MAXIM! 0.7.4 MBRI.‘ MAN imam oaareiu. m cameo-ten 5i > » The People's Paper (lovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘s? Read Everybody seodin MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Affection in the broadest l..." or life. Idol an. , Guardian. r» Cease. , Cl-IARIHPIETOWN. CANADA, MONDAY, APRIL s. 1944 Subscription llellevud. 85.00 loll. 01.00! other Irevlnrea I ILl-A. lfnfl Finns Ifiay Have Pearce Byi Easter 11w... Soviets ilffer Finland New Peace Terms KHOLM. April 3—(AP)— before t ca government report kivi’e new The by air fro - uedoycnight after having transmit- “ his government some Rus- eian modifications of armistice terms. These were considered in most quarters to be much milder than any heretofore mentioned. Reliable informants eaid the new ling/I: to the Finns the al o ngoe on d'| southwestern tip. Vii url. the Karelian met-rope which is Finland's second cit in her tim in was lhedisouasicns between Peaekivi and the Runiana regard- ing the Moscow demand for intern- menl. of approximately seven Ger- man divisions in r d. But it seemed certain that this thorny problem has been threshed wiit and a tentative plan reached tee dealing with it. so N. e. Schools Without leathers-.. April 2 —(OP) New BIUIISMB; term numbered as can; “mm a .. .. o :13; is in 1m. w? to ‘higher paid fillets», herald. Winchell To File rim Libel Suit NEW YORK. April 2 — (AP) '- Welter Winchell. after a iudlo bros ght in which howl’; mad y reprresentative gdartiu Dies lDenL- exas), armonnced he would file a libel suit for $504700 tomor- againat esentative Clan l-lixlman (Rap- h). “It's the first suit I've over flied against anyone." The columnist said. COMING EVENTS “Just arrived a few Coal and Wood Chick Broader Stoves. Dillon ett ' S-Sl-di. "Victory Seed Oats to arrived. Book now. McGowan s: Boyle. 3-28-101- "Variety Concert in Brodal- bane Hall, . April 4th. in lid of Library l-i-Ii-ZL "Freetown, Monday, Bradalbnne Tuesday. Free Sound ionel Film Board. e ' f Davis and mZT-Wfi“ Kifilisdawfocr- ooomApi-iloth. lhtilieflaéa "Garden Seeds. Ali the latest best varieties. Send for free m Oateiotiie. Arth V . u. 14m- ~ "raking ii i Davie s. haaar gory" “oayortiil 11.30. Artbiw salmon. S-O-Thu-Momtf. oar feed all at . "it lib0—- f‘ eheo hon arrived. Willclirs oat Qgrwsll Clare: ltlbli. Iliillnlillll. Monday and I. Walter WOOD. 1-8-31. "Medial m: mm s. m!“ and QC It‘!!! Pfin forlioou til further ti . .0300. 237$. '" care u w, Tues- day. w . recamllsu. double reolaanld om, bagged. Flour. mill- _ barley meal h grow- er. and Son, . * 4-9-2. nav the pminaula. at . M vies. Nat- ° d-i-tli. 315ml" Sta tics of the new quadruple EdWI-lq: Island and the Mainland" with comparative figures for screw ice-breaking railway car ferry to operate between the former S.S. Specifications Of New Car Ferry A , I Burma theatres, but I oentraicd, Atoll defence ring ls obvious. Brighter April skies mean new and shaken Balkan satellites. There sources that Anglo-American air power the Russian thrust toward the Balkans. ationa huh In Hungary. The plight of the only Nari willing war American nnval forces drive deep through her pun 4% By KIRKE I‘. SIMPSUN, Aflldlflofl Pffil War Anllyst high “Situation Last. Nigm l There are stirring and significant happenings in the Pacific and it still is on Europe that world attention l; con- partner, Japan, as powerful ctureil South Pacific But it is on the other side of the world that April weather seems destined to see the attack on the Axis rage to e new blistering air attack; are lntimations from high nllied from Italian bases i; linked with The vital Budapest communic- key to the whole Nari dofence front in south- ‘for Germany Invasion 0f Ilumania ls llause 0f Panic By T0lll-_Y:Ibf0ll[h LONDON. April 2 - (AP) —Tha Red Army has smashed across the Prut River into Rumanis at sever- al points in the first Russian invas- ion _of AXL; territory, and also l4 within i9 miles of the prize port of blllazed Odessa, where thousands of Gcimans mid Rumziniuiis arc being pinned against the Black Sea, Mos- cow announced tonight l. Prince "Charlottetown and the S. S. "Prince Edward Island New Ferry Charlottetown P. E. I. Length overall . . . . . . . . . . . . 37g n, g in 334 _ 30mg, Length between perpendiculars .. , 310 it. m5 (t, gait-h Diwali 69 ft. 52 ft. ALLIED HBADQUAR, 53s 111° - U ft. 2d ft. Southwest Pacific, Apflf: ._ Drausht extreme 1o n. 3in 1a rt. e in. (Month!) — (AP) -- American 100M080. lPPWflmliA 81'0" 0.089 2.795 foroee have expended their Tounosv. approximate net 3,365 1,100 "fllihllfili P051110!" it Empress Railway cor tracks 3 2 “w: n" iilllliflllalnvllle ls- Railway oars carried l6 12 ° s" ""1""- MIM Automobiles carried 4i 4o aelllfllllfladlj announced dodgy. hump" 95o 80o 750 ggwAqo_ A m 3 ___ ( _ 365°00'51"? _ 200 per hour 100 per hour capacity 2'7 Pope Pius and gins: vatictn zific- “m” -- 3 Se“ 5"" 3 5°“ 3 "is ials are giving sgnchmry gnd omel- dlesel- 26-4l-66x3d (2) 23‘r'_~-3fl%-60X93 l assistance to Jewish refugees, g electric (1) 2i-33li-5dxiid conference of iridwestem Jewish H0110 cover ------ -- 12.000 b. n. p 8,000 l. h. p 1.000 i. n. p. Communal Leader; was told today. Speed approximate 16% not; 14 knots 12v, knots . ....¢......s__..,.__, NEW YORK. April a _. (u) The first quarter oi 1044 ended last week with only one Allied or neutral merchant-man repor- ted destroyed by U-bo u l the Wesiem Atlantic. ‘ n The figure contrasted with announced destruction of 47 ship; in the eeme water; i u. is: sci. “$22.22 .2: rim‘ llorlod of ma. ° "n" ZONDON, April 2 - (C?) — Au. ihor H. G. Wells. 77. who is ill with Wluflwa. was reported today to hive had a "pretty well" day. DONDON. Aprll 2 — lCPl~ The Air Ministry. In n recapit- ulatlon of March operations gold kill»! that it was a record month for the R. A. E. involving mo" than 8.000 bomber flight. in which France and Germany were blasted with 31,300 ton; or bombs at e loss of 381 planes. The total included R. C. A. 1-‘, losses. HALIFAX. April 2 — (OP) — A twin engine R. C. A. I‘. plane be. lleved to be carrying four men has; 5"" milling since Saturday night 0n a flight from the air station at‘ Debert Camp, N, s, Canadians In Jungle Action 0N THE ARAKAN FRONT. Burma, April 2-—(CP)-Cnmdiens had n big part in the successful and historic operation recently com- gleted y transport aircraft and the rd tactical air force in advancing Allied troops some 200 miles beyond the enemy lines in North Burma. Man men from the Dominion flew n ght after ni ht over Jungle in haza ous flight, car- and towing British Gurkha and dian troops, mules, Jeeps and a vast quantiéy oi supplies that mlKe__\B_l le _-_s_i._ifflclent__ior_t.1. 1113- BT. JOHN'S. NYE-Do o! (OP Cabin-A represents ve the Canadian labor department has nisde an unsuccessful attempt to recruit labor for the I minion n Newfoundland, it was learned iiaturday as plans went ahead for he rscrui of about 1.600 NW- rcundland is rs for farm work in the United States. Hon. Michael Dwyer. represent-l alive of the Canadian labor da- partinent came her recently to in- vestigate the nossl ilitlee of ob- taining workmen for different tonne of employment that country. lncludinwackers for 0n- taiiig packing ea liahmqi e is. no el fell through. it was “maxing-n c‘ bliwmr m. 6° “II Oh 0 turn transportation "its. or re- could b! liv- , active recruiting of Newfoundlendersmfiir S. M Iiwen. wd-l-Ii. Canada Fails To Get Farm Workers In Nfld. Airman Killed In Brash Near Nit. Pleasant A member of the Royal Canadian Air libroe was killed yesterday af- ternoon when a training plane he was piloting crashed and burned a,- bout a mile and d half from the home airport at Mount Pleasant. Cause of the Crash was not learned. Airport official; announced that the victim of the crash was Flying Officer Stewart Alexander Coffin, whose wife resides at summerside. His father Ls Dr. Efmest coffin of 1846 14th Street, West, Calgary, Al- a. Flying Officer Coffin. alone ‘xi the plane. was said to be on a. rou- tlneedfllght when the accident occ- urr . Expect Action In Ceylon Area COLOMBO. April 2-(0? Cable) ~R..C.A.F. units stationed in Cey- lon have it on the authority of air chief marshail Sir Richard Peirse that “in thesnot too far distant future you will have a are“ d“! to do" because the enemy hLs been increasing his activities in the In- dian Ocean Iihd the Bay of Ben- al. R The air officer commanding Al- lied air forces in the southeast Asia. command told Canadian airmen on a recent visit “it is not my fault l nor yours that you have not engaged ' .. .. he the enemy closcly- Il- W0! ie-ult of the enemy who doesn't oe- operate." or. force for essential Newfound- land industry. - Transportation and other ex- penses in the move are being paid y U. S. authorities. and represent- atives of the wear f trs- three weeks 0c n farming methods in an a college of téie Stain to w ch thev their understood. they ‘ accommoda- ere sssiafl - Where wlvea hiiblhdl. it ill will b. given , tiona. -> OTTAWA. April 1-<OP>-A labor degartment spokesman said wnlght at efforts by the depart- ment to recruit worhsre in New- foundland for rioua types of work in Canada. includinfnem- ploynient in packing a lish- ments in Ontario. proved unsuc- eeadui because offered by Aiaerican employers could not be in e government. subieot to lion that it will not impair the lab- OITAWA, March 3i - (CP) Approximately 55.000900 is to be spent extending the runways and making other additions to the Ed- monton municlpal airport and the airports at Grnnd Prairie. Fort Nel- son and Watson Lake, it was an- nounced today by “Trades Minister MacKlnnon. ' The Minister said that Munitions Minister Howe had authorized lilm to state that approximately $1.- 250000 would be spent on the Ed- monton Airport. The work will be- gin nlrnost immediately. These undertakings are part of an extensive plan to strengthen and extend the runaways all along the northwest staging route so they will be able to handle the heaviest planes that 11y. officials said. Reveal Details 0f Month-Old Lahrador-ilrash AN R..C.A.F. STATION IN NEW- FUuNunAivu, April z —- to!) - The R. C. A. F. made pubLc today details oi a month-old crash in the Labrador wilds in which one man was killed and live survivors strug- gled through s. week oi‘ silo-zero temperatures oefore they werc rescued and brought back to their home base. ‘ihe crack-up. which killed F0. R..0.A.F. Pu paperman, occurred while the men were flying from doeland in face of one of the most vicious swrme to sweep the Atlantic coast this past winter. Three engines were deed and the fourth was efire. Griffin was buried in a flag- draped coffin nt Goose etery ailm- station by dog The survivors warez- Sodn. Ldr. D.i".C., of Toronto. Pilot: Flt. Lt. (Contlniiedwonjpagej, Col. 7 513i... Million 0011...». For Extending Runways On Weste ‘ill. S. Bomber I bile . ‘roronto news- lAelnged Bav cern~ e being brought to the e teflm. A. A. '1'. (AL) Imirie. ‘c rn Airports Blast Important Nazi War Plant LONDON, April 2 -- (AP) -Un-l ited States bombers from italy fought off swarms of German figh- ters over the Alps today and bias» ted aircraft and ball-bearing works in old Austria in a sequel to Satur- day's blow by British based Amer- ican planes against southern Ger- many durlng which g, Swiss town was bombed accidentally. The Sunday raids against the Axis come after R. A. I". Mosquitoes at- tacked objectives Saturday night in Hanover, Krefelt and Aachen with- out loss and other aircraft laid mines in enemy waters. Mosquitoes also attacked Western Germany Fri- day night without loss. While the Daimler Puch works which included an aircraft compo- nents plant, was being bombed at Steyr 90 miles west of Vienna, other heavy bombers spanned the Adria- tic and smashed at three communi- cations centres —— Brod in Yugosla- vie. on the main Belgrade - Zagreb Split, and Blhao railroad yards 50! miles north of tho Adriatic port 0i 1 Zara. l The Berlin radio. claiming "an- enormous number" of fighters clial-l the Americans over the , said the bomber thrusts were “checked in air combats at», two pla~ ces over South-western Germany." sorta-r nearest-spins JOHN, N. 3., A i1 2 — eedanfl-lfirfound- At Your Service "SAL a TEA 8: COFFEE Iflees must now go further n is doubly important to buy Tea and Coffee by the “flavour” etimdarel eastern Europe. is in easy reach for Foggla-based bombers. lends grim signlflo ' Bulgaria and Romania to get out of the war new German crack-up have developed. There were unconfirmed rumors this week-end that Nazi evacuation of the Lwow fortress that guards the way into the central Polish plains of the last Nnzl Dnleyier footholds In northeastern Russia, but of the Bultlo States ns well. East Prussia would hr exposed by such a willi- drawal. Only dire necessity of conserving manpower for a two-front ile- fence of the inner walls of the Reich itself could explain such a Berlin move. iioal From Farm, That fact in Hungary as well u while yet there is tlmc. It ls in southern Poland. however, that strongest lnlimillluns of I to Moscow's The historic crossing lnio Rumo- nla. whose finest troops lle in gray. es extending clear to Stalingrad or are bottled up in the Crimea. came a in]! week after Russia gave ‘hut: shaken Axis satellite a notice in quit west of the Bug river was in progress. | If Lwow is being evacuated. it must foreehadow n. Nazi retreat in ht- north at least to the San River and German rellnniiishment not only | zMlzhaucfCives Details Of New FGrLEOT Prov. UPI‘ W , ll -'I' H - A A Apr 2 ne oncur able J. E. Mlchaud, Minister of Transport amiminced that Murine Industries Limited of sci-cl, P. Q the construction of a new ice-brea- king car ferry to operate between Borden, P El. and Cape Tomien- .mentine, N. B The keel for the new vessel has already been laid. The ferry will carry railway pass- enger and freight cars, automobiles and buses as well as passengers. This will be the finest craft of its kind in service in any waters, Hon- ourable Mr. Michaud said. and will be operated for lhe Government of Canada. by the Canadian National Railways. The contract calls for cum~ pletlon and delivery of the vessel before the winter of i945 end the Sea Products CLEVELAND, April 2 —(AP) - Annouricement. of a. process for making gasoline and coal from farm. forest and sea plants, eho h to surpply the worlds needs. simp and cheaper than other synthetic methods, was released here tonight by the American Chemical Society- The process telescopes into a few o *1 have been awarded the contract for U its partnership with Germany The new Russian stroke has thrown much of the Rumanlan pop. “1091011 "W0 0 Danie and‘ martial law has bet-ii proclaimed in Eucli- arosl. its capital. FCpCH5 said, Grrnzan and Ritimnznn broadcasts said the Russians had erased ilio Prut, which they reached last, 5.1.»... 0M’. near Iasi. key Rumanian rail hub where lines branch to the no); Ploesll oil fields. ‘l0 miles away‘, and to Bucharest But it was probable the Rumiana also had entered north Rumanin. Since Moscow's daily communique told of the capture of Gertsw, Buc- OViBIl Village on that frontier ‘The special Russian announcement stressed that the invasion oi Rum- ania was dictated by military n66. easily, and not by any Russian my. ritcrial ambition D. N. B. Predicts Allied Offensive NEW YORK. April 2 -- iAPl - A D N B. broadcast, recorded by . S Government monitors. said today that the Allied 5th Army beaclihesd at Anzlo had "collec- ted considerable troop and mateiw lal reinforcements" in the last few days and that 1t was probable "fixa- jor Anglo-United States attacks will be resumed at any moment.“ The German broadcast said rein- forcements poured ln last night an. that at midday fresh supplies ~- nrms. ammunition and equipment of all kinds arrived under preteri- lien cf n smoke screen l line, Mostar, 50 miles southeast of v hours, with heat and pressure. what nature took millions of years to do in fanning coal and oil. It was perfected by Dr E. Berl. re- search profcssor at-wthe Carnegie institute of Technology. Pittsburgh. Dr. Berl said. for example, the . sugar cane. planted on 2.1 per cent of the available crop lands in the United States, could produce as much gasoline as the 32,000,000 cars in the country used in i040. The process is not limited to sugar. 1t will make coal or gasoline at will from Sorghum. sweet t- atoes, ccmstalks and uiany o er farm crops, from grass, leaves, Irish Moss, seaweed, wood and sa. ust. The synthetic coals, Dr. Berl said, ignite much quicker and burn faster than natural bituminous coal They contain less sulphur. They make both porous coke fol‘ blast furnaces and dense coke for foundarles. The process comes from a study Dr. Berl started l8 years ago to find out how nature made coal and oil. He believes he has solved this chemical fimblem. Dr. Ber in the first Great War was chief chemist for the Austro- Hungarlan war industry. Allies In Slight Retreat At Anzio Push Geno-ans Back On Main Front. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Nap- les. April 2, — (AP) - Allied 5th Army irOCIps have made "h slight withdrawal" from one position l lell miles southwest of Carrcceto on the Anzlo beachhead after s heavy Cler- man raid, headquarters announced today. Inland, Italian troops who seized Mount Marronc on the central front i5 miles northeast of Cassino, mov- ' ed on to occupy 3,000 foot Mount Oastelnuovo just to the northeast, straightening the Allied line. The Germans offered no opposition to either pum. headquarters said, but enemy patrols were out, withdraw- ingqon contact. era was no immediate official amplification of the withdrawal soulihwesg of Carrooetn after a Nazi raid Fri ay. Allied srtiilerymen knocked out two tanks west of Cis- tcrna and apparently exploded an ammunition dump two miles north of Lltto a, since explosion; contin- ued for three hours. The beechl-iead announcement we; the only unfavorable report on the fronts. With the situation ln the railroad station ares of Cassino re- stored. the only activity there was by German and Allied gunners. (This dispatch was the first indi- cation that the Allies had lost Rround in the station area of Cass~ lilo.) i with Canadian l) ‘.521 nil the latest advances in ship- ,dltlons and will ‘be of prime importance in the coirl pa)’. lstruclion of the vessel. ' estimated cost is sinooooo. i Comments 0n Plan Dwign plans for the new veseeli _ To Provide Doctors were made by Messrs. German zmd- Mllne, naval architect; and marine‘ surveyors. Montreal, aller exits. tive investigation in conjunction‘ National Railway officials into the potential railway and automobile traffic to and from, the province of Prince Edward ls- land and other sections of the Do- REGINA, April 2 - 1C P) -— Municipal Minister R, J. M. Paw ker told the Saskatchewan legislat- lure Saturday a number of dnciom minlon. Public meetings were held‘ 110i‘! sflvilll; in the firmed flirt‘?! in Charlottetown and Summerside‘ will be detailed to provincial rum] attended by n11 interested parties municipalities to offset a shorts?! and expert advice was obtained oi medical men from captains who have comman- Amendments to the Saskatchsn- ded crafts in the Government ice-l an rural municipalities not author- brgdkln operations, The new car} ize municipalities to provide a mes.- ferry wll be notable for its out- icalcfflcer oi the armed forces wzin standing appearance as well as its equipment and s means of trans- serviceability. Its engine; will be P0140010" “@5007? 5°!‘ cfirflliis on more powerful than any other craft a bractlirc , , of its kind, generating 12.000 b. h. Mr Parker said the Dominion In the construction of the les- Government would pay the costs o! transporting medical men to iha municipalities. The medical officer would continue to draw his PM’ H! a member of the armed forces A salary from the municipality and any other money the doctor withstand the most severe lce 1011-, earns during I11!‘ llrflctiife must b6 be able to operate turixecl over lo llifivllmvlnfifi “id packed the province Will Tbllllbllffc the Do- lminion government for the 110C101‘! Mr Parker rflkl. builzlln-y. land marine engmeerinz will be incorporated, combined with special features to meet year round service problems in the Northum- berland Strait The vessel will through field ice as well as ice Iceworthlness is considered l0 tile l Main Feature 1 The main feature of the new vm~ 30°“ °‘. . ?..“.°l"§...‘§'2?°.l.£...§.' ‘i,§“‘““““ "i" T €€.‘2.“‘i§£€.°i..§’.’.§.§’“{S3°.i€f"’§lll“.mi sfflmw‘, permit of extreme flexibility in 0°‘ . throwing a concentration of maxi- mum power from the diesel engine, generating sets onto one propeller, in an emergency The forward pro ‘ pellers will greatly improve the ice-i breaking efficiency and will per~ mlt greater ease of msnoueverlnr. such g, large vessel in the restricted terminals. Diesel - electric propulsion is re- cognised as the most efficient mo‘ ive power for the purpose for which this vessel is to be used It ls in. successful use on lcebreakere lni Russia. Finland. Sweden and the‘ United States. By use of electric transmission, remote control of the propelling motors from the bridge provides for instantaneous response to the orders of the navigating off- icer through conveniently located control levers The utmost precis- ion of control is possible, An ln- finite number of suecd changes will be available-and it will be possible to apply power to p, choice of pro- pellers Ample safety devlcs will be provided for any emergency con- dillon of operation. The Minister stated lhiil it was intcrestlniz lo note that both the diesel and the electrical equipment will be manufactured in Canada A; a matter of fact, he said, about as per cent of the material enter-l l-ilgli this: l.1s mnmlng at, a 3Q and tonight at 7 22 Sun sets this evening at TN and rises tomorrow morning at 6 as, hill moon April 8. 2.22 P. M. DAILY AIR SERVICE Charlottetown — Suuirnarside — Monctrm Leave Charlottetown 1.88 u. m. [Z00 noon. . p. m. Arrive Charlottetown Llll o. m. 5.45 p. m. 1.05 n. m. SUNDAY SERVIQI heave Charlottetown l! noon. I» Arrive Charlottetown M5 n. In. “‘<c5iIii.iF€F'T§§'T'€sT'ITin7 s»