.30 and tonight at 9.01. Sun svis this afternoon at 5.54 .."l1l(l rises tomorrow FYCTPIDQ at 0.29. l New moon Mfl"(‘ll R. 10211 pm. Suuimcvsrde tide l8 nriiiilcs iat- er than CNISITLICIPIONTL Leaves Border. 0.45 A Mas 100 PM over another mall. - Leaves Tormentlnc 11.00 A. M; 8.061%“. ' ' naatvv-w~amiei w...