he SUM HE M/ESTERN GUARDIAN qlllvT-lilrs. John Pond. 101 llnrnrtl Street — Pb I88 ‘ SUMMER-l. al mil PIINCICOUNT! m. "m, Subloriliilillil- Mlvlriilins should be left with Mrs. Pond n, Gulfllllll mu be iwlllilt daily at any or the rouowib; m,” u, F amide:- u uuultstore, Wlter 8t. Gourlles Drugstore, wags 5g grcnronlo Boiler!» WI"? 5‘- "lfi Gilli". 87 Grnnvllrle 5|. 1|, Guardian will be delivered to an home in Summ rsid , "'|;by~st 2o per day or 10o per week. hone 289 for this leervlc‘; Z,‘ "m, crder to the boy responsible for deliveries on your route. -rAn-1w th t "- 1° M Tel/iv!‘ Dfllezgg? -ur:w lick t dr end brintsjat (eiay Pficimsugfrfttcerif eide- L-427-4-2u-2i. —RALPH G. - | nl reserved for news Lhliutfiilluiilitifrzsl but adverttsm; u, | tiewsy nature may be insen- ulzt Z culls a word strictly ply- ltle irflijifif" ., 5,; '5.\l.\N WANTED. - Ener- - hill with selling exper- '" Clothing Depart- eml m man“ AgNgSéPTARI‘. Gen. . illiwpswgoxiféfiiesiilfifli- of 8J1 knots. Lioeraaicoriilrsalzlrgnzi wtcncc to - - _ , - ‘newest rates. Phon s - ,t‘tc.e. b. i. L-J3J-4-i8-2i. 527.1; 521-2. eL-liillxililnta-léisll-GST .10 bu 0w CHICKS- 3mm -iu:'runusn T0 . _ l and be" “."“‘P‘“"° Refit/lies Jenn Llewellyn ti? Iflillglillgl to ti] l-‘Pi 1W 9w" eany’ “sit- “hi1. N. 3-. alter Spenciln u 008.1, Nollh TlYim- ‘lew weeks with her arents qi/fr L'333'4'29'1i-‘and Mrs. W. K. Lleweii n Ssideé OTS-With a ' -' RK B0 ' “o tupcse. New and com- —NOW I bigger than ever. Now S the your Sprint; suit tilnde ti? 581m . 1i c to buv wiliie Prices l1"? iCompleze new stock now pop 031:2. Pier also l d Mflfllliii-i- summei- ,to choose frorltifnlviialiii XiIIItOCiESIFilInIgS; L'335'4’19'2i- tcieflllers and Clothiers. water st" l Sllmlne-"slde- L-350-4-l8-2i. gADMINIgON | Gh- 1e mem ers _ . dlniiivton‘ Club ex- I Explsrlgf gait: an llgétctiigfiugrvrs; ‘ ' ‘ "mlellis is May l. Send for cpeard before that time, which entitles bdlllllfil’ to our present special orahous d the ha'l into a Pi c" iii any tllile during stunmci" _ trtlen. The stage re». 1940. Nooutms Beauty Parlor lawn and .1 dcmsummcrside, Phone ggql, ' ro the lucky nitm— L-35i-4-l8-3l. w liileliS. There ,__? oi Bridrc an: n uum- _FQRMER “LANDE . . . I ctinn. The affair was -Thcre passed awav ’ iliithliilht of _ at her hcmc in Portland, lifaine, . s» - rtsslltzlr a . s. Hintoni Gentle-lilo vears of iflgfiaLMrgs-Ggfllllpiilt/L "scllvn Rogers: Lanes be kindlv remembered on the Islard Illeadorvs: Gent's 2pc. I by her many friends, whom she ‘.15, r Ladies l0w. MFS ' lied quite often. Ten of hcr eleven’ ti: Gent's iOW- W P-‘Bilildfcn were with hcr on New, u". Ladies 1st. M rs Years Day, Mr. Frank J. Gallant. cl | Gcnts 1ft. Mark Gnu; Wellington was among hcr sons who u mber pr zcs. Mrs. F. . uere present at the gatherzng. f-lcr r sir» wred lifurfliiy. Mi“ husband predeceased her some . Hacker. Mire rears sac. Besides her children 3i . sister, rs. John Wedge of Mont - Carmel survives. _s, 'ltc . ‘low, you are invited to cull.‘ sen Lilli ‘:3 :- F’ o. w '< Q < m U I t], - ements for a . u g.2l'(if‘ll brlr go. Window res o.’ hovers anti other flower E? a .. w; P. so n Per~v Wcdpe. at lcd rby filter felling‘. i .. i t . i, u",;".",._ "M... nc- FIRST BATTLE . mics. Louis Romcke. -i_ l? Brcunan. Worthv oi’ (gonglnued {mm page 1, I n wqs‘ the ladies first w__________ ___ _ __ _ ,,sl:.‘.":is.lt’;.i "or even rear-e, we ' George cavrerorh course and the other sq ps ulueled g ‘ rounu and then we rights-cl two mc-rc German ships on the oincr side of the flord on cur part bzw. Tlve Germs-n destroyers tried to head rs off from the cx.t and a salvo t-s-ll on us. ‘I heard a terrific bang there was a grcnt smar-h. "Foam this tme tho other f-lliliS carried on indepetrtknt/y". “We 105m all hondvlry and we gradually drift-zd tc-unrd tltc I10 Cl. m“ One cf our guns wads Still ttrrg lYS we went aground. We lcl. oll our EH11 limos Lmvlirss of Nurboro lll the Prince County s \.ill rcgrct tofcarn ‘i)lll(li'i~‘mi*‘I‘l"F1i-]§)iflii\ri)?“out m mg “"51 L°TP1T°~ _____ l "The order - ‘abandtv ship’ ill rcgret to learn that. Given and with Jlblimigilbigltaivd “'21s I ic- icutis u ' t0 Pr" cl Arsctlnllit of the staff of limits on we swam (Willi, mutt-c. has entered the shore." (‘tllllgv Hrsptul for a sl’g, t| l ~ . Bowman's Story l-IOLLWATVD ) A 20-year-old scaman. William Wilkinson of Belfast. snid:- "We wernt inlto action Just befcre 4 o'clock in the mommg. Our guns ____ startled ItXOdWOIK and we gave them ((W:'."tY‘-q . ,, [til we a . After a whilc they " C 1 “d honfliipaPi-l ‘scored several hits. One shcll b rt near nrv gun. Slirapticl was tying all m s nd u; like a cloud. Swen _ of us were manning a gun and t three of my cnums were killed. ‘The fight went on for three hours, then we went agroirtd. Lieut. Mailziscn slitoutrd ‘abandon ship.’ ‘This we d'd q ‘lckly. The sca ‘ sc-r-med filled wit-h I“(‘I1. : "It was daylight and we cou‘d see the slhore about 100 yzrds away. The water was icy cold. We waded brerst hlcli for another 101 ivcrc tabled they wctiirl active belligerent-t <_ and foreigners con t. the Governmen with stcmly. .the military action from im- ‘rhorship to calling up \\‘lii for either mili- 'i‘i\ll:- or labor. Search for Firearms ‘l- *"\!‘l'11l announced nice!- ~ li_Ni'irn:il Socialists (Dutch ‘yards. then up a cliff where we ’"’ all“ iwm prevented and ‘saw a hcu e." Wilkinson sa-Ild the men were imit- cotiducted searches for. nmtnttnltion. Yester- scarch was conducted rnburg Castle c-f Count llill ct (YAHSQIIIDOUFQ, of paliomciu, martial 1' (ll-closed the . confidence, faith in 1 I "Above all, in these tnust be our first duty to ~W1<i cur neutrality. welcomcd at the hcusc by a tnoth-cr ‘and daughter Norwegians Kind “They knew we were Eeeglieh and had heard the b"tt‘c. Thsiv manic us feel at homo right away and fixed us some tea." Describing the long walk to the ineorest village, Wlrlirinsrn sad the c l: - l flu l ‘tlliebcliiiggrgfiiis tiifiilratilig me“ ‘km-BERG Elf-Ti s. rough road .11; (r135 “Fummtv o’ tmtll dusk. The wcundrd wcr: fak- [Pugt tom the i F on in improvised ambulances. They ("n b:- rcllcd ytlpgllfe absu jwore welor-med in the vT-agc anti lu any cnsn we pm; gmgiven blankets and clothes. Thcy it prrlcctly ulna,- lhut ‘um lstaycd there for threo days and on 5 able u, Saturday saw Briteh destroyers rmlncd to prptggt, bu; ‘pass up the fjord. “They disappeared round s bend ‘l'i'llllEl‘ repeated the offers and later we heard the sound of l"\' Qitccn Wilhelmina and|hecvy Prim. Juogpg frrm the v.<'(:!:.’l.(l of the Belgians of sound it must have betn some miiifil’ good offices to lbaltie." - (This was the fight of April i3 l» which n British destrr-vcr f’o- tiilo. hi1’! the battlewhio Warsptte sank seven German destroyers in or "ea-r the p0't of Narvik. (From the men's accounts ‘t was evrriept. that the Hardy d‘d not. SJ rerouted at. the town of Norvik itself but et a. compare tlvtvvdeecrt- ed point on the fjord nst for a- w,_.._, . Stoker Arthur Baker, pl kicg no the storv. sold that local prop"- .E ——- broumt ford to a schoclho so in y’ W YORK. April 20 (Satur- llhe v'l‘s'e where the mcn were d “CPJ —'I‘he New York Times mi"- comfortable, 105")‘ that. the "whole vicious "They were s‘1""t of saw-hos ,‘$‘_f‘_5___0i German conquests in tbemsel e1" he mo. "We had one Mat, leeks the more abomin- pound of tea among its-abort 200 ‘i, "Ely Nazi effort to cov- men-biirney. we brewed it. over and sm-‘Siill; edltoriall ropsgsnda a: ‘Juviiigd 1A1‘ that f?” wiiirigsiit lcli it 551d ,8 bemgvmft 0m from . . o Y men cm a G" lnnn Library of Informa- ‘mirmitmm 12mg}, p rut n. located at 1'1 Buttery Place ' {u e’ F? “f F,‘ sgmémy F” ‘i Y . the Times said “we dd or de oedicem o "he M‘ yd Guin- l, behave the mm‘ Wm ever be mnln eer Brtsrlmr-tkrboa-t an all. ls to concoct n“ which Wm b’ naled it t h wars l“. Boat. at do, wwssful m m“ country, once were sent and the survivors s rntrccubn "Facts in Review’ “m” “bk” ‘w’ _ out from the German Ll- BIRENS 0F SYDNEY ‘m’ "m" "llwlied "lei “ii new. Australia —(CP)-SV(|- Edlmrs °i Tim‘ i" “"1"” nev‘: first at raid "warning test. wrs itll ("t9 :6’: a W? re-read (or rend) U" failure. A s retch of 35 miles alone h?“ :3" Y" Pffilliilillldu in he coast was covered bv the sirens, I .-irc. a Magnum 0P“? they which "borelv penetrated" some busy i1 n \\' y 8,000 or better. i ..troughout the domin- ion a vallell’ of piantsare working on crclvrs connected with the pro. ' from raw materials steel, en- MERSIDE AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE N AZIS DRAW ‘wimtinvedgtendrgn _1> 5. Minister of Propegqrm; pun radio Id Adolf Hitler's t Iuehrer Joseph Goebbels, ur c dress on the eve b1 51st birthday, said h. "has the complete 10v, um m, ence of his people" , “to sow the seeds of disumtyifleamong us" war-c is the Nazi reg- o! Hitler's New a decision durlng (is?) ‘mum's , are bel b- systematlcaly for $120113“! and reserve stocks not needed complete obed and British efforts iiofimcd to fllilu _ So determined lmc to make Year's promise ood hcss and iudustr ed immediately, other units b1 t}; C d 5e" e Force areid “Qirrtffitctfiilfi Restrict hoductlon "in?! 0f the non- rmanent active m tis in 11 u toriai regiments, Funk, address lh, “mu, Reinforoements for an over. meeting of the s olders of the u" llhlis will be dram-l mm m, Relcils fink. therefore stressed not "mmflfll regiment in its own 011i)’ the “rationing of essential are“ and by the territorial regl- needs" but also the restriction of mem °n a 0110M basis from ail Ac. production consumers’ placements. Ill business circles it is heard filld more that the economics _ _ . the éfiiablilllz of all machinery lying idle against the time when peace. . consumers‘ 209418 can be resumed. the rnach.. available (b; r-uuk ' "tl fl; 'l11l zivtiiltiltilelelxiqileld gfsfiwggfiewofi war moz- mznitztry l5 ubum m decree time productions of incl-y to be made munitions. must chest, 110w into Germany's to tax itwreosed liquid be \'u't “Bil credit m. r tel 3055815 0:1 into the Gcimu tolls of Scctndinctvi b (lurid lashicn a m’ ‘tic nation’ bi 1h , uh s ' d” has been growin wccks, g NAVAL PROGRAM (Continued from page l) Wile" illev take over the it . \ (.1 t. i. 3.0.10 on strength now. luc- n‘. t... m. (u: 1.5 ‘O fort tn push tl A1151 on ship iVAClillLl... clam. rartzing scmi-ltntshcd articles in br ize and timber to boilers, gnu-s. pumps and cables. Contracts for eight mlnesweepers, steel vessels 1'70 to 190 feet long, re- main to be let but already some of the stual cr vrooden boats bulltegnder tho nrtirzram havevbeen deliver Titcsc vessels will be used for gen- cral scrv cc with the Royal Canad- and as Canad- light- crs, aircraft rescue and salvage bouts aircraft tenders and bomb and supplv loading dlnghies. ian Navy, T..e Royal Nov service boats for tie Roya inn Air Force. Thev include service scoivs, Yugoslavian Authorities Discover Plot lgp-tAPl-Yugoslavion announced tonight covered a 010i i0 over t0 the Nazis and former Premi vic, "friend lonely and hamlet. of Gemisoy.” inaccessible hundreds of Germans were qlgged, in connection allpged "fifth column" plot. stoyadino tody an imdcr hca-vv guilld i0 on a moun din B0 {he capital to isolate ftxrelgn agents slav colleagues. pt-WQY with him a year "we want no Quislinfli- ll lclns. no Hac who fell ago tries of Norway, Czecho- tria on stoyadiitnvlcfs home documents wh linkcd the former Premier Nazi "Trolnn horse siblc some of hi5 i°n°wfis :llce watch. p Raids were made ship list of the cultural band, say is pro-Nazi. Bath Yugaeiavla began t; examine the German river barges on the i-do s more skillful job. ' streets in Blldne-V- ube. 0 Progressive reduction of soockgog% "imiiillls from investing ln re. ll is not desirable psycholgg-l- . earnings V» ii" 5M4. but he warned that, _ nevertheless made available to the kings banks and the Hitler's birthday will be ce|e_ liialcd throughout the nation and n-occupied puf- in sub- because 0f the war, 101,. , , gift is a conecttcn of metal which steadily 1o;- thc i boat's _i “if 0e on active servicg will m». Royal ‘Consular: ital/Y. charged, \\_ll.li ilkitilLU of Catiaoas territoriai| 1933. wilen the R. C. N. V. 'servi organized, these men, funny W} l-~ln lwllns tor inland, have born training i0l‘ lust such an oc- . an. Authorized strength before Ml‘ M15 will: men with rough y Vt cl ‘Liiu rt. c. N. R. are pro- iollal scallion who train o. cer- IIQTUCU fill E8011 X981‘ W ti] the Royal Canadian Navy, as do men cf _ v. it. Before the war they iiumomcti some ‘.250 and since n lllt‘ ranks have grown to about; A.) the dominion bends every bl. 1e s,.ipbuilding' pro- cxpected that within a e tile tiumoer of men dc- construc- 3ft! than doubled —t.o BELGRADE. Yllcoslevln. Avril authorities they had dis- overthrow the government and turn his); er Milan Stoyarlino; ‘ in Police raids on the homes of HI vlc was taken into clu- d moved from B8181!“ internment miles south of him from and his own YEW“ from d Hen- has, no Seys-Inquurts N " ffi 19.]. 11:0 YQE‘?m:§'rlu¥ldtoon%ex9rno§1y's Germans Lack Artillery "lmm mm" m i’ e ‘nvadcd mun- r military experts point- the Sudelenland, Slovakia proper. end Alle- A. police raid Tuesdifllamgg l th tes so . ch, an 0i‘ with activity in Yugoslavia. it. was considered 1:0‘; would be interned. They ore illidei’ on the homes living near the "i mm” G°"'“““ nd k did 0t hesitate with ‘G~'"""'c’§timi.“§}§r't:‘?£‘ Rlsiaifier, Kidd“? your hgnds, lo carry on (Lag? sufi-l showed up the plot the war on another element and $3.1,“ uprlslng of the German thus prove again the amphibious minority, to be timed with the character of Britons and our entry mm Yugoslavia of the Ger- navy- .m%}1em£¥d5 m this region, which Crew Bruin Ashore f ll- illgfw‘°§y"°cfi?v"cmnsar Pificmiiir- B. J. Rees, the Hardy's radio wabian-German which the police and Romania crews of t0 New Plan For Reinforcing 0. A. S. F. Units OPPAWA. April ts-(am-A for raising reinforcq- m!!! for Canadian units serving deeifined to enabled hun- Muud mill a units not yet mo- to contribute something to the national war effort was an. nuonoed tod ' ofxlmltggéioslttgefgiyicge Department unit‘ overseose oltiltitiitn “it rv rcemen r l _ pot in Canada. tltise dgemtudg; overseas units are grbu ed Wm, tive Servi F0 um,‘ compiifslng and militia The territorial infant tggl- men“ eel no are: the Bri ish Co- lumbi" Relliment. the Alberta Regiment, the Western Ontario Regiment. i118 Central Ontarlg Reliimeni- the Eastern Ontario Reslment. Le Regiment de Que- bec (comprising French-speaking Qilfibec units), New Brunswick Regiment and the Nova Scotia. alliiednPrince Edward Island Regi- For the time bei a1 “m” W1" be lzwllpe vifltlh try units for the purpose of an. ebiinz i-nem to contribute a quota 0i mm i0!‘ Overseas service. Late: if cavalry Units are sent. overseas éeinfomements for them will be fawn from all c < Canada. avalry “mm m Tile militia includes some 88 in- éfiiiiiii’ qlld 21 cavalry regiments, hese will contribute the rein_ forcements for the 12 infantry bfi-iifliioiks now overseas in the 1st division and the 12 in the 2nd ldltitision which ntay go overseas a c r. , AiWBdY. however. some overseas units have recruited considerable bodies of reinforcement-s in their depot battalions in Canada. Thus until Canadian troops gr) into action it is unlikely that my large call for reinforcements will bb irtisucie on the non-permanent, 11n- Reinforcemenls for artillery, army lservlce corps, engineer, army medl- cal corps and other overseas un- its will be obtained on the same principle from militia and active ce force units in the military districts from which the units reoitrrng reinforcements romc. There are some 140 artillery but- teries. firld. medium and heavy in Canada from which reinforcements for the 12 batteries overseas with the 1st division and whatever corps ififtiiief" lmii" "“"" b5 59y“ Qver. seas, will be drawn, British First (Qorrtiniled wtromjyagej”) The men from the Hardy, who were landed at s. port in northwest Scotland last ni ,.t, were welcom- ed at Euston sea ion by a crowd c1 re atives and friends. Outfitted in everythin from Nor- wetzian ski Siiii-s to lum er jackets, they ave vivid accounts or their exper enoesz- Of how the Hsrdy and four other destroyer: encased six German dc‘! stroyers in the first battle of Nsr vik: how tho Hunter was sunk, pro- bablv with the loss of all hands: 10w the Hard . badly hit, was beached and a andoned; how the OO-Odd survivors swam ashore mrougti a quarter-mile or l water. and how these survivors ms ntained themselves in territory occupied bl‘ t. he Germans for several days unttl he second British attack smashed the German naval force at Nurvik. “The hard service of the destrolylcr flotillas has been given freely," r Churchill told the sailors and a crowd that filled the horseguard- parade to welcome them. “ t i1. s plaved s. notable, indeed an indis- oensablc, part in securing tho salon- of our country during the opcnin; months of this hard and obstinate was.” Nnls Pour In Troops Word brought from the northern from, by a Norwegian official show- ed Germany is pouring 2,000 men a day into Norway by plane. In an interview the official accused Ger- many of carriing out seven bomb- ing rsids against King Haakon and his Government. Victory in the battle for Trond- heim, Scandinavian observers said. would be one of the richest prim-s of the war. By gaining possession of ‘rroridhelm, the Allies could tum tables on Germany with s base for operations a airist the Nazis in Denmark as wel as against Ger- many's Baltic ports. Trondheim ls such an im rtant position, they pointed out, t at the Germans may be content to dig in along a line extendln eastward from Trondheim to e Swedish border without attempting to push further northward. l Newsps ed out t at the German Expedi- tionary Force must lack heavy artillery and large sunplies of am- munition, since it would be impos- sible to transport these (by sir. Mr Churchil paid tribute to the Hardy's Captain, R. A. Warbur- ton-bee, who. he said. “took the rc- sponslbillty of ordering this de- termined attack upon the enemy and sealed this great decision with his lire." Be then added:- "But you, although your vessel ooerntor who described how the men swam to shore, said: "If we'd been hit by snowballs as we staggered up the beach. we would have been knocked over.’ Daily War Survey (I! The fi-nldhn Prslll As s new wove of netrvoulnsm the OOiIILBH-tl of Ell-ope Allied and German forces gird themselves for a struggle in Norway. The first phase of the operations in Norway which consist; of the landing of troops, establishment of bases and lines of communication was only ntcr-ly under way when Holjand, Rllllllllilifl. and Yugoslavia showed synrpttntts of aldmi. To what extent these symptoms result from German preparations for aotiorn and to what extent they may be due to calculated German measures to cause alarm Wtil be determined only by the tum of events. Certainly the use made by the Germans of Nazi sympaimimrs in Nod-wry has directed intrreaszd at- tention to Gordian-controlled uri- oer-cover activities in other coun- tries. The Nethcrlands government reclaimed martial lawv tllu-oughcut e country part-ly as a precaution against internal enemies and su- thloiitics launched a new drive against persons silspectled of matin- l WILL IN TRODU Ch gnaaeunrsaumdll__ be r to the Press. Ho sold Dr. wished to ex- amine any s lo cue. the infor- mation be given. MlcMlilm said ‘that h! did want the names published but did not see any reason why they were not avails. . Premier Campbell said sli the members hs-d lists concerning! their own districts and would be 88d to show them to any member seeking information. Dr. Maolvffllan asked if the list would be given to him privately. Thu Premier answered that this proccd- ure was s. matter of detail and any special cases could be itivcstigatcd. Dr. MaoMillan oblecteci to gDllig around to each 11K lviciual member m see the lists and the Premier said they would be willing to furnish him with a reasonable number of lists. Hon. Mr. McGuigan in answer to a. question from Dr. MacMillan said there had been an increase in the amount given to pensioners "on the basis of need." Cites Olnldg III look Dr. MaoMillan declared that tl:e reports about the Province winch appear in the Canada Year book wtrre often incorrect and sometimes against the cause of the Island, he explained that when this Province presented the Dominion Govern- taining contacts with the Nazi re- gime in Germany. Similar precautions were taken in some states of Southeastern EWODB nut-l now measures were taken in Spritzer-land. Alarms in other quaartem. how- ever, are not likely to deter the Allies from sending to Norway the- forocs necortsary for a determined effort i0 wrest the country from the German invutlcrs. The Allies have laians ready for a Gennazi move througih Holland or Belgium or bot-h, for s. German push into France by way of $wii71€fifltifi and for a. German move in the Balkans. Until a fcw vwecrr- ago any of tttere moves was considered more probable than the onslaught on Denmark and Norway. In fzvt the number of movcs the Grnnaus may make vchlclt will provide anything in the nature of a surprise now ls limited. TROOP “HTIIDRAWALI DENIED MOSCOW, April 20—(Satu.rdsy) —(CP Havasb-Tass. Soviet News Agency, today xlenied reports that negotiations between the Soviet Union aJld Rilmzinia had resulted in an agreement for withdrawal of Russian troops l0 kilometres (about 6 1-4 miles) from the Russian border. (Tho reports had said, also, that. Romanian troops were to be with- drawn an cqital distance from the Soviet. frontier.) TWO CENTS WAGE INCREASE MILLINOCKEYI‘, M0,, Apr-ll 19- (APJ—-A Wage increase of two cents an ilour and a, week's va- clllion with pay were granted em- ioyccs of the Great Northern apcr Company mills here in a new agreement, company officials sold today. The Great. Northern is one oi the largest newsprint producing concerns in the United Statts. German destroyers was simply:— "We kept on firing we didn't give a damn for them. They hit us and we knew it but we didn't give a damn. We just kept shoot- mg." George Cock, 336-pound petty offgcer. pointed at his stomach and sat . "Getting ashore was easy. I just slung myself overboard and sort of lloatcu m." Able scaman Dunn said that af- ter thc nun got. ashore the wound- ed wee carried l5 miles to town in improvised ambulances. It was on the beach that death claimed Captain Warburton-Lee who was wounded fatalll 0:1 the bridge but remained at his post to guide the disabled destroyer tn shallow water where he to.d the crew:- "You can swim for it. now, boys." The crowd checzep wildly, waved hats, hanrlkcrchlcfs and scarves as they Avcllrcl “load old Churchlllfll altcr thc first Lord of the Ad-l mirniiy, chili ourthrttst and fist‘. Ci-Jllftilfii, told the tncn they had‘. done thcir "(‘Oill‘l‘i'l(‘0llS duty" for Finch the whole nation is grate- ul “You are the vanguard of the meat with claims they were tolti that a fisherman lriere w-as making $700. a year and did not need any- thing. Messrs. Barbour, saville and Hon. Mr. McKinnoi-i tvere not in favour oi having the names of old age pcn- sioners published. I-lon. Dr. Maclvfillan inquired a-- bout liens on the property oi old age pensioners and asked if tie Government took the money pairl durln the lifetime of the recipient. from is estate. Hon. Mr, McGulgan explained that s. mortgage come first and. also the claim of a person who had cared for the pensioner. Three- quarters of the money belonged to the Dominion Government. ‘The whole Act is checked by a Domin- iou government audit every three months, and they had cxprcssed satisfaction of the administration of old age pensions in this Province. He said unat Nova Scotla and Prince Edward Island. were declared to have the most satisfactory B/tlilliil- istration in the Dominion. ueglsglliriéglfin téie he? yltasflcontgi- er amp e , on. r. Maclvlilian Mr. McPhee, Mr. Robin- son and lvir. Hughes. Hon. Mr. Dennis suggested that iigg‘ pension be raised, from $15 to Mr. savllle declared that the pensions were too low to provide a ood. e Bill was reported agreed to with amendments. Public School Act The Act Raspmting Public schools was referred back to committee, with Mr. Barbour in the chair. Dr. MacMillari moved an amend- ment. asked for by the City COilll- cu urging that a maximum of $60.- 000 be set asn. limit to the annual expenditures being made for Char- E rs tottcwwn, file amendment was passed. Ln speaking to his amendment, Dr. MacMilltiu ‘ declared that the City School Board was the most. ec- onomical oi all the City UBDBFI- merits. He explained that lhc ex- penditures will increase cvcry year us the population oi the City increasnrr yearly. Every family hich moved into the City added to e problem, especially in regard to the schools. he said. The expenditure of iflie School Board last year was $58,000. as a- gainst $57,000. for the previous year He added that every modern im- provement was demanded by_ the schools, such as uianual training, and domestic science equipment-- First And Third Reading: The following bills were giv- en first reading: An Act to Amend the Montagill? Incorporation Act. Au Act Respecting the Solemni- zation of Marrlfllse. An Act Respecting Bacterial Ring 0t. The following bills were read s. third time and passed: An Act Respecting the Law of Partnerships. An Act Respecting the Legislative Assembly, On mot on of the promoter, I-Ion Mr. Dennis, "An Act Respecting till‘ Prince Edward Island Wumcns in- stitutes" was withdrawn. The House vrcnt into oommittcc on "An Act to Amend rm Act i0 ‘Consolidate and Amend the Prince Edward Island Dental Act," vritll. Mr. Stewart in the chair W718 . ' GUARDIAN Accuse Ford Company 0f EmployingThugs WASHINGION, April 1l—-(AP) -.A National mbor RelauonsBooId trial examiner today doomed the Ford Motor Company of "gather- ing together the most brutal, vic- lous d consciencelws thug-s in its on: to block UYWODIZBUOD of Ford workers under the Wagner Act. The accusation was made by Ex- aminer Robert Denham in s. report of a. month's hearing on labor dif- litrull-tcs at the Ford plant m Dai- las, Tex, He recommended that the company reinstate two employees wit-h back pay and notify individ- ually all of its employees in the United Status iihat lt would "cease discouraging" union membership. The recommendation that d1 Ford employees receive the notifi- cation was unprecedented in labor board affairs, The company em- ploys more than 100.000 workers. Dcnhamis report. against which the company has 20 days to file exceptions. was sent to Dallas by airplane today and there served on Ford officials. It recites Dollar. test- imony bearing on charges that it so-calleti Ford "strong arm squad" engaged in assaults and intimida- tion to discourage union member- Silil’) C. A. B. F. PAYROLL OTTAWA, April l9—(CP)—-S0me 52.850000 now ls gpilbg each month into the homes of men on active service with the Canadian forces it has learned today, The number of beneficiaries has reached 55.000. 1‘ Ulhcsc payments coluprlse assigned pay in combination with allow- ances to tvives, children, parents or other eligible dependents. NEWLY-WEDS AT VATICAN VATICAN CITY -(OP) --Nea.r- lv a million newlyweds have entered the Vatican lwrttlLs since i932 seek- ing iiic Papal blessing- and they're still coming. Pope Pius XII, contin- iliilz the custom established bv his predecessor, has madereceptions for the newly-married a fixed part of the Vatican's activities. His Holi- Sea; received 20,000 newlyweds in Trans-Canada Air Mail Service The Post Office authorities advise that it is anticipated that the 1n- lcrrupted Trans-Canada Air Mail Service bet-ween Moncton and Mon- treal will resume “operations Monday, April 22nd. on a from which date mail matter prepaid at Air Mail uly. be closed for des- patch at the Charlottetown Post Of- lice at 4.00 p. m. daily, except Sun- day, instead of 4.50 p. m.. as fonner- ly, making (lirect connections with the Pacific Coast and intermediate points in Canada. and the United States. There is no direct connec- lion by this service with St. John or Halifax. Thu mail for the re tlur plane carrying Air Mail and f st class- mail making train connections at Moncion closes daily except Sunday, at 11.45 a. m., and e mailing b- llc is requested to POST Y TO AVOID LAST MINUTE CON- GFSTION. CAN USE RED CROSS UITAWA. April 19 (GP) —'!‘lw Canadian dental corps, like me Canadian medical corps is untitled, in its own right, to use the Geneva (Red) Cross in all circumstances the Defence Department announ- ced tonight. Use of the cross on all establishments and material be- longing to the corps will ensure them the protection and respect of the belligerents. A ruling to this effect has been pzlvcn by the British War Office on submission by the Canadian headquarters in London, it was announced. RHINO‘! ANCIENT JAW COLOMBO, Cevlon -(C7P) -—.An rflmost complete rhinoceros law, be- lieved to be 10,000 years old. s found hcrc. and throws light. on Ccylotfs ‘ancient fauua.______ mcndments Tho reports 0f the DePBTi-mm‘ °I Public Works and Highways. the It was reported agreed to with a- mendments. armies we and our French Allies will llSjr (luring this saimtner to pitrge and clcnnsc the soil of the vikings. thc soil of N0:\va_v, from tho filthy pollution of Nazi tyranny. ‘f _ _~ Seaman John Walters‘ account of the bottle between the British Oslo. Norway-German troops on the patches lndlcstelhat seven German ws Photo sent by radio from Berlin. The House went into _ _ on, "An Act. Rcsrlectiiil! Qiilifiillfivll l with Mr. McLean in the chair. lilo ~blll consolidates existing lc I It was reported agreed to w l‘. (Credit NI-JA Telephoto). commit-tot- l hout a- i R. C. M. P.. and the Old A e Pen- szon Commission were table . Thr- House adjourned until Tues- ‘ - . ' k. islatioir idfliilitliiiidrriiicr? Ciginottncerl that the Btttlszct would be brought down iihni rm: rat wast I! Don Glibart Oonsdlan Press Cablc 34m" ‘Pheflrdweckoftihewarpssb ad with no stateroom to Par-ha. ment on Britain's plan; w any. out the German invaders from Norway. A War Oiilce statement said nlerely that BritLsh forces 51m been landed. ’i‘ticrc ivcrr- no (retail as t0 ulnc or in vmat ll‘i.'lii)<‘l'.<. The mOVPiPt‘ ‘s o: the breath» 110.1 at N n 0a and 51108-151195. n '1 and south re- tiveiy of t important port of p dilcim, and that by constant air attack and a naval bonzbard- men-t the Germans h ‘e been pre. venttxl frrm c thtm. and probabl y selves in Norm, at stavangcr. In the south the Gcrrmms un- doubtedly mane " rtsa. A Nor- wegian official . in London ertimlawtl one l r nrnr; at 60.000 men, a fort lit-h, it may be conceded, ivii‘. ho 1H8 ripper hand over the Nori gian azmy until the Allied expeditionary fCri-o can get its Cilfllptilflh, 1:110 muuqn, The Germans are b03115! reinforced doll-l’ by air, bit‘ srJ-n tranwzort is required for mic movcn nt of heavy equipment nccos-"atry for large scale oportitlons, anti the Royal Navy can be relied on in keep such Nazi movements m s minimum. A calnpalgn lasting several months was forecast by Winlmu Ghurohzl-i in a speech no survzvon of one of the destroyers lost in the Narvik raids. During the summer, he promised. Allied armies v.11 "purge and cleanse tfhe soil of the Vikings from the filthy pollution of Nazi tyrmnny." The "Trojan Horse" method 0t! treachery used the Nazis in et- fectlng film Norweg an adventure centre-d the atterntzon of the Allied governments on the posszbiiit-y mat intense activity by Gcmion agents in the Balkans and the low coun- tries may foreshadorw similar tan- tios eLsewhei-e. In Yugoslavia, for mstanoe, thousand-s of Crennsng, supposedly in the coimtry for old respecting or other iirmooemt pur- poses, were rounded up. A former premier known u Germany's friend." was taken 1n- to custody lest he tin-n out to be Yugoslavlab “ltfajor Qlllfliifll." In Hit-numb’. a pro-German former premier was cioely war/shed. Even in Thlrke-y, other-e lentLment ll ovetvwhelmingly in favor of one Allies, a former cabinet. mzriistm wurgs arrested as s potential “Qtis- g3. ‘The Newton-lands. extending mar- tial law to the entire OGWHIY, con- tinued to rely on a policy of strict neutrality, her premier declaring tihart no offer of protective aid from either side could be ocnsxdexed. The nrwirimi of the Netherlands East Indies in the evmitr-ha-tI-Iol- land is invaded received tihe omen- tion of lfhe United States Ind J1!- n. A declaration oi’ Japan's ‘deep concern" over me roams was followed by when was "rlghvt to natnonol expansion‘ w- cccars, and fvfiuemiint‘: "abdome- able will." Tho newspapers were sbrongly pro-German in who. but it was tshmigtm that Muaolfnl homily would rmm to enter the war on the losing side. rt was not mice out, however, that. swam in tho Balloons, shmilri Germany co- Bus- sin. attack more, might force Irrily to take a hand. Glancin back l5 yen-st Beware flghtlrug the YTn-es 111cm ro- sulted in British troops capturing Hill 60 near Z/mnnlt-ek» in the week oi’ Anril 14-20, 1M5 F-rmnr: floods halted fighting in . Car-premium MUliTli-Riii$'\\".1r".‘i" Russian troop: hold strong lament-vim in the passe! leading to the fitment-inn pinlfll. April 19- .,< evening at B p. m. march in Oslo, after there surprise occupation and seizure of Norway's Illiliiiiiiiil eiii- Late iii!" rships have been bottled up in 0slo's harbor by the British in their attempt to retake the cit!-